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TECH: Interesting post on physician IT education

Tech-over-achiever Shahid Shah’s new IT aggregator blog — the HITSphere— has started up a community feature that’s well worth tracking. Several people have started their own blogs there and one is an MD called Mike. He has some interesting things to say about how to get doctors to the point that they can “learn to love the EMR”. His piece is called: Healthcare IT, Informatics and GME: Are We Doing Enough? Go take a look but here’s a flavor.

If we teach our future physicians the basics and give them the tools to self-teach in the future, they will be better equipped to adapt, optimize and lead. Future challenges related to standards/inter-operability, languages and security should not be left entirely to non-physicians. We as a group want functional cost-effective solutions and so we should be willing to invest in that future by training leaders to help guide us.

TECH/CONSUMERS: Joe Paduda is nice to Steve Case

Here’s Joe Paduda on Steve Case’s strategy for Revolution Health

Loyal readers know I have been less than impressed with Case’s strategy, team, and acquisitions to date. While I admire the audacity, I question the judgment.

Joe is too nice.

It’s all very well Case going to talk to Warren Buffet about this. The guy he should have talked to was Jim Clark who said exactly the same things as Case is saying now in 1995 before he started HealthEon. Luckily for Clark the stock market insanity enabled HealthEon to buy up some real companies with their valuable paper despite the fact the company had basically no revenue and no products that seemed to actually work. Amazingly enough they didn’t completely kill their acquisitions in the process—although it was a damn close run thing. Case tried the same thing with Time Warner when AOL bought it….and it survived but as a very wounded beast.

Still if he wants to piss away his $250m or whatever, it’s up to him. But perhaps he should talk to someone who knows something about health care first.

However, if he really wants to change the system he’d have been better off taking either Bill Gates’ approach or trying to agitate for a political solution like Philippe Villers did with Families USA.

QUALITY: Can a hospital CEO get us all to integrate (medicine, that is…)

This is pretty interesting. A fairly hard nosed hospital CEO, under it appears the tutelage of his new wife, gets into alternate and preventative medicine. 

Three years ago, Treuman Katz got some troubling news: At 60, he was on his way to becoming a diabetic. Katz, CEO of Children’s Hospital & Regional Medical Center at the time, could have relied on the region’s top specialists. Instead, the man who had spent nearly 40 years running two of the country’s pre-eminent hospitals reached out to a naturopathic doctor. He took herbal supplements, changed his diet, started yoga and hired a naturopathic trainer. Soon, his blood sugar dropped and he began to feel healthier than he had in years, he said.

Fair enough. But then he tries to integrate it with the care his institution delivers.

That opportunity came five years ago, when Katz and his medical staff
started to notice an intriguing trend: More than half of their patients
were using natural medicine but not telling their doctors. Therapies
ranged from herbal supplements to acupuncture.

So Katz organized a small group of physicians to visit Bastyr to
start connecting NDs — naturopathic doctors — and MDs, Molteni said.
Brown-bag lunches with Bastyr naturopaths followed. The hospital put
together a group to study how herbs could affect drugs. It hired two
anesthesiologists/acupuncturists and will work with Bastyr to bring on
a chiropractor, a naturopathic doctor and a traditional
Chinese-medicine practitioner within the next year or two.

I live in a city with more than 70 yoga studios and probably more than 300 acupuncturists, so there is something going on in the alternate care movement that deserves some level of integration with tradition western care. This might be one approach that makes sense.

BLOGS: Grand Rounds up at Medpundit, and here next week

Whoops. If you’re looking for the December 28th, Grand Rounds please click HERE.

——

Grand Rounds is up at the ever-wonderful Medpundit’s site. OK I rag on Syd a lot, but she’s a great blogger in addition to having a real job. I just wish that her no-nonsense views on medicine transfered over to her views on politics, but I’d be happy to have her as my physician (but no, I’m not moving to Ohio!)

Meanwhile, next week Grand Rounds will be here at THCB. It’s a best of the YEAR 2005 edition, so send me you favorite post from the year. Email to matthewATmatthewholtDOTnet

 

POLICY: Tax health care benefits, go on I dare ya!

Hat tip to Ezra, who clearly wasn’t partying enough this weekend and read the NY Times on Sunday. In it there’s a rational argument that me, Fuchs, Enthoven and Eric Novack all agree with: get rid of the tax deductibility of health benefits.

Next year, the federal government expects to provide about $130 billion for Americans to buy health insurance. The amount is substantial: it is equivalent to about 11 percent of all federal income tax revenue and more than a fifth of federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid. And it is growing fast: the bill is expected to surpass $180 billion in 2010.

Of course, this was recently proposed  by the same panel that suggested getting rid of tax deductibility of mortgages, and immediately disowned by the politicians who set up said panel.  But linking this to the issue of the uninsured and showing that it’s unbelievably regressive on those people who buy their own insurance and don’t get the tax break can’t be a bad meme for us wonks to pursue.

