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The New System

I’ve just finished reading a market research report1 which suggests that we are seven or eight years into a major health care revolution. Since 1977 there have been substantial increases in the sales of self-care products and publications. Medical devices formerly available only to health professionals are now being actively marketed to laypeople. Services provided only in the hospital as recently as a year or two ago are now available at home. And there have been unprecedented changes in our health attitudes and behaviors.


The figures cited in the report include the following:

What does all this mean? These statistics reflect a major change in our understanding of health. These changes, combined with the movement away from fee-for-service and toward flat-fee health financing, are transforming our health care system.

The Old Health Care System. Under the old system, the central person was the physician. He (or occasionally she) stood at center stage, directing the efforts of all other medical personnel as well as those of the patient. The patient was seen as little more than the container for the disease, the raw material upon which the physician was to practice his art. The patient stood by in mute astonishment as the wonders of modern medicine were applied to his or her problem.

Under the old health care system, going to the doctor was a familiar ritual: your complaint was your ticket of admission. The doctor looked you over, probed and poked a little, asked a few questions, and ordered a few tests. Then out came the prescription pad and you received some medicine. In more serious cases, you were referred to a specialist or hospital. You weren’t supposed to ask questions. There was only one commandment for the patient: obey your doctor’s orders.

The New Health Care System. In the new health care system, the informed layperson is the primary provider of health care. Instead of passively waiting for illness to occur and then depending on out doctors to “fix” what ails us, we are increasingly detecting potential problem’ early and taking steps to prevent them long before they become serious enough to require a doctor’s care.

The new health care system considers self-care the primary form of health care. Professional care is seen as an adjunct And when professional consultation is necessary, health consumers are much more likely to ask questions, seek second opinions, find their own sources of information, and patronize a. variety of practitioners.

We now realize that most important health decisions are made by individuals families, and communities, not by doctors. The new health center is not the hospital or the clinic but the home. The center of health power is moving from the physician to the informed, health-active layperson.

Future editorials will discuss the characteristics of the new health care system. We welcome your comments.


REFERENCE:


I. The Health Strategy Group, “Helping’ Ourselves to Health: The Self-Care and Personal Health Enhancement Market it the U.S.,” 1983 (prepared for Rodale Press Inc. by The Health Strategy Group, 32 Spring Street, New York, NY 10013).

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