From Voice ~ Topics: information design, Medicare

Design Is the Cure for Medicare’s Ailments

Since I’m years away from collecting on Medicare, I tuned out during the recent discussions about the system. Then, last spring, my father took a bad fall that landed him in the hospital. Despite having Medicare and a good secondary insurance policy, his survival depended on my ability to quickly learn how to navigate Medicare’s convoluted structure and decipher its hidden codes. As a designer who creates user-friendly brand and communication programs, I found it necessary to envision solutions to the seemingly endless problems that plague this confusion-riddled, fraud-laden, money-squandering monolith.

The paper chase

As my father was air-lifted to the hospital, my 80-year-old mother, overwhelmed by the swiftness of events, had to immediately produce a Health Directive, Living Will, Power of Attorney, Medicare Number, Secondary Health Insurance Policy and Prescription Drug Card. These are discrete documents, which all come in different formats and are produced and distributed at different times. Even if you have them, finding the latest version can be a challenge. Imagine if you had to provide a bank balance, credit history, utility bill and birth certificate every time you made a credit card purchase! The wasteful and labor-intensive process of generating and collating the same information repeatedly became a recurring theme throughout the year ahead.

The problem begins with language

Although Medicare and Medicaid sound quite similar, they couldn’t be more different. “Medicare” is health care insurance (similar to what most of us under 65 pay for privately) while “Medicaid” is healthcare for the poor—in many cases long term nursing care. Then there is “Medicare Part A” (hospitalization and nursing facilities), and “Medicare Part B” (doctors services and tests). Most of the terminology obscures rather than conveys meaning. Not only is it difficult to understand, but the rules and criteria for benefits are constantly changing.

“Acute” or “Sub-acute” are designations for the kind of facility one may be eligible for based on your medical condition. In translation, “acute” means “hospital” and “sub-acute” means “nursing home.” (No one actually explains this.)

Social Workers are assigned to each patient. According to the US Department of Labor website, social workers “provide persons, families, or vulnerable populations with the psychosocial support needed to cope with chronic, acute, or terminal illnesses?” After several interactions I realized that “social workers” are actually government watchdogs—making sure you don’t overstay your allotted days in any given facility.

Un
friendly user information

Medicare is a bit like cottage cheese—it has built-in expiration dates. Except with Medicare, none of the expiration dates were clearly visible and the criteria for reaching one never clearly explained. After thirty days at the hospital, the “social worker” provided us with a barely legible list of “sub-acute” rehabilitation facilities, and informed us that my father had to be discharged the very next day. To learn more, I went to Medicare.gov, where the primary elaboration was a list of violations for each facility (for example, “percent of high-risk residents who have pressure sores (13 percent national average!)”, percent of residents who are more depressed or anxious (15 percent national average”). I got depressed just reading the criteria! In lieu of usable information, I resorted to old-fashioned networking to determine where my father went next.

The scariest failure I encountered with Medicare was the absence of systems to ensure continuity in the exchange of information, which meant there was no continuity in my father’s care. Reams of paper describing his cerebral hemorrhage (bleeding of the brain), bradycardia (irregular heartbeat), pharyngeal dysphasia (difficulty swallowing), hypothermia (low body temp), and anemia (low white blood count) were faxed to his new facility, but unfortunately, his doctors didn’t make the trip. As a result, twelve days later he was back in the hospital suffering from a recurring infection that—without the proper translation—looked like a stroke.

Astonishingly, the hospital had no record of him and assigned all new doctors, none of who seemed to be aware of the 20 medications he was taking. All I could think about was how Amazon welcomes me by name and suggests new books I might like. How is it that the healthcare system has no central database for the various medical professionals who encounter a patient? After all, my summer reading list is not a matter of life and death—but the medical treatment I receive often is.

