Medicine Is About to Get Personal

How can Americans get better health care for less money? There's a quiet experiment going on among primary-care physicians, and the results are intriguing

Nowhere outside the pages of Dickens is there a more aptly named fellow than Garrison Bliss. A trim, gray man, he has twinkling eyes and a face lit by a smile of such authenticity that it makes you think of Shaker furniture. But he’s a doctor, not a mystic. And he’s smiling because he believes he and his cousin have found the answer to one of the toughest questions in health care.

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The idea is deceptively simple: Pay frontline doctors a fixed monthly fee directly instead of through the byzantine insurance bureaucracy. Make the patient, rather than the paperwork, the focus of the doctor’s day. The result will be happier doctors, healthier patients and a striking reduction in wasted expense.

In one of the more intriguing experiments in the medical industry, Qliance Health, the company Bliss co-founded with his cousin Dr. Erika Bliss, 47, is applying this idea to managing the health of roughly 35,000 patients–about half of them on Medicaid. If it can work for them in Seattle, they say, maybe it could work for everyone.

How the Bliss cousins arrived at this notion is a more complicated story. But it’s one worth telling, because it says a lot about how the U.S.–normally adept at hooking up the buyers and sellers of goods and services–managed to make such a mess of its medical economy. The story starts with the fact that Garrison Bliss, 69, wasn’t always so happy.

He is a primary-care physician, and a career in primary care has become a recipe for misery in the U.S. Nearly a third of all frontline physicians ages 35 to 49 expect to quit within the next five years, according to a 2012 survey by the Urban Institute. Young healers who start with dreams of being Marcus Welby often sour when they meet the realities of the job–which can include seeing patients every 11 minutes and having their performance assessed by how many MRIs they order.

Like so many others in his field, Bliss came to feel that he wasn’t in the business of caring for patients at all. His job was to feed payment codes into the grinding machinery of the insurance companies, rushing from exam room to exam room, ordering tests, making referrals, scheduling follow-up visits in which the cycle would be repeated. He knew that a proper exam, with time for counseling and questions, can take 45 minutes or more. Yet even a 15-minute session became a luxury.

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