The Dose - “Not on Banker’s Hours”: How Primary Care Differs in the Netherlands and the U.S.
Episode Date: January 17, 2020Primary care is the bedrock of a health care system that works. For most people, seeing a doctor regularly can help prevent small medical concerns from turning into full-blown emergencies. On this epi...sode of The Dose podcast, we hear from Los Angeles Times reporter Noam Levey, who recently wrote about the differences between the primary care systems in the United States and the Netherlands through the eyes of two doctors, one working in each country.
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The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation dedicated to health care for everyone.
And then at the end of the exam, I asked, you know, all the patients I saw that day,
there were, you know, 15, 20 patients or so, were you worried about how much this was going to cost?
And I joked with people that I might as well have asked them, you know, how is your pet penguin?
Hi, everyone. Welcome to The Dose.
On this episode, we're returning to a topic from some of our very first episodes of the podcast,
how healthcare is different in the U.S. and other high-income countries.
My guest today is Noam Levy.
Noam writes about healthcare policy for the LA Times,
and we're going to talk about
a story he wrote for the Commonwealth Fund, in which he speaks to two primary care doctors,
one in the Netherlands and the other in Seattle, to learn how their work, how their primary care
practices are different. Noam, welcome to the show. Thank you for having me.
Let's start by just talking a little bit about your story. What's it about?
So I wanted to compare the experiences of physicians in the US and the Netherlands,
in part because I think that their experiences provide a window into the way primary care works or doesn't work in the U.S.
and in other high-income countries. So as many of your listeners no doubt know,
primary care in this country has historically been underfunded and sort of viewed as the
forgotten stepchild of the American health care system. And that's a big contrast with a lot of other high-income countries.
The Netherlands is an interesting point of comparison, I think, for the United States,
because it has very deliberately built a health care system on the foundation of a very strong primary care system.
And, of course, it's one thing to talk about that in generalities,
but we thought it would be interesting to actually get into the nitty gritty of how
primary care doctors go about their days and interact with their patients in these two systems
to sort of see what the experience is like, not only for the physicians, but for patients who receive care. I'm curious about maybe time that you spend at a clinic or maybe a
primary care practice in the Netherlands and how that might be different from the ones you've
reported in the U.S. So there are a few things. One is that, which is quite remarkable, I think, and deceptively important, I think,
is that the physician whom I was visiting with in the Netherlands meets his patients in his office,
not in an exam room. So his patients come into the office and they sit down with him
at his desk in the same way that, you know, you might meet with a teacher of your kids,
or you might meet with a banker or any other kind of professional relationship.
Right. But it's not a medical setting. You don't start out there.
You don't start out in the medical setting. That's right. And it creates an interesting
dynamic that's different from this country where most of these kinds of interactions happen in a much more
clinical kind of setting where the patient is sort of oftentimes kind of sitting uncomfortably on an
exam table or wedged onto a little chair while the physician is sitting kind of on a stool or
something. I'm sure this would be familiar to anybody who's gone to the doctor recently.
I mean, I'm just thinking about my issues always. What do I do with my stuff? Where do I put my stuff?
Exactly. And the doctor has the same sort of uncomfortable in this country a lot of
times by doing it in a more traditional office setting and i should say this setting was quite
nice it sort of had a glass door that opened up to a garden in the back it creates a sort of a
more of a equal kind of an interaction and And people are sort of more comfortable. The
doctor is sitting across the desk from the patient. The two are facing one another. And I just noticed
that the conversation seemed more natural than it does a lot of times in an exam room in this
country. And so the doctor could also begin all the interactions with a conversation.
And sometimes I think the sort of art of conversation, that interaction between the clinician and the patient can get overwhelmed by sort of all the clinical demands of doing a routine
exam with a patient.
So much more seems to be often learned by just having that conversation. The other thing that's interesting about the interaction between the doctor and the patient in the Netherlands is that you can, and I use this term cautiously, but it is a
gatekeeper kind of a system where patients are assigned to a primary care physician. And the
expectation is that they go to their primary care physician first before seeking more specialized
care. And this is not done primarily as a way to prevent patients from getting care, but rather with
the recognition that if the primary care doctor is doing his or her job well, he or she is
best positioned to manage patients' care.
