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Glad to see that in this piece CNN Money made a point to say that a diagnosis of Sleep Apnea is a legitimate medical diagnosis: http://moneyfeatures.blogs.money.cnn.com/2009/07/25/are-mds-diagnos...

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People who are compliant with Cpap therapy are less likely to develop heart disease, diabetes, stroke, and a host of other more expensive to treat conditions. In a recent Guest Author peice in my blog, My brother say's "The good news is that many of these risk factors can be reduced or eliminated by early diagnosis and treatment of obstructive sleep apnea." ( http://cpapcritic.com ) and he is right! Early detection,and treatment of sleep apnea, are proactive ways of saving healthcare dollars. Sites like this one, not only help to make cpap therapy a bit easier, they help spread awareness.
i think they make a good point when they talk about over diagnosing and testing pts driving up the cost. I also think that we need to look at the lawyer's, and insurance companies roles in this process. medical malpractice premiums in some states has gone as high as $200,000. While insurance companies are still paying for older more expensive treatments rather than newer ones. It is the entire system that is driving cost up. i do not believe that we can put the blame on anyone or any area of the medical field.
I think it is kind of funny how the media keeps bringing us news like this as if they were not in a position to do something about it.
A good change would be trying to reward/compensate on patient outcome rather than per test/visit.
From what I have heard insurance companies are starting to do this on their own. they are going to start compensating doctors on successful treatments. A doc with a poor record might be under scrutiny from certain providers. just here say though. i have no way to validate the info.

Eric Thayer said:
A good change would be trying to reward/compensate on patient outcome rather than per test/visit.
Ouch! That COULD be hard on doctors who treat a lot of chronic health conditions! Or those who treat a lot of terminal illnesses.
I would hope that they would take the severity of the initial condition or the general patient outcome profile into account too.

Judy said:
Ouch! That COULD be hard on doctors who treat a lot of chronic health conditions! Or those who treat a lot of terminal illnesses.

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