Posts Tagged ‘Quality Care’

If You Had to Fix Just One Thing

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

In my post yesterday about lessons we can learn from Israel’s health care system I wrote:

So, yes, the focus on health insurance reform will lead to many changes, and more complexity.  And some day, years from now, someone will be explaining the American system to an audience, and people will wonder, how did anyone ever create a system such as this?

In response, a friend of mine challenged me:  if the system is too complicated, how should we simplify it?

I wish more policy-makers were asking this question.

For me, the answer is clear: Primary care.  Time was, your primary care doctor was able to serve as the hub of your medical activity.  He or she could spend all the time needed to figure out what was wrong and to coordinate with your specialists.  It’s not true anymore.  Patients are left on their own trying to navigate the system.  In many ways they end up acting  almost as their own primary care doctors.  Patients try to pick their specialists, find out what to do about their condition, decide on good treatment choices.

It’s a problem that is well reflected in data collected by Best Doctors from people calling for help with that process.  Here’s our latest data on why people call:

Primary Reason for Call

Need help deciding among treatments          46%

Symptoms not improving                                   27%

Don’t understand diagnosis                              20%

Skeptical of doctor                                                 8%

It tells quite a striking story.  Patients, on their own, end up struggling with some very fundamental questions.  You could say that their primary care doctors should resolve these questions.  But with typical primary care doctors carrying as many as 5,000 patients and spending 15 minutes or less in each visit, it shouldn’t be surprising that they can’t.

What’s worse is what happens in this environment.  Studies – and Best Doctors data – show that 15% or more of patients end up with the wrong diagnosis, and more than half end up making the wrong treatment decisions.  The biggest reason?  The cognitive errors that happen when you try to make complicated decisions with fragmented information and insufficient time.   We estimate that, on average, each time you fix one of these problems you save about $20,000.  But sometimes it’s much, much more than that – and I’m talking about more than just money.

You don’t have to believe me, though.  An increasingly significant body of research shows that focusing resources on primary care is the best way to address the fundamental cost and quality problems we face in health care.  Reformers still aren’t getting it.  Pay more money for primary care?  The conventional wisdom says that doctors who say this are just trying to make more money for less work.  Really?  If a primary care doctor spends more time with his patients, he can do a better job figuring out the patient’s diagnosis, guiding them to the right treatment choices, and helping them, as a human being, cope with the difficulties of being sick.

So, if I had to pick just one thing to fix in our health care system, it would be this.  Focus on making primary care the fundamental basis for the system.  I think it is clear that it would save substantial amounts of money and lead to higher quality medical care.  But it would do more than this.  As Dr. Robert Centor said recently:

Patients need physicians who spend time with them. Patients need physicians who sit down, look them in the eye and talk. Patients need honesty and empathy.

He’s right.  Any health care system, or health care reform, that doesn’t create a stronger doctor-patient relationship, is failing.

Questions Are the Answer

Monday, October 12th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Last night, I saw a commercial produced by the federal government.  Called “Questions are the Answer,” it’s a call for patients to be engaged in their medical care, to ask questions of their doctors in order to be sure of their medical condition.

The commercial was excellent – it showed a man asking dozens of increasingly arcane questions about a cell phone he was thinking of buying.  Then, it showed him in his doctor’s office, apparently after getting a diagnosis.  “Do you have any questions?” the doctor asks.  “Nope,” says the man.

The government agency that produced the commercial is the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.  There are a series of other videos and tools that can help you be a better, more informed consumer if you get sick.

The only catch:  it’s almost impossible to find any of this great material.  The front page of their web site – if you should somehow manage to find it – is an enormous list of bullets and subcategories.  There’s a good consumer-oriented video on the right side (featuring Fran Drescher), but the screen is quite literally smaller than a postage stamp.

Those excellent TV ads?  Hidden several clicks away from the front page.  And what’s worse, you can’t embed or share them, they seem to only be available to watch locally.  In other words, all this good work is going to waste.  From a social media perspective, this most effective part of AHRQ’s web site pretty much doesn’t exist.  I noted this back in May, and it’s unchanged since then.

But the AHRQ should know: it’s never too late to get involved in social media.  Please, re-think your web site and get a social media strategy.  It’s never to late to get this important message out there.

Don’t Get Sick

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Some people are upset or wringing their hands about this bufoonish speech by little-known representative Alan Grayson from Florida.  All of them – including Grayson – are taking themselves way too seriously.

And they – like reformers and their opponents – are missing what’s important in health care.  They’re all fixated – as they have been from the beginning – on who pays for health care, and how.  It’s a problem that long pre-dates this latest reform effort.  Its impact was well documented in Atul Gawande’s (thoroughly misunderstood) article in the New Yorker.

Gawande showed how our fixation in America on money — rather than medicine — was creating the very problems we are trying to solve.  Money has become the central organizing principle of our system and efforts to reform it.  And so as reformers focus on ever more clever ways to pay for medical care, they continue to systematically undervalue everything that makes for high quality medicine. Things like time with your patient, thinking about his or her problems, consulting with colleagues, and coming up with sound advice.

So the focus on a “public plan” or the arcana of insurance underwriting completely misses the mark.