And so one thing you see is that the Dutch primary care doctor is empowered to do a lot
more, and the expectation is that a lot more could get done
in the primary care office before the patient is sort of sent off to cardiology or sent off to get
an MRI or sent to the hospital or what have you. It sounds like that takes a degree of trust as
well, where you're going to see your primary care doctor, not asking for the slip of paper that
says, I want to see a cardiologist, I want an MRI,
but you actually trust that your primary care doctor could tell you what's going on.
I think that's a really good point. Yes, I think that's true. And obviously, that level of trust
is going to vary based on who the physician is. I'm sure there are some Dutch doctors who don't seem
particularly trustworthy to patients. But there is this, because I think the system emphasizes
the relationship between the patient and the primary care physician, maybe there's an expectation that
there can be a more trustworthy relationship. I was struck when we first started talking a couple of weeks ago,
and you mentioned this very stark difference in the way that patients in the Dutch practice
feel about their health care costs compared with patients you've interviewed here in the U.S.
It is really striking, and I should say this is not just in the Netherlands, but in other high income countries I've visited, including Germany
and the U.K. The very profound difference between how patients think about or talk about
cost is really, really striking compared to the United States. So, you know, if you go into any doctor's
office or hospital in this country, you wouldn't necessarily hear doctors talking with their
patients about cost. But if you talk to patients, you can be pretty darn well sure that they're
worried about how much it's going to cost. And so one of the things which I did when I was in this
physician's practice in the Netherlands was ask the patients, you know, what were you most worried
about when you came to the doctor's office today? And people would say things like, you know, I'm
worried about this pain in my back or my abdomen, or I'm taking a new medication, and I want to make
sure there's not the side effects, et cetera.
And nobody would mention cost.
And then at the end of the exam, I asked, you know, all the patients I saw that day,
there were, you know, 15, 20 patients or so, were you worried about how much this was going to be cost?
And I joked with people that I might as well have asked them, you know, how is your pet
penguin?
Because they looked at me like I was crazy, like
this was not in the realm of possibility. Well, of course, I didn't think about cost. And in fact,
one of the patients who came who was a sort of middle aged man who had to leave his job,
he could have was overwhelmed by stress and had kind of a breakdown at work and was talking with
his family physician about kind of
getting back on his feet and so forth. I mean, when I asked him this question, he looked at me
and he said, I don't understand, how would that be helpful for me to get better if I had to also
worry about cost, which is it was sort of this, you know, blazingly obvious kind of issue, but
sort of lost, of course, in our system.
Right. That's pretty much the most important point. When you're dealing with a physical
health condition, the last thing you need is compounded stress financials.
One would think. One would think.
Yeah. I mean, if you're the single earner in a family of four and you have two young kids
and you have a $5,000 deductible,
that's a lot of money you have to spend every year before the insurance kicks in.
Absolutely. And clearly, it's having a huge impact on patients in this country. One of the things
that sort of I found interesting about talking to the primary care physicians in the United States and in Netherlands for the piece I did for the fund,
was, you know, the fund does obviously a survey every three years of primary care physicians in the U.S.
and in other wealthy countries.
And U.S. primary care physicians are notably much more downbeat about the health care system in which they work.
There's less of a difference in sort of their own professional satisfaction, but they feel very pessimistic about the American health care system in general.
And I think it's speaking, again, from experience of talking to a lot of physicians in the U.S. over the years, they see the struggles that their
patients are going through paying bills. And, you know, Dr. Brewers, who is the American physician
originally from the Netherlands, who I interviewed for this piece, said she sees, you know, her own
patients rationing their own care, not getting the tests that she recommends or not billing prescriptions because of the costs.
And I mean, that's very demoralizing from her.
She cares about her patients.
