Dan Connors's Reviews > Code Blue: Inside America's Medical Industrial Complex

Code Blue by Mike Magee
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As one who has luckily avoided the medical industrial complex for the most part, I still wonder how we got where we are with American health care, and why it's considered one of the worst systems in the world while also being the most expensive.

Dr. Magee is an expert in his field, and he showcases his experience at Pfizer during the Viagra gold rush. If you've been paying attention the past 20 years, you will recognize the names and changes that have made our system both dysfunctional and excellent, depending on luck and circumstances.

The medical industrial complex, as Dr. Magee calls it, consists of medical professionals, insurance companies, hospitals, big pharma, government and universities, all of whom collude with each other to protect their turf and maximize profitability.

The book dives into some of the history of how we got here, and how groups like the American Medical Association, Food and Drug Administration, Medicare, and the employer based health insurance system got their starts. One thing I didn't know was that after World War II, when the American government was helping rebuild Germany and Japan, they helped both countries establish public health insurance, while at the same time squashing it here at home as "socialized medicine." Presidents as diverse as Harry Truman, Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama all tried to establish some sort of government health insurance like has emerged in all other industrialized countries, only to be beaten back by the medical industrial complex every time.

What's always puzzled me is how what we now know as Obamacare was actually dreamed up by the Republican party decades earlier. Now that same party is trying to destroy the Affordable Care Act with no clear alternatives being discussed.
More points brought up in the book:

- Advocacy groups like the American Cancer Society are funded by industry and more geared to heroic cures than to prevention.
- The people who monitor and evaluate hospitals are not independent. Hospitals can be very secretive about their prices and their accidental death rate (which has been going up according to the book.)
- Drugs for ADHD (ritalin and adderal) and Pain (opiods) are recommended by doctors and commercials way too much for minor conditions, with the result that the profit motive trumps sound healthcare. The author warns that all drug advertising and free samples to doctors should be stopped.
- Universities and researchers are beholden to the MIC, and have been known to stretch ethical boundaries with tests on human subjects and fudging their data to get the right result.
- Enormous amounts of health care dollars are spent on bureaucracy. For every physician there are 16 workers in the system, half of which add no clinical value at all.
- In order to pass health care reform, Obama had to agree not to negotiate drug prices or allow imports, leading to the scenario today where drugs in the US are often 10 times as expensive as the same drug in other countries.

The final chapter of the book lists reforms that the author thinks would help the health care system catch up to the rest of the world (where he claims we are number 50 of 55 comparable countries in overall health.) The big reform, which has been discussed by many, would be some kind of single payer, government based healthcare that would eliminate the middlemen and rein in the profiteers.
After watching this debate for most of my life, I'm not too hopeful because the current system is so entrenched, but I highly recommend this book to those in the healthcare field and those who use the system regularly.
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Reading Progress

June 9, 2019 – Shelved
June 9, 2019 – Shelved as: to-read
August 2, 2019 – Started Reading
August 2, 2019 – Shelved as: 2019-books
August 16, 2019 – Finished Reading

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Esha C Great and thorough review! I like your summarizing points


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