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How Relevant is the American Medical Association?

Like most doctors, I was busy seeing a full schedule of patients when President Obama addressed members of the American Medical Association at their annual meeting in Chicago.  The speech was billed as a crucial confrontation over health reform, and anticipation had been building for quite some time.   So I was too busy to learn anything about his remarks and the response until I got home.

Then again, I’m not a member of the AMA.  I never have been.  Neither are very many of my  physician friends and colleagues.  In fact, the odds are that your doctor isn’t a member of the AMA, because at best, only between 25-30% of the approximately 800,000 doctors in country belong to it.  And a good percentage (up to half of members according to one report) of those include residents and medical students, who get big discounts on membership and a free subscription to a journal when they join.Continue reading…

The State of Meaningful Use

Is it possible that the State Department is technologically bolder than the HIT Policy Committee?  On Tuesday, that committee convened by the Office of the National Coordinator as required by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act released some initial recommendations on the definition of meaningful use of HIT.  Then yesterday the New York Times in an above the front page fold article reported that the State Department recognized an internet blogging service could change history–right now.

Compare that report about the State Department to the HIT Policy Committee’s recommended vision for the role of patients and families.  The committee envisions that someone would eventually “provide access for all patients” to populated personal health records and some self-management tools by 2015–about six years from now.  It’s not that this vision is bad; it’s just so underwhelming.  Let’s see–the State Department thinks that the Iranian people might be using Twitter today to regain control of their nation–and in our multi-billion dollar ultimate vision for the patient’s role with health information technology we’re still talking about “providing” a couple of interesting tools to patients by 2015.  Is it me, or are we possibly missing a powerful health reform player here–the consumer?

So, as you can see, I listened to this meeting on “meaningful use” and came away with some distinctly mixed impressions.Continue reading…

Back to the Drawing Board?

Roger collier

The current congressional approach
to health care reform of adding ever more fixes without changing the
underlying system looks increasingly shaky. 

What are the some of the indications? 

  1. The public plan has generated
    enormous opposition—and not just from insurers. Whether anyone believes
    that a Medicare clone would reduce under-65 health care costs or not,
    it is unlikely that a final reform bill will include anything other
    than a weak compromise.

Continue reading…

Op-Ed: On Health Reform, Obama Faces a New Foe: Other Democrats

Harris Meyer Democratic Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington is a prime reason President Obama will have a hard time getting health care reform passed this year. Let me explain this seeming oddity. At a news conference on May 27 in Yakima, Wa., the purportedly liberal Cantwell, who represents a state that voted 58 percent for Obama, announced her support for two new, bipartisan bills that would advance a key goal of Obama’s reforms — increasing access to primary care physicians and other doctors who are in short supply. As Massachusetts has discovered, making sure nearly everyone has health insurance doesn’t help if there aren’t enough doctors to take care of them.

The two bills Cantwell endorsed feature provisions that would cost the federal government billions of dollars a year — scholarships and loan forgiveness for medical students who serve in shortage areas, increased funding for the National Health Service Corps, higher Medicare payments to primary care doctors, more Medicare funding for resident physician training, interest-free loans for hospitals starting new residency training programs, etc.Continue reading…

Beyond the Beltway – How Most of America Sees Health Reform

What are people saying about health reform beyond the beltway and outside the health wonk debates?  I’ve been meeting with Rotary Clubs and local Chambers of Commerce during the last several months, and they’re talking about different issues than the ones being debated in Washington, DC.  When I talk with these groups about the prospects for national health reform, what are the top three questions they ask?

  • Is this going to lead to a single-payer system with rationing, just like they have in Canada?
  • Why isn’t the malpractice problem being addressed?
  • Will this include illegal immigrants?

These are not the top issues being debated on Capitol Hill.  If you just read Politico.com, the Washington Post, and the pundits’ blogs, you would think that the big issues are the public plan option, the employer mandate, and the cap on the tax exclusion of employer-paid benefits.  There are important, but they aren’t the issues that most small employers and consumers are worried about.Continue reading…

Decoding “The Social Life of Health Information”

The Pew Internet/California HealthCare Foundation report, The Social Life of Health Information, is packed with new findings from a survey of 2,253 adults, including 502 cell-phone interviews, conducted in either English or Spanish.

We spent a bundle of money on making this a random sample of the U.S. population, but guess who got a call on his cell phone?  None other than e-patient Dave!  He had never talked with me about the survey questions or reviewed a draft, so I decided to keep his interview in the mix, but he surprised the heck out of the interviewer when he finished the sponsor identification for her at the end.Continue reading…

The Road from McAllen to El Paso

Head Shot Dr. Harold S LuftDr. Atul Gawande has provided a chilling description of the problems facing true health reform in his  recent New Yorker article.  In  The Cost Conundrum he describes how medical care is provided in McAllen, Texas, which is second only to Miami as the most expensive healthcare market in the country. McAllen’s per capita expenditures are twice those in El Paso, Texas, a city with similar demographics.

There are no good reasons for the differences. McAllen’s population isn’t demonstrably sicker and the care isn’t measurably better.  There is also little understanding among the participants about what causes the higher spending. What is chilling is how easy the medical care environment in El Paso could become like McAllen’s.

Gawande refers to the accountable care organization (ACO) concept proposed by Elliott Fisher and colleagues at Dartmouth University. They propose that physicians whose practices are focused around a specific hospital be given incentives to lower the overall costs of patient care.

Payer Costs are Provider Revenues

The ACO has merit as a goal, but the challenge is in forming them.  Getting very intelligent people such as physicians and hospital administrators to change their behaviors, especially if such changes may reduce their income, will be difficult. We need ways to encourage voluntary participation of both physicians providing care in the hospital and those who decide who should be hospitalized.

