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Tag: RWJF

Missive from the DMZ

Not everything about improving health care is breathlessly hanging on one high stakes decision.

The Supreme Court will rule soon enough on the constitutional challenges to the Affordable Care Act. Meanwhile, even amid the drama and bitter struggles, progress can occur in health care improvement—like the ever increasing adoption of health information technology. Believe it or not, there is broad agreement about using this technology in health care. Scott Gottlieb and J.D. Kleinke in a recent Wall Street Journal opinion said it well, “. . . promotion of health information technology is one of the only demilitarized zones in Washington—consistently attracting bipartisan support . . . .”

So, this rare consensus seems real and durable, but what is actually happening in the hallowed HIT ground where both sides have somewhat oddly come to a policy truce?

Since May of 2004 when President George W. Bush established the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) we’ve witnessed a slow but relentless upturn in adoption. That progress dramatically accelerated with attention and funding in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act in 2009. Since 2006, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) in collaboration with ONC has supported an ongoing, independent effort to monitor the national adoption of the electronic health record.

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Patient Power

What happens when consumers are able to compare the performance of primary care physicians in their state using Consumer Reports, the magazine that’s so highly regarded for its ratings of thousands of products and services we all use every day? Well, for the first time ever, we’re about to find out.

A special Massachusetts version of July’s Consumer Reports magazine will feature a report entitled “How Does Your Doctor Compare?” along with a 24-page insert that includes ratings of nearly 500 primary care physician practices from across the state. The ratings are based on data from a comprehensive patient experience survey conducted by Massachusetts Health Quality Partners (MHQP), a coalition of consumers, physicians, hospitals, insurers, employers, government agencies, and researchers. The physician ratings report is also available online at www.mhqp.org.

In recent years, there’s been a lot of talk in the health care community about the importance of consumer empowerment and patient-centered care. This experimental collaboration between MHQP and Consumer Reports, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Aligning Forces for Quality program, helps move theory into practice, and will test some key assumptions about the value of transparency in the effort to improve the health care system. In many respects, ratings of primary care physicians are not new to Massachusetts. We at MHQP have been reporting the results of patient surveys and clinical quality data since 2006 and these reports have had a positive effect on health care in our state. But let’s face it, Consumer Reports adds a whole new dimension to the notion of transparency. Not surprisingly, their involvement has been met with both excitement and some trepidation in the physician community.Continue reading…

Lightning Strikes Datapalooza


It didn’t appear on the lightning strike map, but lightning did indeed strike a young medical student inside the Washington Convention Center right in front of about 1,500 amazed spectators on the first day of The Health Data Initiative Forum III: The Health Datapalooza.  Everyone is fine—though our medical student may never be the same again.

Actually, this story began long before Datapalooza, of course.  Fourth-year medical student, Craig Monsen, and his Johns Hopkins Medical School classmate, David Do, started collaborating on software applications soon after they met in first-year anatomy class.  Craig graduated from Harvard with degrees in Engineering and Computer Science and David from University of Minnesota in Bioengineering.

They’re not quite Jobs and Wozniak—neither dropped out of anything—yet—although Craig, at least, is planning to skip or delay residency.  You see, after seeing the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Aligning Forces for Quality Developer Challenge last year—they got very serious about bringing to life their vision of new applications that could help patients and consumers make great health care decisions.

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Separating Fact from Fiction and Health from Health Care

By JAMES S. MARKS, ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON FOUNDATION

James S. Marks In an editorial on Wednesday, The New York Times debunks the often-cited claim that America has the best health care system in the world.  For the politicians who routinely use this as a plank in their efforts to stifle reform, the Urban Institute study (disclosure: this study was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation) is an objective rebuke. The U.S. health care system is not the best – far from it.  And Americans, with a life expectancy that still trails many other countries, are not the healthiest people in the world.

Clearly, this country desperately needs health reform.  But the study, the editorial, and the entire current discourse around health care neglect an important truth about reform: fixing the health care system alone will not significantly improve Americans’ health.

For example: medical spending consumes 16 percent of the U.S. GDP and is projected to reach a staggering one dollar for every five earned by 2018.  And yet, only 10-15 percent of preventable mortality is linked to health care.  This and our terribly poor international rankings in length of life are telling signs that our tremendous investment does not do enough to address the factors that make us sick in the first place.

Our current national debate must look beyond health care – the so-called repair shop of our health system – and focus on our health.  Fixing health care will require insurance reform, cost containment and sound economic policy.  Fixing health will require us to look at our neighborhoods, our schools and our workplaces.  From our earliest years of life, these are the places that determine how long and how well we live in America.  The recommendations of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Commission to Build a Healthier America, which identify pockets of success where programs are making a real difference in people’s health, provide a useful place to start.

In schools, where obesity threatens the current generation of children with sicker and shorter lives than those of their parents, solutions are critically needed.  By guaranteeing daily physical activity in schools – which fewer than 3.8 percent of elementary schools provide – and linking federal funds for school meals to their nutritional value, we can reverse the epidemic and help our children grow up healthy.

In our neighborhoods and communities, we must consider the health impact of investments and development to ensure that they help promote physical activity, make healthy foods more readily available and lay a foundation for prosperity.  With public-private partnerships, we can bring grocery stores and nutritious food into underserved neighborhoods and help both the stores and the neighborhoods thrive.  By incorporating bike lanes, sidewalks and trails into our transportation planning, we can help make the daily lives of Americans more physically active.

All of this amounts to a change in the way we think about health in this country.  Health care reform, while critically important, will not avert the crisis of poor health that we’re facing.  The Times editorial and Urban Institute study shine an important light on the dubious claim that we have the best health care system in the world, but they don’t go far enough.  It’s time that we debunk the larger myth, that Americans are the healthiest people in the world, so all of us – from the halls of Congress to the family dinner table – can start working to improve the health of the country we love.

Dr. James S. Marks, M.D., M.P.H., senior vice president at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and director of the Foundation’s Health Group.  Dr. Marks oversees all of the Foundation’s work in childhood obesity, public health and vulnerable populations.  Prior to RWJF, Dr. Marks was an assistant surgeon general and director of CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion.