Introduction Historians will see the last
years of the 20th Century as the period in which powerful
commercial concerns tried to convert medical care into a
profitable industry. A number of entrepreneurs used
health care information to invade the health system,
supposedly to improve it. Patients, physicians and the larger
community were not prepared for them. We had not anticipated
that they would wield enough financial power to sway many
patients from their physicians, would become the brokers of
health care (and often of death), and would take the role of
arbiters in the distribution of health resources. In many respects, physicians
were taken prisoners by health maintenance organizations and
others, and treated as powerless line
workers. Counterbalancing forces emerged
from the beginning. Even in the early 1980s, when the
invaders were starting to press ahead, physicians and
patients were organizing to fight back. We physicians and patients had
to prepare for war because the insurers and their
representatives came to challenge our decisions, our right
to explore a proper diagnosis, our determination to propose
the best treatments, and even worse, our freedom to
communicate with each other. Our presentation here explores
the history of the invasion. It also presents the
reasons that led us to devote years to fighting the
invaders, the phases of our struggle, the factors that
framed the present, and our vision of the
future The history takes us back to the
events that preceded President Nixon's fateful decision to
give the green light to Health Maintenance
Organizations. The narrative of our campaign
against managed care abuses reveals our approach to develop
a powerful coalition of physicians and patients to fight for
our rights. Our analysis of the present and the
future comes from our assessment that the American public
has become aware of the problem and has joined our mighty
struggle. Our field of psychiatry is the
medical discipline most beleaguered by the invading
entrepreneurs. This is why our story may have value for
every person who cares about the future of medical care in
America.
©2000 Munoz and
Eist, The People v. Managed Care