Paperwork overdose

My mother began to get pounds of paper from Medicare. And pounds more from the secondary insurance company, not to mention individual bills from cardiologists, anesthesiologists, oncologists, radiologists, psychologists, urologists, helicopters, ambulances and hospitals. They contained page after page of doctors exams and procedures: electrocardiograms, echo exams, Doppler echo exams, Doppler color flow ad-ons, chest/neck/spine X-rays, chest/abdomen/pelvis CT scans, ECGs, airway inserts and mileage! A quick scan of the individual costs was frightening. $980, $692, $575, $331, $133. $468, $107, $214, $107, $214, $107, $214, $307, $214, $107, $321, $107, $107, $107, $468, $75, $110, $75, $600.87, $296, $91, $91, $91, $91, $91, $75, $75, $75, $75, $91, $75, $75, $75, $456, $400, $200, $148, $2134, $653, $653, $425, $360. These were all on the first statement!

Medicare, the insurance companies, and the doctors all have different computer programs and formats, making cross-referencing bills and payment nearly impossible. The secondary insurance company pays its portion once Medicare has paid. Despite Medicare’s approval we began to get “scare letters” from the secondary insurer saying they’d deny the claim unless they received certain information. How could this be? It turns out that the insurance company’s computer system accommodates fewer characters per line, so half the information drops off when Medicare passes on the claim. The doctor then had to resubmit the same information all over again.

Perhaps most shocking revelation was that Medicare pays a fraction of the costs. A $692.00 bill for 5 x-rays? Medicare paid the provider $112.51. A $60.00 electrocardiogram report? Medicare paid the provider $7.76. How can the hospitals and doctors survive when their fees and expenses are so highly discounted?

Federal guidelines allow for a 30-day “hold” to process each bill, so payment can often take 60–90 days. Then add another step for the secondary insurer’s payment. After months of waiting, the patient’s balance is typically quite small, making it hardly worth the effort to bill it, let alone pay it. Now consider that most of these bills are being sent to senior citizens, often not in the best of health (not to mention chronic short term memory loss). Also consider that most of these seniors are part of the World War II generation, who pride themselves on paying their bills quickly. I would suspect many of them are overpaying, ashamed to let a bill sit “unpaid” for 90 days.

The cure

Information is useless unless it’s been collated, edited and packaged for easily access and understanding. The FDA has done a beautiful job of creating standards for the labeling of the food we buy, and the SEC has done it with simplified language in prospectuses. From creating a universal format for information sharing, to establishing consistent software programming, to employing “smart” information systems, to cleaning up the language, the knowledge and the technology exist to make a better Medicare, not to mention a more cost effective one. Employing them is not only crucial for the survival of the system; it’s essential for the survival of everyone who depends upon it.

My father is currently in a fourth rehabilitation facility. Miraculously his mind is working better than ever, though he still cannot walk. Much of this is attributed to lying in bed for months without physical exercise. His rehabilitation benefits from both Medicare and his secondary insurer have run out, yet he is not well enough to return home or poor enough to qualify for “Medicaid.” And the bills continue to arrive.

About the Author: Leslie Smolan and her company Carbone Smolan Agency are information designers who have tackled many complicated communication issues, including demystifying mutual funds for investors, making children's textbooks and learning fun, and orchestrating the movement of millions of visitors through the Louvre museum.

  1. link to this comment by Rian Murnen Wed Oct 19, 2005

    Thank you L. Smolan for the thoughtful article and for sharing your experience.

    Now ? Dear AIGA,

    Forgive me while I invoke the First Things First Manifesto, but this seems like a prime example of “?pursuits more worthy of our problem-solving skills.”

    How about an AIGA Initiative.

    The AIGA has a huge base of knowledgeable and skilled members. Why not form a Medical Standards Taskforce. The taskforce would lobby the FDA and the U.S. Congress for change, but also offer to come along side and partner to redesign the systems of communication.

    Would it take time? Yes. Would it take charismatic designers that can navigate the politics of large companies? Yes. Would it belong in a history book as a phenomenal effort that improved the life of an enormous numbered of people? Yes.

    Apparently I haven't grown out of my youthful idealism quite yet, but what designer really ever does.

  2. link to this comment by Rhonda Ostrowsky Mon Oct 24, 2005

    I read in horror, but not disbelief, as Ms. Smolan described her families ordeal with the government and insurance companies. I,too, have turned a deaf ear to the stories of similar systematic red tape.My punishment will be the enviable fate that I will be drawn into the same quagmire, more sooner than later.

