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Skipping out on America’s future

Remember what it feels like to gorge yourself on a meal with friends only to find when the bill arrives, your tablemates have conveniently slipped off into the washroom? Well hopefully not, (if so, visit myfriendsareusingme.com) but young Americans should prepare themselves to feel such pain.

Despite all the excitement over the prospects of impending health care reform, the young still have reason for worry. While lawmakers from the Right and Left vigorously seek to caulk the wagon and float across the ideological divide on health care, little is being said about the sustainability of reform and its long-term implications for the future.

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Divided we might get somewhere, but not yet

Matthew HoltThe NY Times describes the Republican-less lobbyist meetings with Democrats that are allegedly getting 
towards a consensus on an individual mandate as the way to universal health care. Funnily enough some of those same groups (e.g. The Business Roundtable & the NFIB) appear to be lessening their commitment to the worthily named “Divided we Fail” campaign.

And then on the second page of the NY Times article there’s this:

Many businesses, crushed by soaring health costs, say they now support changes in the health care system as a way to control their costs. But in its summary of the recent discussions, Mr. Kennedy’s office said, “There was little consensus on the employers’ role.”

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Connecting the dots–Uninsured people are poor!

A bunch of random articles all hit at once on Wednesday morning. And they win the John Madden award for stating the bleedingly obvious. This is kind of  a companion piece to my rant about Friday’s NY Times article on the health industry and its political allies and adversaries sitting down to come to consensus.

Inquiry featured a worthy study. It tried to suggest that high costs “crowd out” health insurance spending.

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Commentology

John Haughton MD left this thought-provoking follow up to his original post on the Obama administration's health IT plans. ("Stimulus Bill Offers Docs Incentives, But Demands Effective Use")

"Since writing the post 2 weeks ago, the Stimulus bill has now passed.  It does offer the $40K + bonus for "effective use" of a "qualified EHR" (DISTINCT FROM CURRENT DEFINITIONS OF EMRS / EHRS) – The bill specifically targets FIVE AREAs (which by the way are the evidence-based areas associated with HIT and care improvement):  1) Patient Info / History and Problem lists (Structured Data); 2)Clinical Decision Support.  3) Quality Reporting (performance measurement)  4) Ordering (including prescribing)  5) Interoperability (exchange and integrate with other sources).

All of the above can ENHANCE workflow and health by saving time and improviing care.  There is no push in the bill to completely change office workflow – there is a push to enhance patient care. 

The days of the $40K EMR are numbered.  Here's a prediction:  most physicians will spend no more than $10K each over a 3 or 4 year period (2010 – 2013) to acquire and use a qualified system – leaving an increase of dollars flowing into primary care – a great stimulus. What do you think?

Fear and Loathing over the Stimulus Bill

CapitalThe reaction in certain quarters to the healthcare reform provisions of the stimulus bill now clearing 
Congress lays bare the nature of opposition to the forthcoming fight for real change in healthcare: It will be viciousness at the top of the lungs.  It will be a scorched-earth campaign.  Its main weapon will be fear. It will be unencumbered by any actual knowledge, subtlety, awareness of history, or access to the thoughts of people who actually know what they are talking about.  Its fury will be unloaded not just in service of narrow and inflexible political nostrums, but in the service of sectors of the industry which fear that a truly efficient and effective healthcare system would cripple their profit margins.

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Just OK Quality or “The Best”?

The folks at the Oklahoma Hospital Association might want to get together with the Commonwealth Fund to see if they can borrow a URL for their hospital quality Web site.

Using the two-letter abbreviation for the state name, the Oklahoma association’s just-launched site providing quality and safety information on 80 local hospitals promises “OKHospitalQuality.” On the other hand, the Commonwealth Fund’s almost-as-new site displaying quality information on hospitals nationwide boldly asks “WhyNotTheBest?

In both cases, however, visitors will largely see repackaged HospitalCompare measures from CMS and the standardized H-CAHPS patient satisfaction survey from AHRQ. The Oklahoma association claims its site is easier to use than that of CMS, and they’re right. For instance, it’s simple to look at state benchmarks and multiple hospitals at the same time.

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Massachusetts doctors say single-payer or bust

Massachusetts members of the Physicians for a National Health Program released a report today faulting the state’s experiment with health reform for failing to achieve universal coverage, being too expensive and draining funds away from safety-net providers.

The doctors’ punch line is that the reform has given private insurance companies more business and power without eliminating vast administrative waste. In fact, it says, the “Connector” in charge of administering the reform adds about 5 percent more in administrative expenses.

In summary, nothing less than single-payer national health reform will work, according to authors Drs. Rachel Nardin, David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler, all professors at Harvard Medical School.

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Job Post: Causality Inc.

We are seeking a full-time partner/investor to build a new company that
dramatically improves the way millions of patients learn and shop
online. We address a $70 billion market. Our current team consists of seasoned entrepreneurs, technologists and physicians from Google (Teams: Health, Search & Foundation), Stanford Graduate School of Business, UCSF Medical School and former high-ranking government officials from CDC/HHS. As a founding CTO, will initially assist with VC presentations, partner meetings, technical collateral creation and overall technical direction. With funding, you will hire the engineering team. If you are an investor, we currently accrue consistent technical progress and have our first hires (and other investors) on standby.

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CASTING CALL: The Future Role of the Doctor

Health 2.0 is working on a new documentary focusing on the next generation of physicians and healthcare professionals.

We
are looking to cast 3-5 medical students who are willing to share their
perspectives on how the field of medicine is changing, how they expect
to be practicing when they're out in the world, and how Health 2.0
technologies factor into their lives.

Are you (or can you
recommend) a dynamic and engaging medical student or health
professional in training who is currently working to bring the medical
profession/healthcare system into the 21st century?  Are you working on
projects that relate to social media/the web/mobile/ changing the world
with technology?  Then we want to talk to you!

The short film
will debut at the Health 2.0 conference in Boston in April and be
distributed online through various partner organizations. 

Please send all recommendations and references to Lizzie Dunklee, Executive
Producer at Health 2.0 at li****@********on.com.

Podcast: Blues VC fund invests in Phreesia

I’ve been following Phreesia since it was two guys in an apartment trying to figure out how to make the patient check-in at the doctors office a better and more useful experience. Today they announced an $11m series C round with new investor BCBS Ventures, a new-ish fund backed by 11 Blues plans. (FD: Phreesia has presented and exhibited at Health 2.0, and I think they’re a great example of using light-weight web technology to solve a messy process problem.) I spoke to Chaim Indig, CEO & President of Phreesia, and new investor Paul Brown, Managing Director of BCBS Ventures Inc this morning. Here’s the interview.

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