Your care may be paid for by a private insurer or a public one.  Your coverage may be called a “Cadillac” plan or a high deductible plan.  You may be uninsured.  But there are some things that will be virtually certain if you get sick regardless of who and pays for your care and how:

The majority of your medical visits are going to feature face-to-face contact with your doctor of 15 minutes or less.  Your care is going to be fragmented, with information about you stored in paper files, electronic records, and the memories of the doctors you have seen.   You’re going to be on your own, facing important decisions, with too few places to turn to for help.

It’s bad, and in my experience, almost everyone I talk to on this subject has some personal experience with health care that looks just like this.

What’s even more troubling is what happens to many of them.

Studies show that 15% or more of patients have their diagnosis missed, delayed or wrong. Others have found that the biggest driver of this poor quality are the cognitive errors that happen when you make complicated decisions with fragmented information and restricted time.  Our own data at Best Doctors show that more than half of patients end up with the wrong treatment.

It’s not clear if the current effort to focus on money over medicine will succeed or not.  But for those who have become engaged in health care because of it, there is an opportunity to lead a renewal of thinking about health care in America.  We need to refocus on what is really important when you’re sick.  That your doctor is able to spend the time with you that you need.  That he or she is able to think about you, answer your questions, help you understand your condition.  That you are sure you have the right diagnosis and treatment, and the best chance to get well.

UPDATE: Dr. Bob Centor, who does some of the best blogging on this kind of ‘re-thinking’ of health care has a post up on this point that’s well worth reading.

How a Harvard Hospital Improves Patient Safety

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Patient safety is another way to look at health care quality.

Some hospitals are doing meaningful things to improve both patient safety and the quality of care.   Over at the Better Health blog, Dr. Val Jones has put together a terrific three-part video series with Paul Levy, President and CEO of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

The Harvard-affiliated BI Deaconess is one of the leading hospitals in the country.  And Paul Levy is one of the leading-edge innovators in the use of social media through his blog and active twitter use.  Dr. Val has managed to capture that unique combination in the work done by the BI Deaconess in her videos.

There are three videos.  One is about how BI keeps patients aware of their safety record, and another talks about how patients can keep in touch with friends and family while they are in the hospital.

The one I liked the best is about how patients can have a better hospital experience by keeping themselves informed.  You can watch that below.

The work hospitals are doing to improve question of patient safety is something we should hear more about.  Kudos to Val for helping people see this in action.

In the News

Monday, September 28th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

If you were watching New England Cable News on Friday, their top business news story was on how EMC deals with the problem of health care costs.  A big part of the story was Best Doctors.

You can see the story below.  I’m in it in a couple of spots:

I’ve written about EMC previously here.

Also last week, BLR posted a free whitepaper on trends in benefits and compensation.  It, too, included Best Doctors and Delia Vetter, Senior Director of Benefits for EMC.

Real People, Real Reform, Continued: Safety National

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

SAFETYNAT_RGB_TAGBy Evan Falchuk

Imagine there were a parallel health care system.

In this system, everyone has to be covered.  There are strict controls on how much insurers and providers can charge.  And there are strict limits to make sure doctors do only those tests and treatments that are medically appropriate.

Nothing like that could really exist in America, could it?  Actually, it has for the last 100 years.  It’s called workers’ compensation, and it’s the health care system Americans who have been injured on the job experience every day.

Does it work?

(more…)

Real People, Real Reform, Continued: J.B. Hunt

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

jbhuntBy Evan Falchuk

Want to know why big health reform plans are going badly?

Not enough attention is being paid to people doing real, meaningful things to improve the cost and quality of health care.

In my series “Real People Real Reform,” I share some of these stories.

This time, I speak with Rick George, Director of Benefits for J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. If you live in North America, you’ve almost certainly seen their yellow logo on a truck on a highway near you.

But J.B. Hunt is more than just trucks.  They are a recognized leader in transportation logistics.  And they’re bringing that same level of insight and attention to their health care programs.

(more…)

Three Things the President Won’t Talk About Tonight

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Everyone’s busy trying to figure out what the President is going to say in his big health care reform speech tonight.  I’m more interested in predicting what he won’t say.

Here is my list of three things the President won’t talk about tonight – but should.

(more…)

How Doctors (really?) Think

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

This is funny (via the Happy Hospitalist).

It’s of course a joke, but it gives you a sense of what counts for satire in a world where doctors have to see 30 patients a day.

How Miracles Happen

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

My mother sent me this incredible medical story from the New York Times.  It’s about a young woman, Jessa Perrin, who suddenly faced a life-threatening diagnosis, and the heroic work her doctors and nurses did to save her.

The story spans the globe- from the remarkable medical team at the Hadassah hospital in Israel to the transplant team at New York Presbyterian Hospital.  But perhaps the most moving people in the story are unnamed – the family of a little girl who, on her death, donated her liver to save Jessa.

Most people with transplants have time to prepare, but she had woken up one day in an intensive care unit, thinking she was still in Israel, only to be told that she was in New York — with a new liver. Jessa said only, “It’s crazy.”

In this time of heated debate around health care reform, it is easy to lose sight of the heroic work doctors do every day to save people’s lives.  It doesn’t matter what kind of health care system they work under, they focus every day on making things possible that seem like miracles.

  • "Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the class room. Let not your conception of manifestations of disease come from work heard in the lecture room or read from the book: see and then research, compare and control. But see first."
    - Sir William Osler, MD
    The Father of Modern Medicine
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