OPINION

When Universal Health Care isn’t enough

The immune system does not operate in isolation: it is tightly linked to endocrine regulation, metabolism, gut integrity and infection defense.

Dr. Jaemin Park

Universal Health Care (UHC) is often discussed in terms of access: access to doctors, medicines, hospitals and financial protection. But as countries expand coverage, a harder question emerges — what happens when care is abundant, but outcomes keep worsening?

This dilemma is especially visible in complex autoimmune and immune-mediated diseases, where patients may deteriorate despite years of treatment, multiple specialist opinions, and escalating costs. In such cases, the challenge is no longer just access — it is how health systems manage uncertainty, coordination and restraint.

Conditions such as lupus, vasculitis, and other immune-mediated illnesses disproportionately affect women, frequently during their most economically productive years. Philippine media and policy discussions have periodically highlighted the burden of lupus and related conditions, including proposals for national health programs and regional accounts of patients navigating fragmented care outside major urban centers.

These reports point to a broader reality: autoimmune disease is not rare, but it is often poorly understood, diagnostically uncertain and difficult to manage within systems built around single-organ care.

It is also established that autoimmune diseases can cluster. Medical literature describes polyautoimmunity, where a single individual develops multiple immune-mediated conditions driven by shared genetic and immunologic pathways.

Having two or three autoimmune diagnoses is not unusual; having more is uncommon but documented. What is often less clear — both to patients and the public — is that many of these diagnoses overlap clinically, biologically and therapeutically.

In practice, experienced clinicians frequently find that what appears to be many separate diseases may reflect a smaller number of dominant immune processes, combined with downstream complications and treatment effects.

This distinction matters, because complex autoimmune disease rarely follows textbook rules. Symptoms span multiple organ systems. Laboratory markers fluctuate. Diagnoses evolve over time. Responses to therapy are inconsistent. Faced with this uncertainty, modern medicine tends to default to escalation. New diagnoses are added as symptoms persist. Treatments are layered when earlier ones fail. Immunosuppression is intensified to avoid the risk of undertreatment.

Over time, however, disease and treatment can become difficult to disentangle. The immune system does not operate in isolation: it is tightly linked to endocrine regulation, metabolism, gut integrity and infection defense.

Prolonged aggressive therapy — particularly overlapping steroids, biologics and immunosuppressants — can destabilize this balance. Infections may resemble autoimmune flares. Medication side effects may mimic systemic disease. Malnutrition and hormonal suppression can compound fatigue, weakness and weight loss.

At a certain point, worsening physiology may reflect not only immune activity, but the cumulative burden of treatment itself.

This does not mean the original diagnoses were wrong, nor does it imply that care was inappropriate. It reflects a known challenge in tertiary medicine: when uncertainty persists, escalation can become self-reinforcing.

Yet many health systems struggle to recognize this inflection point because they are designed to reward action rather than reassessment. Medicine is trained to intervene; financing systems are trained to pay for interventions. Few are designed to support stopping, consolidating, and rebuilding a case from first principles when escalation no longer produces clarity.

Health system design therefore becomes decisive. In highly specialized systems such as in the United States, patients with complex autoimmune disease have access to unparalleled expertise and advanced therapies. But care is fragmented by design. Specialists focus on organs rather than whole patients, authority is diffuse and escalation is easy.

A comprehensive diagnostic and therapeutic reset — where prior assumptions are revisited and treatment burden is critically reviewed — often depends on a single senior clinician asserting integrative leadership. Without that, the system’s default response is to continue adding care.

The Philippine health system presents a different set of trade-offs. Continuity of care and long doctor–patient relationships are real strengths. However, institutional mechanisms for structured multidisciplinary reassessment remain limited, particularly when care spans multiple hospitals or countries. Once complex diagnoses are established, especially abroad, they can be difficult to formally revisit, even when individual physicians sense that the clinical picture has become increasingly hard to interpret.

Other systems, including Singapore’s, organize care differently. Singapore’s public health system is historically influenced by UK and Commonwealth models, with a stronger emphasis on general internal medicine, primary care continuity and senior clinician oversight across specialties.

This structure can make it easier to coordinate multidisciplinary input, pause escalation and revisit assumptions when uncertainty persists. Importantly, this does not guarantee better outcomes, particularly in cases constrained by severe disease biology or limited therapeutic options. Rather, it affects how complexity is managed — how decisions are integrated, how treatment burden is reviewed and how patient safety is maintained when medicine reaches its limits. These are differences in process, not superiority in results.

These differences matter profoundly for Universal Health Care. UHC succeeds at protecting people from financial catastrophe, but access without coordination can quietly enable harm.

Financing systems readily pay for tests, drugs and procedures; they rarely pay for the time, senior judgment and institutional effort required to reassess diagnoses, simplify regimens and decide not to intervene. As a result, UHC risks funding more care without better outcomes, particularly for patients with complex chronic disease.

If UHC is to meet its promise, it must invest not only in coverage but in capabilities that prevent escalation from becoming harm:

1. Senior generalist leadership, with authority for experienced internal medicine physicians to act as accountable clinical “quarterbacks” across specialties.

2. Multidisciplinary case review structures that are funded and expected to reassess diagnoses, not just add treatments.

3. Incentives for diagnostic reassessment and de-escalation, recognizing deprescribing and simplification as patient-safety interventions.

4. Systems that reward stopping when stopping is safer, protecting clinicians who pause or withdraw treatment when continued escalation risks harm

Without these elements, universal coverage can unintentionally perpetuate escalation under uncertainty. With them, it becomes a framework for care that is not only broader but safer, smarter, and more humane.

In medicine marked by prolonged uncertainty, restraint is not neglect. It is often the most difficult — and most responsible — form of care when uncertainty persists despite best efforts.