The Dartmouth data show that in areas like McAllen, there is much more interventional work, such as tests, procedures and admissions, than in areas like El Paso.  With more access to, and time with, primary care physicians there is less need for interventional work.  This means redistributing resources from the interventionists to primary care clinicians.

It is hard to imagine a new ACO with interventionists and primary care physicians achieving this redistribution.  The interventionists often wield scalpels and have a ready ally in the hospital that depends on them to keep beds filled.The Answer Lies in Separation, Not Amalgamation

Interventionists should partner with the facility in which they do most of their work. Elsewhere, I describe these new care delivery teams (CDTs) that are effectively the inpatient side of Fisher’s ACOs.  CDTs would be voluntary associations of a facility (usually a hospital) and those physicians whose work depends on the facility.

Unlike Fisher’s ACO, the CDT specifically excludes office-based physicians responsible for the ongoing treatment of patients.  The CDT also need not include all eligible physicians at the hospital, just the voluntary paticpants.

The CDT may be a single entity with physician employees or a loose collaboration of independent physicians and a facility, collectively deciding its own governance rules.  The key is that the CDT takes responsibility for an episode of care at a fixed price.  Physicians might be compensated by salary, fee-for-time, or fee-for-service and may share in the gains or losses of the CDT.

CDTs will focus on how to provide inpatient care more efficiently and at higher quality.  (Quality measurement is critical in any reform; see my overall proposal. Savings will be achieved not through lower net provider income, but through better management and clinical decisions.  For example, instead of routinely repeating imaging, radiologists may review well-done MRI and CAT scans done elsewhere.  Orthopedists can agree on the necessary implants, allowing the hospital to strike better deals with suppliers.  Nurses may be empowered to implement routine procedures reducing infection rates.  Lowering Interventional Costs and Rewarding High Quality Care

CDTs by themselves will not solve the key problem identified by Gawande — the overuse of interventional services.  To address that problem, we need to redirect patients toward those physicians who provide high quality care at lower overall cost.  This can be achieved by combining (1) a mechanism shifting resources from interventional care to effective outpatient management with (2) a way to identify those physicians who provide such effective care.

A  comprehensive realignment of the payment system can accomplish this, but in the interim, a  voluntary major risk pool (MRP) can move us in the right direction.  The MRP covers hospitalizations and chronic illness.  This coverage for insurers eliminates costly underwriting.  The MRP, however, is not simply reimbursing plans for expenses incurred; it directly offers attractive bundled payments to CDTs.  These episode-based payments allow CDTs to do what they do best—high intensity acute care—and reap increased income.   Higher provider incomes within CDTs are not inconsistent with lower costs to the MRP as the CDT reduces the resources needed from suppliers outside the CDT.

The MRP obtains electronic copies of claims from the insurers who are its clients and from Medicare, more information than the Dartmouth group has.  After linking all the data and substituting coded identifiers, the MRP will make available the data under arrangements ensuring patient confidentiality.

The Power of the Electronic Matchmaker

Insurers and others accessing the MRP data will see there are local providers with efficient practice patterns, but not their names.  An intermediary trusted by physicians will serve as an electronic “matchmaker,” transmitting messages from insurers seeking efficient physicians.   By remaining anonymous until a “deal is struck,” efficient physicians will negotiate better remuneration—probably not just higher fees, but payment for ongoing patient management, telephone and e-mail consultations, and other innovations.  Some physicians may band together, perhaps by sharing electronic medical records, forming real or virtual group practices—the outpatient component of the ACO.

The major risk pool is the mechanism reallocating dollars.  More effective chronic illness management will lower admission rates and the MRP will transfer more dollars to those health plans directing more patients to efficient ambulatory care providers.  To find those providers, health plans will negotiate better payment arrangements.  To steer patients towards those providers, plans will provide new incentives and sources of information.  We can create what Fisher and Gawande have in mind, as long as we think about how to manage the transition.

McAllen and El Paso are almost 800 miles apart—a long day’s drive.  To move away from the expensive McAllen model of care, we need not just a destination but a plan how to get there.  The self-interest of the players is currently driving us in the wrong direction. By harnessing that self-interest with realigned incentives we can reform the system.  Without taking account of the incentives, we will never get to where we need to go.

Harold S. Luft is Professor Emeritus in health policy at University of California, San Francisco, and author of Total Cure:  The Antidote to the Health Care Crisis (Harvard University Press, 2008).  More information is available at  www.haroldluft.com.

Clinical Groupware: When Not-As-Good Is Actually Better

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In a February 13, 2009 blog post I introduced the idea of Clinical Groupware as a low cost, modular, and cloud computing alternative to traditional electronic health record technology for physicians and medical practices. Central to the concept of Clinical Groupware is IT support for care coordination and continuity, achieved through shared access to personal care plans and point-of-care decision supports. In this post I’d like to put a few more ideas on the table, specifically with respect to the market niche that Clinical Groupware may ultimately fill, including comments by several individuals whose opinions or work may be crucial to the success of Clinical Groupware over the next 1-3 years.  (Anything farther out than that is simply dreaming.)  Consider this an interim report on an emerging story with an indefinite timeline.

Interest in this topic has been, of course, heightened by the recently passed federal AARA/HITECH, provisions of which will provide incentive payments to physicians of as much as $44,000 over a five year period commencing in 2011, provided that the physicians can demonstrate the “meaningful use” of “certified EHR technology.” It’s always more exciting when there’s real money in the mix. Will Clinical Groupware qualify as “certified EHR technology?”  Many physicians and developers are hoping it will. Here’s why.Continue reading…

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