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In Reply: Many of the statements made by Dr. Riggs are indisputable. The conclusions drawn from these insights, however, are questionable.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) was introduced under the premise that a patchwork of policies would improve access and quality of care while decreasing overall health expenditures. Dr. Riggs suggests that, since individual components are targeted toward some of these issues, the net effect of the PPACA is its breaking of the healthcare iron triangle.
Nothing could be further from the truth. This line of reasoning requires that the left hand knows not what the right hand is doing, and that each hand (ie, each component of the PPACA) can ignore the effects of the other, with each proclaiming success in its efforts. It is disingenuous to suggest that the PPACA, on the whole, improves upon the problems of access, quality, and cost if each of the program’s tenets addresses only one or two of the triangle’s vertices.
The PPACA suffers from its own lofty expectations. Rather than being a transformative law that shifts a paradigm, the PPACA is simply an evolution of an existing, broken system, cobbling together components everyone readily agrees are dysfunctional. It expands Medicaid, an insufficiently funded program for the most economically and medically disadvantaged Americans. It subsidizes private health insurance, which, for all its advantages, is likely responsible for the overconsumption of discounted healthcare. And it promotes the unproven concept of accountable care organizations, with no rational expectation that this approach would be superior to preferred provider organizations or health maintenance organizations. It is illogical to expect the sum of many broken parts to yield a superior outcome.
Dr. Riggs notes that trying to improve two legs of the triangle (increased access and improved quality) while acknowledging rising costs is politically untenable. On this point, he is absolutely correct. Discussing the harsh reality that healthcare is a scarce commodity is a political nonstarter. Until Americans demand—and politicians provide—difficult answers to the question of how we will provide healthcare in the 21st century, simultaneously improving delivery of care on all three fronts remains a fantasy. Barring truly transformative change, the iron triangle continues to rule the economics of American healthcare.
In Reply: Many of the statements made by Dr. Riggs are indisputable. The conclusions drawn from these insights, however, are questionable.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) was introduced under the premise that a patchwork of policies would improve access and quality of care while decreasing overall health expenditures. Dr. Riggs suggests that, since individual components are targeted toward some of these issues, the net effect of the PPACA is its breaking of the healthcare iron triangle.
Nothing could be further from the truth. This line of reasoning requires that the left hand knows not what the right hand is doing, and that each hand (ie, each component of the PPACA) can ignore the effects of the other, with each proclaiming success in its efforts. It is disingenuous to suggest that the PPACA, on the whole, improves upon the problems of access, quality, and cost if each of the program’s tenets addresses only one or two of the triangle’s vertices.
The PPACA suffers from its own lofty expectations. Rather than being a transformative law that shifts a paradigm, the PPACA is simply an evolution of an existing, broken system, cobbling together components everyone readily agrees are dysfunctional. It expands Medicaid, an insufficiently funded program for the most economically and medically disadvantaged Americans. It subsidizes private health insurance, which, for all its advantages, is likely responsible for the overconsumption of discounted healthcare. And it promotes the unproven concept of accountable care organizations, with no rational expectation that this approach would be superior to preferred provider organizations or health maintenance organizations. It is illogical to expect the sum of many broken parts to yield a superior outcome.
Dr. Riggs notes that trying to improve two legs of the triangle (increased access and improved quality) while acknowledging rising costs is politically untenable. On this point, he is absolutely correct. Discussing the harsh reality that healthcare is a scarce commodity is a political nonstarter. Until Americans demand—and politicians provide—difficult answers to the question of how we will provide healthcare in the 21st century, simultaneously improving delivery of care on all three fronts remains a fantasy. Barring truly transformative change, the iron triangle continues to rule the economics of American healthcare.
In Reply: Many of the statements made by Dr. Riggs are indisputable. The conclusions drawn from these insights, however, are questionable.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) was introduced under the premise that a patchwork of policies would improve access and quality of care while decreasing overall health expenditures. Dr. Riggs suggests that, since individual components are targeted toward some of these issues, the net effect of the PPACA is its breaking of the healthcare iron triangle.
Nothing could be further from the truth. This line of reasoning requires that the left hand knows not what the right hand is doing, and that each hand (ie, each component of the PPACA) can ignore the effects of the other, with each proclaiming success in its efforts. It is disingenuous to suggest that the PPACA, on the whole, improves upon the problems of access, quality, and cost if each of the program’s tenets addresses only one or two of the triangle’s vertices.
The PPACA suffers from its own lofty expectations. Rather than being a transformative law that shifts a paradigm, the PPACA is simply an evolution of an existing, broken system, cobbling together components everyone readily agrees are dysfunctional. It expands Medicaid, an insufficiently funded program for the most economically and medically disadvantaged Americans. It subsidizes private health insurance, which, for all its advantages, is likely responsible for the overconsumption of discounted healthcare. And it promotes the unproven concept of accountable care organizations, with no rational expectation that this approach would be superior to preferred provider organizations or health maintenance organizations. It is illogical to expect the sum of many broken parts to yield a superior outcome.
Dr. Riggs notes that trying to improve two legs of the triangle (increased access and improved quality) while acknowledging rising costs is politically untenable. On this point, he is absolutely correct. Discussing the harsh reality that healthcare is a scarce commodity is a political nonstarter. Until Americans demand—and politicians provide—difficult answers to the question of how we will provide healthcare in the 21st century, simultaneously improving delivery of care on all three fronts remains a fantasy. Barring truly transformative change, the iron triangle continues to rule the economics of American healthcare.