In an ideal world, all our doctors would have the wisdom of Marcus Welby, and all our nurses the compassion of Florence Nightingale. This medical world would be populated with doctors who all graduated No. 1 in their classes, who perform only necessary surgery -- and without complications. These doctors would always wash their hands between patients to minimize the spread of infection. All medical research would be funded by nonprofit foundations to preclude bias. And, of course, all doctors would be salaried to avoid perverse incentives to do too much to too many.
Recently, the United States Preventive Services Task Force recommended against prostate-cancer screening, saying it doesn't save lives overall and often leads to additional tests or treatments that do harm. Two years ago, the same task force, which is made up of nonfederal experts in primary care, recommended against screening mammography for women in their 40s.
What would Dr. Welby and Nurse Nightingale have said about the task force recommendations? I believe they would have endorsed them, because they are carefully researched and objective.
Yet both recommendations have been met with widespread protest. The task force has been accused of rationing -- the dirtiest word in American medicine.
Why? Because a chasm separates the idealized world of American medical practice and our current reality.
The excesses and errors of American medical practice have created a system that is often hazardous and always costly. The oft-repeated refrain "we have the best medical care in the world" is not just off the mark but wildly wrong. According to the World Health Organization, we rank 22nd compared with the other 23 developed countries.
The costs of our current system are too high and will soar as the baby boomers retire. The Medicare Trustees have estimated that the nation faces $89 trillion of unfunded Medicare liabilities for current and future retirees.
Yet despite the glaring shortcomings of American medical care, reform is impeded by public misconceptions. We conceive of medical treatment as positive, by definition, despite mountains of evidence to the contrary. It's essential that we reduce Medicare costs, but we can do this only by reimagining health care.