Monday, October 15, 2012
Can
You Satisfy Patients, Hospitals, and Doctors All At Once?
I
can’t get no satisfaction.
Keith
Richards (born 1943), musician,
songwriter, and original member of Rolling Stones, Satisfaction (1965)
You
get the satisfaction from being heard.
John
Jay Chapman (1862-1933), Learning and
Other Essays
October
15, 2012 - Today
two articles in the Wall Street Journal caught my eye.
·
The first, by reporter Janet Adamy was “U.S.
Ties Hospital Payments to Making Patients Happy.” Adamy describes how the Obama
administration is tying hospital payment to results of a 27-question government
patient satisfaction survey. The questions are subjective and asks questions
about how well doctors and patients communicate well, are courtesy, are
responsive, and whether the hospital
food is good. If scores are bad,
non-performing hospitals get docked nearly $1 billion. The $1 billion goes to hospitals are perform
well. This is part of the Obama administration
financial carrot-and-stick
campaign. In 2012, the bad hospitals will be penalized 1% of
their Medicare revenues; next year it will be 2%. Hospitals complain that the subjective results may have little to do with quality of care and outcomes. Dr. Michael Frankel, MD, chief of neurology, says doctors are frustrated because there is
little doctors can do to improve scores. He adds, “We’re expected to work
miracles on patients, and sometimes that doesn’t happen.” Nevertheless, the Obama people cling to the
notion that punishing or rewarding physicians or hospitals for installing EHRs,
prescribing electronically, or reducing hospital 30 day readmissions is the path to
lower costs, higher quality, and greater satisfaction.
·
The second piece, “Let Doctors Cure
Health-Care Costs, “on the Op-Ed page, is by Mitchell Rabkin, MD, a Harvard
professor of medicine, and John Cook, an independent consultant on health are
payment. The two say that more
satisfaction could be achieved by replacing the ailing fee-for-service model
with salaried-physician groups working within a fixed budget. That way doctors would be held accountable. They say the current Medicare Accountable
Care Organization model may not work because primary care physicians are not on
salary. But they point to Kaiser Permanente as a model
that works and where salaried physicians tend to
be more satisfied than doctors elsewhere according to 2012 White Paper from the
Physicians Foundation. The key word here may be “elsewhere,” for in the other
parts of the country – Ohio, Texas, and Connecticut – to name but a few, the
Kaiser model has not worked because of patient and physician dissatisfaction.
They conclude” When these three goals
are met – living within a reasonable budget, maintaining high quality of care,
and patient satisfaction- the money not spent in the annual budget would be
distributed in three ways: to the physician group, to the insurer
(Medicare), and to the patients in the form of reduced premiums over the next
year.
So far in Massachusetts, where Romneycare
is supposedly the model for Obamacare and where salaried physician groups are the
norm. premiums are higher, waiting times are longer, and ERs are more crowded than ever. And in the Physician Foundation Survey of
630,000 physicians, released on September 24, 2012, 62% of physicians said, in their opinion,
accountable care organizations would be unlikely to decrease cost, enhance quality, or improve satisfaction.
To paraphrase Abraham Lincoln, “You can satisfy all
of the people some of the time, you can even satisfy some of the people all the
time, but you can’t satisfy all of the people all of the time.”
Tweet: The
Obama administration has adopted a policy of rewarding or punishing hospitals financially
based on a 27-question patient satisfaction survey
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3 comments:
Isn’t the timing of the survey very coincidental as we’re soon touching November 6th? Some of the points make absolute sense. But it’s also true that you can’t satisfy all the groups all the time in accordance to Lincoln’s thought.
Nice article, thanks for the information.
Nice article, thanks for the information.
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