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Saturday, December 28, 2013

Finding the Future of Health Care: Opening Remarks from Troy Brennan, M.D., M.P.H.

American health care is in crisis. With mounting costs, one thing is clear: we need to find a better way. That’s where The Innovation of Care comes in. We’ve asked 20 innovators one question: "If you could scale up one remarkable health care idea, what would it be?"

CVS Caremark's chief medical officer introduces The Innovation of Care series. Troyen A. Brennan, M.D., M.P.H.

Health care is, to put it mildly, a complex affair. With sweeping changes to the policy landscape, a system that faces increasing costs and pressures, and a population at risk, one thing is clear: we need to find a better way. That’s where The Innovation of Care comes in.

We’ve asked 20 innovators one question: “If you could scale up one remarkable health care idea, what would it be?” From prescription drug abuse and community health to big data and real-time alerts, our expert panel offered a range of ideas as diverse as their backgrounds. But one common thread remained throughout their answers: these are ideas that work — or, if given a chance, could fundamentally change how we approach health care. They’re ideas that offer a new path to better health, a fresh point of view on how we, as health care leaders and concerned citizens, can lower costs, increase quality and improve access.

Not all of our experts agree with one another. That’s partly why we created the series in the first place: it is through productive, open debate, and not operating silently in silos, that we’ll discover the next generation of ideas that can pave the way toward a better health care future. The transcends pharmacy innovation alone: while many of the ideas exist outside of pharmacy care and delivery, America’s health care system today is simply too interconnected not to facilitate a broader conversation about the bigger picture, about how all the parts weave together into a far bigger whole. The goal, ultimately, is not to prize one idea, approach or player over another, but to figure out how it can all work together.

Personally, the idea I’ve chosen is one that, as a former practicing physician, compels and inspires me perhaps more than any other issue: adherence, or, to put it more simply, patients following their doctors’ orders.

But all of the ideas contained in the series matter, and I encourage you to read — and share — each of them. I hope you find The Innovation of Care as illuminating and interesting to engage with as I did, and I look forward to continuing the conversation as we head into this pivotal year, and era, in health care delivery, management and transformation.

Transforming How Doctors Get Paid

Fee-for-service payment brings “potential overservice,” says Newhouse. Twain, writing in his autobiography about the doctors’ house calls of his childhood, observed that the “universal custom of the physician…is this: to keep on coming and coming, long after the patient has ceased to need him — and charging for every visit.”

Nearly two centuries separate those two observations, but the challenge remains to steer a middle course between incentives that encourage too much care and ones that push toward too little. Increasingly, the health system is moving toward the type of solution that Newhouse advocates, known in shorthand as “value over volume.” Changing reimbursement to reward cost-effective, high-quality care has been endorsed by the Institute of Medicine and a bipartisan National Commission on Physician Payment Reform. It is also the keystone of bipartisan Congressional proposals (a rarity) intended to permanently alter how Medicare pays doctors.

Question:

If you could scale up one remarkable health care idea, what would it be? 

Answer:

"Care should be delivered through provider-led delivery systems that treat a defined population and have at least some financial risk for the amount and quality of care they deliver to that population. Patients would have financial incentives to be treated within the system they elected. Such entities should be able to improve care coordination and efficiency."

Joseph P. Newhouse, PhD, the John D. MacArthur Professor
of Health Policy and Management, Harvard University

Some of that change is already starting to occur, in bits and pieces, from private insurers and Medicare alike. In Massachusetts, where private insurers have been particularly aggressive, the impact on patient care can be seen at Boston-based Atrius Health, an alliance of six medical groups. About half its one million patients already have insurance plans that link reimbursement to specific cost and quality markers.

These measures apply to the entire pool of patients covered by any particular plan, not to any individual patient, and the financial risk and reward are directly borne by Atrius Health and its 1,100 doctors, not by any individual physician. That, says Newhouse, reduces the risk of “underservice.” With reimbursement changing so that more care doesn’t automatically produce more revenue, Atrius Health is also changing. It’s pouring resources into a concept known as “population health.”

The idea is to measure and manage the care of all patients, while intervening in a targeted way toward carefully defined subgroups, such as the population of diabetics. The objective is to keep people as healthy as possible as long as possible. The bottom line is care that’s simultaneously better and less expensive.

Dr. Richard Lopez helps direct that strategy as the health system’s chief medical officer and, as a practicing internist, sees it with his own patients. Early each Friday morning Lopez sits with his nurse and rapidly goes over a list of his diabetic patients that has been culled from Atrius Health’s electronic medical record. Diabetics frequently have multiple problems in addition to blood-sugar control, so the population of “all diabetics” is broken down even further.

