21st January 2008

Laws of Unintended Consequences

posted in Current Affairs, Deaf, Hearing Loss, Money, Technology, ubiduo |

The Case of the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker

A few months ago, a prospective patient called the office of Andrew Brooks, a top-ranked orthopedic surgeon in Los Angeles. She was having serious knee trouble, and she was also deaf. She wanted to know if her deafness posed a problem for Brooks. He had his assistant relay a message: no, of course not; he could easily discuss her situation using knee models, anatomical charts and written notes.

The woman later called again to say she would rather have a sign-language interpreter. Fine, Brooks said, and asked his assistant to make the arrangements. As it turned out, an interpreter would cost $120 an hour, with a two-hour minimum, and the expense wasn’t covered by insurance. Brooks didn’t think it made sense for him to pay. That would mean laying out $240 to conduct an exam for which the woman’s insurance company would pay him $58 — a loss of more than $180 even before accounting for taxes and overhead.

So Brooks suggested to the patient that they make do without the interpreter. That’s when she told him that the Americans With Disabilities Act (A.D.A.) allowed a patient to choose the mode of interpretation, at the physician’s expense. Brooks, flabbergasted, researched the law and found that he was indeed obliged to do as the patient asked — unless, that is, he wanted to invite a lawsuit that he would probably lose.

If he ultimately operated on the woman’s knee, Brooks would be paid roughly $1,200. But he would also then need to see her for eight follow-up visits, presumably with the $240 interpreter each time. By the end of the patient’s treatment, Brooks would be solidly in the red.

He went ahead and examined the woman, paying the interpreter out of his pocket. As it turned out, she didn’t need surgery; her knee could be treated through physical therapy. This was a fortunate outcome for everyone involved — except, perhaps, for the physical therapist who would have to pay the interpreter’s bills.

Brooks told several colleagues and doctor friends about his deaf patient. “They all said, ‘If I ever get a call from someone like that, I’ll never see her,’ ” he says. This led him to wonder if the A.D.A. had a dark side. “It’s got to be widely pervasive and probably not talked about, because doctors are just getting squeezed further and further. This kind of patient will end up getting passed on and passed on, getting the runaround, not understanding why she’s not getting good care.”

So does the A.D.A. in some cases hurt the very patients it is intended to help? That’s a hard question to answer with the available medical data. But the economists Daron Acemoglu and Joshua Angrist once asked a similar question: How did the A.D.A. affect employment among the disabled?

Their conclusion was rather startling and makes Andrew Brooks’s hunch ring true. Acemoglu and Angrist found that when the A.D.A. was enacted in 1992, it led to a sharp drop in the employment of disabled workers. How could this be? Employers, concerned that they wouldn’t be able to discipline or fire disabled workers who happened to be incompetent, apparently avoided hiring them in the first place.

Of course, if they had a UbiDuo, none of this would be a problem anymore!

There are currently 6 responses to “Laws of Unintended Consequences”

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  1. 1 On January 22nd, 2008, RLM said:

    This patient has the right to refuse the note pad communication so this Ubi Duo gizmo would be pointless!

  2. 2 On January 22nd, 2008, jsg said:

    I don’t think you fully understand the article. She refuses the pen and pad method. She demanded a sign language interpreter. Easy to say that because she doesn’t have to pay for the interpreter, the doctor does.

    She was lucky that this doctor was willing to treat her while losing money.

    However many other doctors will certainly exercise his/her rights to do whatever is necessary to stay in business! And if that means not seeing deaf patients that demands sign language interpreter, so be it.
    Good luck proving medical discrimination.

    This was not the INTENTION of the ADA law. But this is the CONSEQUENCES of the ADA law.

    So either you can complain about it and get sicker or suck it up and see the doctor without an interpreter.

  3. 3 On January 22nd, 2008, Dianrez said:

    The doctor is able to get a tax credit, if my information is right, so that he does not lose any money by seeing deaf patients. This is not well understood, and we are seeing deaf people turned down by lawyers and doctors now.

    Yes, there is a dark side to the ADA and this is not discussed enough in Congress or by the NAD. We need to get t6hem moving on exploring this.

  4. 4 On January 22nd, 2008, jsg said:

    I’m not an accountant so it would be great if an accountant can step in and fill in the blanks what the doctor can do to recoup the cost. And does the doctor FULLY recoup the cost or PARTIALLY recoup the cost?

    But maybe the doctors do not know they can get tax credits. Or maybe the doctors know that there’s tax credit but it doesn’t fully recoup the cost. Or maybe the doctors know about the tax credits but it’s a bookkeeping hassle.

    So no deaf patients = no hassles.

    We can talk about the problem or we can come up with solutions. The UbiDuo should be considered as part of the solution. A VRI can also be a solution, if feasible.

  5. 5 On January 24th, 2008, California Advocate said:

    Yes, it is true that doctors, lawyers, accountants and many other public services often end up paying more for the communication accommodation than they earn in fees from the appointment. However, the Dept of Justice (DOJ) has determined that the undue burden definition requires looking at the total YEARLY income of the service provider versus the cost of providing a communication accommodation a few times per year. When looked at from that perspective the TOTAL cost of providing the accommodations is usually not that large. And, as pointed out by other commenters, the IRS provides both a tax credit and a tax deduction for the costs of providing accommodations each year.
    The accommodation needs of deaf and hard of hearing consumers are unique compared with most other disabilities because they are an ongoing cost. Most disability accommodations involve physical alterations to buildings and facilities and once completed do not have to be paid for again. Interpreters and CART accommodations have to be paid over and over. That is one aspect that was not fully considered by Congress when writing the ADA. It would be great if the IRS would allow a greater tax credit for the costs of accommodations!

  6. 6 On January 24th, 2008, California Advocate said:

    The flip side of the coin here is that while doctors and lawyers are among the highest wage earners in the US they are also the most vociferous in resisting providing requested communication accommodations!

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