And obviously, if her patients can't get the care they need, that's the Dutch physician who I profiled in this piece, you know, one of the
things she said was that she felt very confident that her patients could get the care that they
need and that the Dutch system protects people. And, you know, that makes her feel better about
being a physician. I thought that was pretty striking. Yeah. And I'm actually glad you
brought that up. So
let's get into the story a little bit. The point you make about home visits and being able to go
see a primary care doctor after hours. In the US, of course, it's much more common to go to the
emergency room at night or on the weekend. So can you talk more about the different approaches to these two issues,
home visits and after hours care? So again, I think one thing that's striking about the Dutch
system is the degree to which it has been sort of very deliberately planned, which is a contrast to
sort of, I think, the much more haphazard way that our
healthcare system has evolved over the years. And one of the things that the Dutch did in building
a system with primary care as its foundation was to assure that patients would have a place to go
after hours. And, you know, anybody who has kids or a medical condition
or elderly parents knows that, you know, the time of the day when you're assured that, you know,
something bad is going to go wrong with your kid and they're going to have an ear infection
is, you know, at 730 at night when the doctor's office is closed. I mean, it doesn't happen on
banker's hours. Of course. And, you know, one of the things which we struggle with in this country is that it's a pain to try to get after hours medical care.
And we end up going to urgent care centers or, you know, in some cases going to the emergency room.
Nobody thinks that's the best way to deliver care.
It's not only more expensive, but it disrupts continuity between the place where you're getting care. So the Dutch said, we are going to create after hours and infrastructure for patients to get care
after hours. And so Dr. Saunders, who I wrote about in this piece, has to staff an after hours
clinic a couple days a month with other primary care physicians in the general area where she
works so that her patients can go there
after hours. You know, it's just this level of convenience and thinking about how patients
actually interact with the system that, you know, unfortunately is so often missing in our own
system. Home visits, I think, reflect that a little bit as well, although I think they're also
something of a product of the residential patterns in Netherlands,
which are different than they are in the U.S.
Of course, home visiting used to be considerably more common in this country, you know, half a century ago.
And it sort of fell out of favor as people's living patterns changed.
But I think it also it has a value beyond sort of being kind of a
throwback to, you know, another age. One thing I remember chatting with a doctor up in Boston named
Robert Masters, who pioneered a lot of thinking about better ways to deliver care to frail,
elderly, older patients in Boston. He said, you know, it changes the dynamic with the patient,
that when you are a clinician and you're visiting a patient in their home, you know, you're, you, the clinician
are the, are the visitor. And so you are sort of, you, you are in some ways deferring to what the
patient is, is, is telling you. And you, you also, as, as a clinician see the totality of a patient's
circumstances and you can see how they're living
and see what's on the kitchen table and, you know, see whether the air conditioner is working. And
that's a much more kind of constructive way of interacting with a patient, particularly one
that has a whole constellation of challenges beyond just, you know, their medical care.
And so I think it is all a piece of a system that's a lot more thoughtful about how primary care can be sort of leveraged to best address the needs of patients.
And unfortunately, we sort of lost that a lot in this country, although ironically,
there are now efforts to re-energize home visiting, if not by physicians themselves, by nurses and others who work with physicians for precisely these reasons.
It's actually making me go back pain and you're like,
okay, well, let's take a look at your mattress and there's a problem there. That's a very
different fix than, okay, let's order an MRI, right? But obviously something is going on for
the patient and the patient might not even know that the bed they're sleeping on might not be
great for their back. Exactly, exactly right. And I mean, there are financing challenges to making
home visits work in the U.S. in no small part because the costs of, you know, traveling and,
you know, you can see four patients in an hour easily as a clinician in your office.
Going to visit somebody at home probably takes an hour when you figure everything out. And
there's their issues involved with with how we pay for health care that make it challenging to
do home visiting in this country. But, you know, clearly the Dutch system puts a premium on this.
And I think that's a reason why it persists in the Dutch system
to a degree that it doesn't in the US.
Right.
Well, this has been great, Noam.
Is there anything else that you observed
or have observed in your decade of reporting
that you'd like to talk about at this point?
I don't think so.
I think we covered it.
All right. Well, thanks so much for joining me on the show. Thanks for having me. It was a pleasure talking with you.
The Dose is hosted by me, Shannur Sirvai, our sound engineer is Joshua Tallman.
We produced this show for the Commonwealth Fund with editorial support from Christine Thank you. is the dose.show. There you'll find show notes and other resources. That's it for The Dose.
Thanks for listening.