“One week we sort it by cholesterol, one week we sort it by blood pressure,” Lopez says. “We look at the patients who are not in control and we make a plan. It takes one or two minutes per patient.” The patient might be paired with a nurse practitioner for more education, get a follow-up call, be sent to a nutritionist, be referred to a specialist or be asked to come in to Lopez’s office.

In Twain’s day, doctors waited to be summoned to the home of the sick. Today, the patient mostly comes to the doctor, but it is still the patient who must decide to seek care. With population health, “you’re not just taking care of the patient in front of you in the exam room,” says Lopez, a 30-year Atrius Health veteran. “You’re looking at the whole population and reaching out to diabetics [and others] who in the past did not come in regularly. This way they don’t fall between the cracks. There’s a continuing interplay.”

Chronic diseases collectively account for nearly three-quarters of U.S. medical costs. The effect of population health management on patients with high blood pressure (hypertension) illustrates its potential. Nearly a third of U.S. adults have hypertension, and the percentage almost doubles for those 60 or older, according to data compiled by the American Medical Group Foundation. The condition contributes to deaths, disability and more than $130 billion in direct health care spending annually. Atrius Health has increased the share of its hypertensive patients whose blood pressure is under control from 67 percent, slightly above the national average, to 80 percent, among top performers.

For patients, that translates into fewer heart attacks and strokes, fewer trips to the emergency room and fewer days spent in the hospital. Atrius Health calculates it has also avoided $14 million in medical costs, a significant portion of which would have gone to its doctors. But Lopez has no second thoughts. “We think this is the way health care ought to go,” he says.

Physician compensation at Atrius Health reflects the changes in organizational compensation. Pay for primary care physicians is based on the number of patients in their “panel,” productivity and measures of the quality of care and the patient’s experience. Nationally, a survey by ECG Management Consultants found that a majority of physician groups have altered doctor compensation to include those same types of quality measures, which are often being used by payers to evaluate the entire group.

Unlike providers, patients may neither understand the benefit of collaborating in care coordination nor have any financial incentive to do so. Atrius Health has nearly 30,000 Medicare patients in an accountable care organization (ACO), a type of arrangement with provider incentives designed to support high-value care but no incentives for patients. Medicare and private ACOs cover some 20 million lives, according to a Leavitt Partners estimate. Atrius Health has another 25,000 patients in the Medicare Advantage program, which uses incentives for providers roughly similar to an ACO but also includes incentives for patients to stick with the Atrius Health network. Medicare Advantage covered 14.4 million people in 2013, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Newhouse says he would strengthen the financial incentive to patients in ACOs to stay inside the network. At the same time, he acknowledges that fee-for-service medicine won’t vanish anytime soon. In part, that’s because not every physician group can replicate what Atrius Health has accomplished. “We can’t shift the entire delivery system to this because not every group has the expertise,” he says.

Nonetheless, the trend is clear. Says Atrius Health’s Lopez: “This level of care goes from being an initial trial effort to the way medicine is practiced.” 

A Flowchart for Choosing Your Religion

A Flowchart for Choosing Your Religion

Looking for a JOB - How to Be the Next Hire

Making You the Most Viable Next Hire
Being flexible, creative and adaptable in today’s economy is the cornerstone to survival. The job search is no different and, with unemployment rising, requires just as much vigilance. One way you can keep your options open and make yourself even more marketable is by considering Consulting in addition to your quest for full-time employment. Often perceived as an “either-or” scenario, Consulting offers you just as many benefits as it does your “would be” employer:

Track record of Fixing Problems?
Career wise, people typically fall into one of two categories: those who thrive on problem solving and the prospect of a new challenge –or- someone who is exceptionally good at steering the ship once it is on course. If the thought of fixing something that is broken appeals to you (versus has you thinking about reaching for the Tylenol), then Consulting might be an avenue to explore.

A More Flexible Interview
Quite often, what a company needs is someone to tackle a specific problem, not a new full-time employee. Identifying this in the interview and being able to present yourself as the solution to their problem (at a lower cost), can ultimately create a job tailor made for you and your skill set. No one can compete against that.

Dating Before Marriage
A consulting engagement can give you the opportunity to see if this company is a nice place to visit or a great place to live. The only thing worse than a prolonged job search, is ending up in a position that results in you being unemployed again in 6-12 months. Consulting lets you do more due diligence than you could ever accomplish in an interview.

“Consulting” on Your Resume
To many recruiters, seeing “consulting” as your current role without any clients/engagements is just a way to dress up being out of work. But, with a list of key accomplishments at those engagements, you show that you are in demand, have more control over your search and are broadening your experience. The latter is extremely important if you are looking to transition industries.

Change Agent
For companies looking to make some sort of change internally (and you should like this if you have a track record of fixing problems), consulting is a more preferred approach versus hiring a permanent employee. It is much easier to come in as a consultant, effect the course correction and then hand it off to the internal leadership.