PHYSICIANS/PHARMA: Is academic medicine beyond salvage? by The Industry Veteran

Several people are concerned about the integrity of our medical leaders, and the latest Cleveland Clinic spat has upset a few people, notably local MD Medpundit. I have a more jaded view. I liken it to when I heard that lawyers have to take an ethics test but are only not allowed to practice if they fail it, I assumed that any lawyer passing an ethics test lacked the aptitude required for the job! However, making a welcome return to THCB, even the usually cynical-beyond-belief contributor The Industry Veteran appears a little concerned. He writes:

I had previously viewed the tussle between renowned cardiologist Eric Topol and his boss at the Cleveland Clinic, Delos Cosgrove, as principally an academic spat whose significance did not extend beyond the personal fortunes and the organizational power positions of the two principals. The Times’s article, by contrast, suggests the Cleveland bash reveals that the integrity of academic/high research medicine is fundamentally compromised. Instead of remaining disinterested researchers who help to develop and evaluate new medicines and technologies, big time researchers and their institutions own equity positions in the companies whose products they evaluate. The very notion that medical researchers are gatekeepers for the public, motivated by professional ethics and the search for scientific truth, remains a fool’s myth. Who guards the guardians?I recently asked a friend who teaches marketing ethics at his university to tell me his views about the recent editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine. That was the one where the Journal’s editors belatedly said they were shocked, shocked by the fact that Merck’s shills neglected to include three instances of myocardial infarction among a sample of Vioxx users. The specific issue for which I sought clarity concerned the relative responsibility of the academic physicians who authored the study (or, more accurately, whose names appeared above the study, since Merck’s medical writers doubtlessly wrote the paper) versus that of Merck, who sponsored the research. My friend’s pontifications assigned the lion’s share of blame to the physicians. They must reasonably be expected to know that the first and final interests of any corporation’s operators lie in obtaining profit to satisfy shareholders. In this particular case, the academic physicians would have been psychotically detached from reality not to have known that Merck’s pursuit of Vioxx profits included a thoroughly unethical inclination to twist and hide data. “If they were willing to accept research money and sponsorship from known crooks such as Merck,” he wrote, “then they had a responsibility to act with the very highest possible standards of ethics, and my guess is that they fell far short of that.” The Times article flicks off the lid to reveal that these kinds of self-aggrandizing conflicts are the routine condition of high powered, medical research.

POLICY/INTERNATIONAL/PHYSICIANS: It’s not just here that doctors fees are an issue

And from the THCB Japan bureau (well actually the Yomiuri Shimbun)….

It’s worth noting that the Japanese, who have one medical fee schedule for all of their multi-payers (and also a complex system of cross-subsidization between those payers), are about to cut fees and reallocate them. In Japan private doctors make lots and lots more money than hospital-based ones, and the government is slowly trying to move the incentives away from what’s traditionally been a system with a high-volume of office visits and prescriptions of dubious benefit.

We’re about to do the same here, calling it pay for performance. Like there it’s going to turn into a fight. Joe Paduda notes today that the AMA is having some success in its attempt to stop the 4% cut that’s scheduled to come into effect for Medicare at the end of the year. And is directly linking it with a demand to stop pay for performance.

The advantage that the Japanese have got is that there’s only one fee schedule to argue about. Here we have gazillions and no one really knows what they are

TECH: More on CPOE

Typepad (the hosting service I use) was down on Friday, giving THCB an involuntary day off. Here was my FierceHealthcare editorial on Friday. You can use this as a continuation of the discussion from last week:

There is little doubt that the big story in health IT circles continues to be
the CPOE study in Pediatrics which found an alarming increase in
mortality rates at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh. Those conclusions
generated a fierce debate as to whether we need CPOE systems, and whether EMRs
can be adapted for critical patient care situations. Yesterday, leading patient
safety expert Bob Wachter likened the phase medicine is undergoing to one
similar to that in aviation in the middle of last century–from independent test
pilots to team players–as described in Tom Wolfe’s The Right Stuff.
Even though no pilot would go back to doing things the old way, it was not a
painless transition. What is clear is that the introduction of new technology
requires a detailed examination of virtually every care process, and in some
cases the benefits can only be realized if the process is changed to fit the
technology. That is a very complicated sell.

TECH: Cerner’s very rough days

So despite the denials, Cerner’s stock had another dreadful day. Following a fall on Wednesday, Thursday it was down another $10 on concerns that they’re cooking the books. Now Neal Patterson may be a rough around the edges guy, but he’s no dummy and he knows about Sarbanes-Oxley.

Cern

On the other hand, it’s not a bad time to be taking profits and people have sat around not believing it before, and then Enron and Worldcom happened.  So a little bit of panic selling/locking in profits is a logical explanation.

Still, I at least am looking forward to seeing whether the clear gain in market penetration that Cerner is seeing is really not being translated into more cash flow, revenue and profits.