Derek Lowe has an intelligent post on the Pargluva mess, which is essential reading if you care about the FDA and big pharma and transparency — and you should.
POLICY/BLOGS: Enthoven coming up on Novack show
Don’t get too used to an unregurgitated Marxist like me saying this, but you should listen to a radio station called 960The Patriot this weekend, as Eric Novack has Alain Enthoven on his show on Sunday from 3-4pm Arizona time. This may be the first time that Eric’s had anyone on who disagrees with him, and I’m looking forward to hearing it. It’ll be in the archives section on Eric’s site later.
Here’s what I wrote about Enthoven and his quarrel with the CDHP crowd.
(I wrote longer wittier stuff in an earlier version of this but Typepad ate it, so I’m giving up for the afternoon. See you Monday!)
POLICY/BLOGS: More interesting stuff from the young liberals
Now that I’ve upset every young liberal in America, here’s a blog that I was pointed to by Ezra Klein. It’s called I am Stella, by Kate who is a young health policy wonk in waiting with her own tale of woe of being a patient. She has a very interesting post on the private vs public cost control issue (although there is a slight flaw in her portrayal that her commenters have noticed–so no cheating before you see what you think). She also has an excellent post on the Phantoms in the Snow article on cross-border medicine which I was in at the start of, but ducked out of too early to get any credit for….(and which probably improved the credibility of the article!)
Those of you who want to really get into the Canada issue can look here.
TECH: Mr HISTalk’s Thoughts on Clinical Systems: introduction (histalk.blog-city.com)
We like MrHISTAlk over at THCB, even if he has a bit of a tendency to mouth off like the southern redneck he may be. So go read his thoughts on clinical information systems and CPOE in an article called Thoughts on Clinical Systems: introduction.
POLICY: Abstinence and universal health insurance prove very popular
Now I’m 42 and never been married, so I don’t agree with most Americans about the very last question on this new Harris/WSJ survey. But the rest of it shows that we’re a damn site more of a liberal nation than our leaders in DC and on Fox News would have us believe.
On the other hand there is some chance that one day we’ll have universal health insurance, which is not the case for abstinence before marriage, whatever 62% of Americans believe. How many hypocrites are in that number?
TECH: PHR conference
Last week’s PHR conference that I didn’t go to (cos they held it in DC and I’m too cheap to fly there by myself) now has an available transcript. (All big PDFs–you have been warned).
The intro is long but good. It has a talk from Carolyn Clancy (AHRQ chief) then a quick 3 person panel on PHRs from CapMed, Brown and Toland (using Medem’s iHealthrecord) and Cleveland Clinic (similar to the PAMF system Paul Tang spoke about). Finally it has a tour de force from Newt Gingrich, who explains exactly what we should have all have a personal health record and gives me no clue as to why we’ll get there. But that doesn’t stop companies giving him $200K a year to join his Center for Health Care Transformation–purely because they are interested in his words of wisdom; sure, yup that’s all they’re interested in!
I haven’t got to this yet but here is the Intel lunch talk, and here’s the last session with Esther Dyson et al
BLOGS: TCHB tech traumas over
Thanks to John, the tech traumas are over and when you go to www.thehealthcareblog.com you end up in the right place, and it looks like it’s really on a standalone domain although it actually lives on typepad, yet you can get away from there to other sites. Very clever (although for those of you who care apparently TypePad’s instructions are wrong!)
TECH: Privacy, standards, certification and RHIOs–more from AHIMA
Yesterday’s the AHIMA meeting morning presentations were excellent. The presenters were all on their game, and were also relatively amusing (especially Mark Frisse). But although I know a lot more about the DC based machinations of the national health initiative after this and the Brailer talk yesterday, I’m still of the opinion that there’s less there than meets the eye.
Carole Diamond runs the Markle Foundation and their Connecting for Health Program with the help of David Lansky, who used to run the Foundation for Accountability which Markle has swallowed (more or less) whole. In her speech she talked about Connecting for Health
Connecting for Health cares about
1 Tech standards and adoption
2 Policy framework for successful EMR/PHR/RHIO implementation
3 The consumer
BLOGS: Wednesday dog blogging
Now that I’m a newly "domestic partnered" person rather than a swinging single, much of my day seems to revolve around walking Charlie, who moved in with Amanda (the other domestic partner).
So I’m thinking much more about dogs than I ever thought I would. So I thought you’d appreciate this story about a New Mexico official promoting a law against dangerous dogs, who’s own dog badly bit him. And this story about a police dog in the UK, who just wasn’t into police activities and would rather hang with the trouble makers
TECH/CONSUMERS: Tang on the unstated information therapy
Next up was Paul Tang, the CIO of the Palo Alto Medical Foundation. He wanted to talk about patients, and about transparency. PAMF went to open access to physician visits (i.e. you call up, and you get a same day appointment) a while back, but found that half the people would rather treat themselves than come in. Worse, even in those visits patients missed the problem that the doctor talked about 54% of the time. So access to the patient’s information by the physician (even if the physician is immediately available and the information is immediately available to the physician) is not enough becuase the patients aren’t getting the information from the doctors. In the US 71% of patients not given any information after an office visit. PAMF now gives out a post-visit summary which is a simple print out for their EHR and patients love it.
Paul contrasted the health care information system with the air traffic control back up system, and the pilots’ interface in their cockpit with the health care interface in the ICU (guess which one is non-standard). We have not set up the interfaces (e.g ICU’s are all different and non-intuitive) or the standards that work, and have no computer back-up. American health care sucks (his words).
He suggested 3 solutions —
1) give a warning that the patient has to sign a consent that the physicians is not using and EMR and nothing can be expected to go right. (Somewhat unlikely even if true!)
2) Patients already keep a medical record at home (which some are already doing) or
(his favorite)
3) provide patients with the information that they need when they need it — this is what PAMF does using the Epic patient look-into the EMR. Their information therapy shows the patient what to do, and allows them to message the doc/nurse — and all of this is captured in the EHR. It shows the personalized content for the patient connected to their actual personal information (e.g. a dabetic diagnosis changes the content offered to stuff about diabetes management).
The most popular feature is lab test results with the physicians annotation and next step instructions. Their systems now has good enrollments and 96% patient satisfaction. Patients are respectful when they communicate electronically with their physicians and docs are 90% happy too. One patient quote "It’s not just a website it’s a good deed", 20% of patients changed their behavior just from seeing their results, such as graphing test results against time helps patients stick to diet.
Somehow Paul gave this whole talk without mentioning the words "Information Therapy". I assume Don Kemper is taking note somewhere.