Money
Besides the obvious benefit of having income during your search, it also gives you breathing room to be more objective in selecting your next job.

It’s Easier to Find a Job When You Already Have One
So much of what makes this true is that fact that when you are employed, you tend to be a bit more objective because you have a “bird in hand.” Consulting (in addition to easing that financial strain, which helps here) can provide the self-assurance that comes along with being employed, which can get whittled away while unemployed.

Presenting yourself as a viable consultant or full time employee isn’t mutually exclusive. Rather, they are simply two sides to the same coin. For the companies where you interview, this will only make you more viable and versatile in your eyes. For you, there is nothing to lose. The worst thing that happens here is you generate some income to inevitable financial strain of your job search. On the other hand, you might just find through this process that you discover your next career move.

Bağdat Caddesi

Gel de parmaklara hakim ol, yapma bir Caddebostan, Bağdat Caddesi nostaljisi şimdi!...diğer bir deyişle 'Karşı taraf' . Cok uzun seneler yazları gittiğim, son yıllarda ise her Türkiye'ye gittiğimde kaldığım Istanbul'un bir başka eşşiz köşesi.
1960'lı 70'li yıllarda köşkleriyle, bahçelerinden salkım salkım sarkan ortancalarıyla, billur gibi denizliyle, 'sayfiye' yeri olmasıyla meşhur Erenköy, Suadiye, Caddebostan.

Dükkanların az, ağaçların çok olduğu, bunca yıl geçmesine rağmen hala güzelliğini koruyan Bağdat Caddesi. On, onbir yaşımdan itibaren yazlarım geçti oralarda. Sokaklarda oynanırdı o zamanlar, öyle pek araba filan geçmezdi. Doyasıya bisiklete binilir, el birakarak gitmek büyük marifet sayılır Erenköy, Saskınbakkal, Göztepe bisikletle rahat rahat gidilir dönülürdü. Deniz için bazı sokakların denize vardıkları noktalarda bulunan kayıkhanelerden saatlik ücretle kayık kiralanır, kadın erkek kürek çekmeyi bilir, kayıktan denize girilirdi. Bazı gençler dalıp iskele ayaklarından midye toplar bazıları ise sığ kumda zıpkınla vatos avlarlardı. Sokaklardan dondurmacılar geçerdi o zamanlar. Simdiki gibi binbir çeşit ne gezer 'Dondurma, Kaymaaak' diye bağıran dondurmacının küçücük arabasında sadece kaymaklı ve limonlu dondurma olur, bazen ise çeşit olsun diye vişneli bulunurdu.

Caddebostan Plajı'nın yanı sıra bir de üyelikle girilebilen klüpler vardı. Marmara Yelken Klubü başta olmak üzere, Balıkadamlar, Caddebostan Yat Klübü ve İstanbul Yelken. Eğer bunlardan birine üyeyseniz veya üye bir arkadaşınız varsa bazı sporları yapma veya izleme olanağınız olur, voleybol, ping pong oynar, kıyıdan yelkenlilerin yarışlarını izlerdiniz. Denizin ortasında ise köfteciler vardı. Bunlardan aklımda kalanı ise mayomuzun kenarına sıkıştırdığımız parayla yüzdüğümüz, veya kayıkla yanaştığımız 'Fıştak'tı. Dönerken yüzülüyorsa demirlemiş kayıklara tutuna tutuna, dinlene dinlene yüzülürdü.

Akşamüstüne doğru herkesi bir 'piyasa' heyecanı alırdı. Saçlar yıkanır, bildiğımız ütüyle ütülenerek düzeltilir, ve (Bağdat) Cadde'ye binbir tur atmaya çıkılırdı. Bir aşağı, bir yukarı. Parkur ise genellikle Santral Durağı'ndan Saşkınbakkala kadardı. O zaman 'cafe' adeti bir elin parmaklarını geçmez, 'Borsa'da yer bulabilmek için hızlı davranmak gerekir, 'Divan' ise gençlere çok pahalı geldiğinden ancak hafif 'yaşı geçmiş'lerin duraklama mekanı olurdu. Hali varaba sahiakti oldukça yerinde olan birkaç genç ise bir aşağı bir yukarı arabayla giderek Mustang veya Corvette'leriyle gelene geçene hava atarlardı.

Geceleri ise açık hava sinemalarının keyfine doyulmazdı. Caddebostan'daki Ozan Sineması'nda genellikle Türk filmleri oynar, çıkınca biraz aşağıda, Caddebostan Maksim Gazino'sunun (MIGROS)yakınındaki büfe'de 'zümküfül' yenirdi (Bir çeşit sosisli sandoviç ) Yabancı filmlerin mekanı ise Budak Sineması'ydı (Şimdiki CKM). Yastıgını kapıp tahta iskemlelere yerleştirdikten sonra, çekirdeğini çıtlatarak izlenirdi filmler. Bazen bu sinemalarda Cem Karaca gibi o zamanın ünlü sesleri konserler verir, bazıları ağaç tepelerinden konser izlerdi.

