Tuesday August 25, 2009 at 21:36

Comments

Tuesday August 25, 2009 at 13:49

The NCQA’s idea of ‘patient-centered’ misses what people find meaningful in health care.  Only 3% of their scoring system comes from the patient voice the other 97% drills into minutia that might on a line-by-line analysis look good until you step back and realize that they’ve totally missed the big picture.
What’s most dismaying to me is that:
1:  In conversation the NCQA  admits that this version of the tool needs major revision and that they’re working on the next version now
2:  Major policy analysits have written extensively on the near-fatal flaws in this yardstick
3:  The overwhelming majority of the ‘medical home’ initiatives in play right now are using the current (broken) yardstick to judge success at transforming office practices.
Folks: if the yardstick is broken how can we measure the results?

The NCQA’s idea of ‘patient-centered’ misses what people find meaningful in health care.  Only 3% of their scoring system comes from the patient voice the other 97% drills into minutia that might on a line-by-line analysis look good until you step back and realize that they’ve totally missed the big picture.

What’s most dismaying to me is that:

1:  In conversation the NCQA  admits that this version of the tool needs major revision and that they’re working on the next version now

2:  Major policy analysits have written extensively on the near-fatal flaws in this yardstick

3:  The overwhelming majority of the ‘medical home’ initiatives in play right now are using the current (broken) yardstick to judge success at transforming office practices.

Folks: if the yardstick is broken how can we measure the results?

Comments

Tuesday August 25, 2009 at 10:39

Cool strategy to demonstrate the human face of suffering from health care status quo.
via s3.moveon.org

Cool strategy to demonstrate the human face of suffering from health care status quo.

via s3.moveon.org

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Tuesday August 25, 2009 at 10:01

Excellent case study of the status quo killing primary care.
via i2.cdn.turner.com
Read Dr. Harris’ full commentary on CNN.com.
First I demonstrated in my own practice that I could put my ‘house’ in order.
Then I worked with practices from all over the US to show that we’re still willing and able.
Then we demonstrated once again that true high quality primary care requires more resouces.
Then we were stonewalled again and again and again and again by an insurance industry that frankly doesn’t seem to care.
At the moment the only successful responses to the intransigence of the insurance industry are:
A: become an employee of one of the successful corporate health care settings (Geisinger, Kaiser, Group Health, etc) who have either bargaining power or created their own insurance
or
B: ditch the insurance strangle-hold and work directly with consumers.

Excellent case study of the status quo killing primary care.

via i2.cdn.turner.com

Read Dr. Harris’ full commentary on CNN.com.

First I demonstrated in my own practice that I could put my ‘house’ in order.

Then I worked with practices from all over the US to show that we’re still willing and able.

Then we demonstrated once again that true high quality primary care requires more resouces.

Then we were stonewalled again and again and again and again by an insurance industry that frankly doesn’t seem to care.

At the moment the only successful responses to the intransigence of the insurance industry are:

A: become an employee of one of the successful corporate health care settings (Geisinger, Kaiser, Group Health, etc) who have either bargaining power or created their own insurance

or

B: ditch the insurance strangle-hold and work directly with consumers.

Comments

Monday August 24, 2009 at 11:43

“we have the only health system in the world based on avoiding sick people.”

Marcia Angell, M.D.: Health Reform: Throwing Good Money After the Bad

Comments

Monday August 24, 2009 at 10:14

via www.workingamerica.org
I can haz health care?  DENIED!  Funny posts on the Daily Kos.

via www.workingamerica.org

I can haz health care?  DENIED!  Funny posts on the Daily Kos.

Comments

Sunday August 23, 2009 at 15:31

RAM LA Results
The following totals are from patient records in hand and, due to an unknown number of misplaced papers and lost data, are lower than actual numbers.

6,344 patients registered for 14,561 patient encounters (approximately 2.3 services per patient)

3,827 volunteers, largely non-medical support (It is believed that patient encounters could have doubled if medical professionals licensed in states other than California had been allowed to volunteer their services at this clinic.)

3,182 dental patients – 2, 274 teeth extracted and 5,438 teeth saved, 1,889 cleanings

2,266 vision care patients with 1,984 pairs of prescription eyeglasses made on site and fitted

8,775 general medical visits

Remote Area Medical

Some of the grim statistics reflecting the status quo of health care

Comments

Sunday August 23, 2009 at 15:23

via latimesblogs.latimes.com
Lest we forget the ugly side of the status quo ignored by so many who think ‘we have the greatest health care in the world.’
These are some of the thousands of people lining up since 4AM in Los Angeles for free health care from Remote Area Medical.
Q: How can LA be remote?
A: When health care is priced out of reach of thousands of residents.

via latimesblogs.latimes.com

Lest we forget the ugly side of the status quo ignored by so many who think ‘we have the greatest health care in the world.’

These are some of the thousands of people lining up since 4AM in Los Angeles for free health care from Remote Area Medical.

Q: How can LA be remote?

A: When health care is priced out of reach of thousands of residents.

Comments

Saturday August 22, 2009 at 15:37

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Saturday August 22, 2009 at 11:25

Why ‘adherence to guidlines’ is the wrong way to measure primary care

Guidlines tell us how to maximize the treatment of a condition or organ system.  They are incredibly helpful tools that guide us in optimal care of diabetes, hypertension, AHDH, etc.

As I noted in my last post, overall health and wellness is not necessarily the same thing as maximizing the treatment of an organ system.  There are times when guideline adherence is the wrong thing for some patients.

Example:

In the treatment of Type II diabetes we see an increase in depression when we maximize adherence to self-testing of blood glucose.  Since self-testing of blood glucose is not strongly linked to better outcomes for Type II DM and depression is strongly linked to worse outcomes, we might posit that strict adherence to the guideline may in fact hurt some of our patients.

Example:

Patients with diabetes who have hemoglobin A1c less than 7.0 have fewer complications.  A logical quality measure pushed by the NCQA and other bodies says primary care docs like me should be judged based on the percent of our patients with diabetes who have A1c less than 7.

The problem is that studies show us that elderly patients with diabetes who achieve A1c less than 7.0 fare worse - they die more often.

This is an example of a seemily logical goal that leads to increased risk of death, an outcome most people would accept as more meaningful than A1c.

The examples highlight the essential work of primary care - to help people find their own ideal balance between guidelines and their lives.  Fully informed adults may choose goals that deviate from the guidelines.  Who’s right?

Measuring primary care by ‘percent guideline adherence’ ignores the fundamental value of primary care and forces us to behave like minispecialists.  Guidelines are good tools to measure specialty care but poor ones to measure primary care.

Let guidelines guide good care and let’s use other more meaningful and appropriate approaches guide primary care measurement.

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