    This story represents the type of design that I never thought of as I prepared for the job market. But obviously, is shouting for reform. As the baby boomers reach that stage of life as to need the government insurance system to work for them, the bottlenecking in the health care system will only get worse.

    Yes, we need to act as a group, to scream louder and crack the government shell to get any reform. Because nothing will change. It will only get worse with the increase in the elderly population and the economy”s belt tightening.

    Why can’ t we, the designing professionals, be contracted to organize and use our skills to make the informational forms user friendly? That is what we were trained to do. Unfortunately or fortunately, streamlining the system would eliminate some government jobs, not increase the payrolls.

    I will no longer avoid the articles and discussions about the Medicare system. The consequences are too frightening.

  3. link to this comment by Anonymous Thu Nov 03, 2005

    Sorry to be anonymous with this post, but I'm not 100% sure I can personally divulge very much info so I'll try to be as vague as possible while making my points.

    Recently, I worked on some documentation for my state-level information services party for Medicare. They hired a great agency/studio to handle the design of the documentation. Unfortunately, the client-supplied content was always changing and differing. I hate to say it, but it's your typical client nightmare of not having their ducks in a row and constant last minute changes.

    The call for good design for Medicare (and related parties) is not lost on deaf ears, they simply lack the follow-through.

  4. link to this comment by Wes Ervin Mon Nov 21, 2005

    I am delighted to see that some designers are waking up to the need for information design in healthcare communications. However, the situation isn't as neglected as you seem to think. There already is an organization, The Healthcare Communications Forum, which is devoted to exactly these problems. We had our inaugural conference in Boston in September, 2005, attended by speakers and participants from the US, Europe, and the Far East. One of the sessions was devoted to the issue of patient communications in the aftermath of serious diagnosis. We will have our next annual conference in Minneapolis in September, 2006. The International Institute of Information Design is one of our sponsors. We would be happy to see AIGA get involved.

  5. link to this comment by Blue Cross of California Wed Dec 14, 2005

    Medicare is a great form of health insurance for many individuals and there is no way it should be cut off as health coverage is a major importance to many.

  6. link to this comment by Rue Anne Sat Sep 02, 2006

    Pounds and pounds of paper...oh, that is so on the money. As a CareManager/Nursing Home Administrator, I have surfed for hours looking for some possible solutions for our seniors...have you come up with anything or another website that I might check? Just want to acknowledge this author for her clarity and interest. This problem is something I have been telling my patients for years....now you need a personal secretary!!!

  7. link to this comment by Keeper of the Birds Wed Oct 18, 2006

    I totally understand how you must have felt attempting to deal with this matter. I am currently on Medicare and Medicaid, as I have been disabled for over 16 years now. So I have been dealing with this system for way to long, in my humble opinion.

    I wish I could offer you some encouragement on this front, but not even getting Medicaid is going to help. With the new law changes instituted by our president, the system is even more befuddling than before. With the new Drug program that was supposed to help the elderly and disabled; in actuality it hurt more of us than it helped. And complicated things even more than they were before. Under the new system if Medicare won't pay for it then Medicaid won't either.

    Majority of these problems, unfortunately, stem from our government. They seem to like keeping this system in a choatic state. I am wondering why, myself. Elsewhere in the government, this would not be tolerated. I could talk with the president of the country before I can resolve an issue with Medicare.

    This truly is a sad state of affairs. They get by with it since not too many of us have what it takes to keep fighting this system. Until more people are aware of what is truly going on and not going on with it, I know this will continue. So many think it does not apply to me yet, so why bother?

    I am currently going to school for graphic design in hopes that one day I can get off of this system, at least for now.

    Good luck with this and hang in there. I know how frustrating it can be.

  8. link to this comment by tliran Mon Mar 19, 2007

    I am currently a student at Pratt Institute and in the process of choosing my thesis and what I want to spend the next and last year of my masters degree on. I was thinking to research Medical Packaging and find this article interesting. Can anyone turn me in the right directions as to where I might find more information on this? Part of my thesis will be to solve a communications problem/issue graphically. I am a packaging major and need to concentrate on packaging. If anyone has any good ideas and/or suggestions, please feel free to email me at tlirandesign@yahoo.com. Thanks.

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