The Hastings Center Report

September - October 2010

Vol. 40, No. 5

Highlights

Editor's Podcast

This podcast player requires theAdobe Flash plug-in. You may also download the MP3 file via the podcast feed.


Subscribe

Save 20% on new subscriptions to the Hastings Center Report.
Use code HBFWEB at checkout
Health, Money, and Fear: A Documentary

Daniel Callahan

, 05/09/2008

Health, Money, and Fear: A Documentary

 Permanent link

A few months ago, I got a call from Dr. Paul Hochfeld, who told me he was an emergency room physician from Corvallis, Oregon, and he had a request. Could he come to The Hastings Center to interview as part of a documentary on health care he planned to make? I was curious to know who was financing the film and where it would appear. He said he was financing it with his own money and the help of a few friends, and he didn’t yet have a distributor.

I could hardly turn down someone with that kind of motivation. He came, interviewed me, asked me to suggest other names, and – remarkably enough – got some of the finest minds in American health care, among them Arnold S. Relman, Marcia Angell, and Stephanie Woolhandler. The film is now finished, and it is terrific.

The main theme of the documentary is health care costs. I have come to think the issue of cost control is just as important, even more important, than universal care, but it gets less attention, makes politicians more nervous and even more fuzzy than usual, and is one of the main reasons the number of uninsured is increasing. The film is built around some basic questions about costs, and it proceeds in a masterly was to answer them. Those interviewed come from a variety of medical and health policy backgrounds, and their comments are skillfully woven together. I find it hard to argue against his view that our system is focused more on money than on health and is driven largely by fear.

Dr. Hochfeld is now trying to find a distributor, ideally a public broadcasting station. I have a son who is a movie director, and I have seen him struggle to get his films distributed. I can readily empathize with anyone going through that wrenching process. It is exceedingly hard, for documentaries as well as for movies. Dr. Hochfeld’s documentary is as good as any I have ever seen, including some made during the Clinton era in the mid-90s, when (for the nth time) a reform effort was under way.

For readers of this space, however, there is some good news. Dr. Hochfeld is willing to send a copy of the film on DVD to anyone who writes to him. The offer is not to be passed up, particularly for readers who might use it in a class or discussion group or maybe even tout it to a local PBS station. He can be reached at: phochfeld@msn.com. More information and a trailer can be found at www.ourailinghealthcare.com.

 

Readers respond

I would like to thank Dan for plugging my video. To elaborate on his kind comments, I would say my audience is the educated voter. My goal is to motivate them to contact, inform, and pressure their elected representatives in Washington. Surprisingly, our Lawmakers would actually rather hear from us than from the lobbyists. To succeed, we must make more noise than those full-time professionals, employed by those who profit from status quo. My target is the political process which is the barrier to substantive reform. I think there are many of us who share the vision of a health care system that is more about health and less about money and fear.

- Paul Hochfeld
www.ourailinghealthcare.com

Posted by Michael Turton at 05/09/2008 12:00:00 AM | 


Comments
I was a lucky local Corvallis person who got to see the first versions of Dr. Hochfeld's film. What was most striking was that the participants were physicians who were warning about the costs and the unethical decisions they are forced to make because of a greedy legal system and health care for profit industry. Go to Dr. Hochfelds website and see for yourself. It will shock you. Then write letters. Send emails. Your congressional representatives need to know that health care for profit is unethical. Doctors hate it. Their patients suffer needlessly from it.

-Don Poole
Posted by: oldstuff@cmug.com ( Email ) at 11/25/2008 4:40 PM


The Bioethics Forum is made possible by Supporting Members of The Hastings Center. Please give today.
Connect with the Forum

RSS feed