The Last Three Health
Reform “Cs” – Cost, Coordination, and
Connectivity
Sailing the Seven “Cs”
of Hospital-Physician Relationships – Competence, Convenience, Clarity,
Continuity, Competition, Control, Cash
Title of Book, by
James Hawkins, MBA, and Richard L. Reece, MD, PSR Publications, 2006
Seven years ago, James Hawkins, a hospital administrator, and
I wrote on a book listing the seven Cs we considered essential for a harmonious
hospital-physician relationship – competence, convenience, clarity, continuity,
competition, control, and cash.
Today, as Obamacare undergoes its implementation travails, I would like to add "cost", "coordination", and
c"onnectivity" to the orginal seven "Cs."
·
Cost -
It is now clear Obamacare is going to cost at least twice, perhaps even three
times, its original $900 billion estimate over the next decade – and the cost
will come in human, access, and economic terms. According to Daniel P. Kessler, professor of
business and law at Stanford and fellow at the Hoover Institute,
“ In total, it appears that there will be 30
to 40 million people damaged in some fashion by the Affordable by the Affordable
Care Act with more than one in 10
Americans. .. We’ll hear more about innocent victims who saw their premiums skyrocket,
who were barred from seeing their usual doctors, who had their hours cuts or
lost their insurance – all thanks to the faceless bureaucracy administering a
federal law.” ("The Coming ObamaCare Shock," Wall Street Journal, April 30, 2013)
·
Coordination
- It’s hard to turn your head these
days when reading about health reform without hearing cries for more “coordination.” What is proposed for coordintion solutions are more
primary care physicians, more medical
homes, more hospitalists, more
accountable care organizations, and
more large integrated care organizations with more doctors, nurses, other health
professionals, and managers working together seamlessly in teams. The article concludes
´Some medical centers have
taken steps to improve communication, assigning color-coded ID tags or scrubs
to staff members so patients know who's a nurse and who's a doctor, and
installing white boards in patient rooms, where a nurse starting a shift can jot
down his or her name. At some facilities, hospitalists write their names on
those boards, and hand patients and their relatives business cards or sticky
notes with their photos."
“A
few hospitals have gone further. At the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., patients
having surgery attend a pre-admission education class so they know "almost
to the hour, let alone to the day, what's going to happen," said Chief
Medical Officer Michael Rock.”
“In
Pennsylvania, Geisinger Health System has developed a checklist on laminated
cards that fit in caregivers' pockets. It includes questions that doctors and
nurses need to keep uppermost when reviewing cases, such as: "Is the
patient taking high-risk medications? When is the patient going home? Does the
patient have any catheters or lines that should come out?"
“Virginia
Mason Health System in Seattle completely overhauled how they did things after
sending representatives to Japan to learn from Toyota. Now nurses spend 90
percent of their time near the patient “so the shift handoffs don’t happen at
the nurses’ station anymore,” said Dr. Gary Kaplan, Virginia Mason’s chairman
and CEO. “Patients don’t have to use the call button.”
“Consumer
advocacy organizations, meanwhile, advise patients entering the hospital to
have a relative or close friend, or even a hired hand, who can communicate on
their behalf and be at their side through the hospitalization. “
·
Connectivity
- These days computer "connectivity" as a universal solution for coordinating care is a huge and
sprawling subject; The logic goes: Once everybody
is connected to everybody else via handheld mobile devices, smart phones, embedded tracking implants, the social media, big data, and electronic health records that
can communicate with one another, everything can be coordinated with nothing
and nobody failing through the cracks.
I suppose this may happen if one interprets
the current IBM ad as gospel, “Few human technologies have
transformed human behavior as quickly as mobile. Two of three people in the
world keep mobile devices within reach as all times. A typical user reaches for the device 150 times every day- sending messages,
researching, collaborating. There are
four times as many mobile phones, in use as there or personal computers, and as
many as there are TVs."
Or If you read The
Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations, and Business, by Eric Schmidt, former Google CEO, and Jared Cohen, author, researcher,
and top global thinker.
I see only one problem
with these lines of thinking –fear of loss of personal privacy and security,
identity theft, and misuse and abuse of personal information, particularly that
dealing with personal health.
Tweet:
Higher costs, lack of coordination, and
loss or privacy and economic security, are fears shaping the fate of the health reform law.
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