Sonra sonra o köşkler birer birer yıkılmaya, yerlerin uzun uzun binalar dikilmeye, Cadde'deki evlerin yerlerini dükkanlar almaya, arabalar çoğalmaya, faytonlar yok olmaya, tekerlekli dondurmacıların yerini Algida'cılar almaya başladı. Ama ne mutlu ki tüm büyümeler, kalabalıklaşmalar rağmen 'Cadde'yi bozmayı başaramadı! O hala 'Cadde', İstanbul'un ,Türkiye'nin en güzide caddesi hala boydan boya yürümekten zevk aldığım, bir yerde oturup geleni geçeni izlemenin keyfini her yıl bir iki hafta yaşayabildiğim bir yer.

Galata' ya dogru...

Galata' ya dogru...

The best way to improve health care requires physicians and other stakeholders

My honest approach for how to improve the care is to support a methodology such as being self-serving. I would like to start a program to introduce a software-based point-of-care tool for obtaining patient feedback. This real time information can be used with clients to positively impact the patient experience, nurse engagement, physician (soft skills) competence and overall quality. In my perspective the criteria for fulfilling the demand for finding the best way to improve healthcare is that it need be simple to implement, impactful and cost effective. The most impact to healthcare improvement will come from process improvement and healthcare provider recruitment AND retention. The by-products will be reduced cost of care and improved patient satisfaction. This applies to hospitals and private practices. Based on current studies and the economy, supplying adequate healthcare to the community is already tough and is going to get more challenging. Recruiting sufficient healthcare coverage will boost revenue and provide some improvement to patient satisfaction (wait time and access). However, failure to retain the medical staff will significantly hurt the outcome. With high demand and low supply, it will be well worth the time and money to present "we have the greenest pastures here". The method mentioned above may be called such as point-of-care through successful implementations that may turn in to popular key parts of process improvement. You need to have some feedback from the patients and the physicians in order to measure the processes that should be or are currently being improved. In order to achieve this you have to create the acronym HOSPITAL to help those in Healthcare recall the numbers of different types of inefficiencies in any medical facility. Those who have been exposed to Six Sigma and Lean have an appreciation for improvement opportunities and generally view things through differently trained eyes that can see within all those facilities. Publishing the results of the similar programs online may offer a transparent access to the consumers to monitor these inefficiencies. Welcoming any feedback relative to this and encourage your staff to consider this method or similar training methods for their teams will be highly critical for the outcome. We have to understand that it is impossible to solve a problem that we are unaware of. By providing even the most basic tools at the lowest level possible, these problems have a way of surfacing. While everyone recognizes that healthcare systems and organizations need to improve, I think not enough time is spent on firstly identifying the key stakeholders, and secondly properly ENGAGING them. I strongly believe that not enough time is spent trying to engage physicians in this process. In my experience too many of these "improvement strategies" are top-down decisions by non-clinical managers who failed to conduct any research into what physicians might want or what stumbling blocks there are/were to get them to adopt the new technologies. EMR/EHR/CPOE are prime examples - all of these require a breakdown in the normal activity flow of providers, as it requires them to either find and log on to a terminal or carry a bulky instrument. Almost all clients and colleagues I have worked with resent and resist those methods. And look how few MDs are part of Healthcare consulting firm teams. IMHO, I believe more energy should be spent engaging rather than alienating MDs as a first step, then doing the same for patients in order to get buy in from the two key stakeholders as I see it. I've always found that engaging these stakeholders on projects from the beginning results in more buy-in and most importantly, better recommendations/outcomes (a better product).

ULTIMATE RESULTS

ULTIMATE RESULTS

Ilhan Arsel

Ilhan Arsel

BJK FOREVER

BJK FOREVER
Karga kartalların sırtına oturur ve boynunu ısırır. Kartal cevap vermez, kargayla savaşmaz; kargaya zaman veya enerji harcamaz, bunun yerine sadece kanatlarını açar ve göklerde yükselmeye başlar. Uçuş ne kadar yüksek olursa, karganın nefes alması o kadar zor olur ve sonunda karga oksijen eksikliği nedeniyle düşer. Kartaldan öğrenin ve kargalarla savaşmayın, sadece yükselmeye devam edin. Yolculuk için gelebilirler ama yakında düşecekler. Dikkat dağıtıcı şeylere yenik düşmenize izin vermeyin....yukarıdaki şeylere odaklanmaya devam edin ve yükselmeye devam edin!! Kartal ve Karga dersi