Site icon Flopping Aces

Doctors Pan Obamacare in Survey

Ali Meyer:

A narrow majority of physicians say Obamacare has a negative impact on medical practice, including on the quality and cost of health care, according to a reportfrom the Journal of the American Medical Association.

The report found that 52 percent of physicians look on Obamacare as unfavorable to the general medical situation, while 48 percent say it is favorable.

According to the report, 36 percent of physicians said the Affordable Care Act had a negative impact on the medical practice overall. Only 23 percent said it had a positive impact. Thirty-one percent physicians said the healthcare law had no impact, and 9 percent said they were not sure if it had an impact.

Twenty-five percent of doctors said that Obamacare had a negative impact on the quality of patient care, while only 18 percent said it had a positive impact. Thirty-five percent said the healthcare law had a negative impact on the ability to meet patient demand, and only 10 percent said it had a positive impact in this regard.

Finally, 44 percent of physicians said Obamacare had a negative impact on the cost of patient health care and only 21 percent said it had a positive impact.

“There is frustration about higher cost to patients, out-of-pocket costs, and many high deductible plans,” said Dr. Wanda Filer, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. “Also, it is some patients’ first time having insurance and they are facing premiums and deductibles and not sure how it works and some have to educate patients.”

When it came to access to health care and insurance across the country, more physicians were positive about the health law’s impact. Forty-eight percent of physicians said they had positive feelings about Obamacare in this regard, and only 24 percent reported a negative impression.

“We are finding a lot of our members are noticing a positive impact on patient access to healthcare and to insurance,” said Filer. “Six of 10 physicians say they are seeing more newly insured patients. Now more uninsured patients are seeing more access to primary and preventive care.”

The report suggested that doctors are frustrated by the administrative requirements generated by the law.

“Many providers feel that the amount of time they have with each patient and the time they spend on insurance administration issues have gotten worse,” states the report. “Four of 10 physicians and more than a third of midlevel providers said the amount of time they have available to spend with each patient has gotten worse since January 2014.”

Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Exit mobile version