Monday, April 20, 2009

Recovery

Recovery Dialogue:

IT Solutions
For one week beginning April 27th, The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board and the Office of Management and Budget in partnership with the National Academy of Public Administration, will host a national online dialogue to engage leading information technology (IT) vendors, thinkers, and consumers in answering a key question:

What ideas, tools, and approaches can make Recovery.gov a place where all citizens can transparently monitor the expenditure and use of recovery funds?

Participants from across the IT community will be able to recommend, discuss, and vote on the best ideas, tools, and approaches. Your ideas can directly impact how Recovery.gov operates and ensure that our economic recovery is the most transparent and accountable in history. Mark your calendars and check back for the web link and additional information.

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New NIH Recovery Act Opportunity Seeks to Fund High Impact, Large-Scale, Accelerated Research

Monday, April 13, 2009

Goal to Promote Growth and Investment in Biomedical R&D, Public Health and Health Care Delivery

The National Institutes of Health highlighted a new funding opportunity under the Recovery Act that will support approximately $200 million in large-scale research projects that have a high likelihood of enabling growth and investment in biomedical research and development, public health and health care delivery. The purpose of this new program, the Research and Research Infrastructure "Grand Opportunities" (GO), is to support high impact ideas that lend themselves to short-term funding and may lay the foundation for new fields of scientific inquiry.

Read More.

 

Health 2.0

For you afficionados of SAS, and asp solutions,stay tuned to the imminent meeting of the new improved merger of Health 2.0  and Ix . Much  more information is available by clicking here or on the logo below.

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Sunday, April 19, 2009

AMA joins the Health Train Express

 

Who said the American Medical Association is out of touch with today's rising provider stars under the age of 55? Not relevant? Does not represent the vast majority of physicians in regard to government regulations?  A group of Medical Politicians? Not so! The AMA now has a place on Twitter, and  "Twits" about all things medical.  Actually the correct term is   "Tweet".

Tweetie Pie is a 1947 Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Friz Freleng and produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons, depicting the first pairing of Tweety and Sylvester.

I hope that my dues to the AMA are not being spent on this 'ridiculous' means of marketing and communications. The twits are limited to somewhere around 140 characters. Twit is actually meant for cell phone and smart messaging.  It is equivalent to your pager going off to tell you about some medical news or other item the AMA deems important to physician members.  (They ought to spend more time and money for information flowng at them, not from them.)

I started this particular entry several days ago......not much interest now in finishing it.

On to more challenging issues, such as how and why TARP is around and how we will be 'stimulated' and prodded to adopt EHR and HIT. There is much material to review and I will be back!!

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Misdirected Heat IT Funding Chapter II

I never think of the future. It comes soon enough.

Albert Einstein

 

 

....There are other ways to utilize HIT in direct patient care that would create enormous dividends and decrease medicare and private payments to hospitals.

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The Silver Bullet Approach

A recent study revealed that a great number of medicare beneficiaries are re-admitted to hospital within 30 days of their discharge due to inadequate post discharge followup.

The study published by the New England Journal of Medicine   states,  "Twenty-two per cent of Medicare hospitalizations were followed by a readmission within 60 days of discharge. Medicare spent over $2.5 billion per year (24 per cent of Medicare inpatient expenditures) on such readmissions between 1974 and 1977.  This study  supercedes similar studies in 1994-1996, and 1984-1986.  The study cohorts are not similar in demographics or provider institutions and may not be comparable.

In this study, the cost of unplanned overcapitalization in 2004 was estimated to account for US$17.4 billion of the $102.6 billion in hospital payments from Medicare. A large percentage of bounce-back admissions appear to be related directly to poorly coordinated transitions of care. Given that a woeful percentage of patients attend follow-up visits, tremendous  improvement might be possible if patients were seen by their primary care physicians within a few weeks after discharge.

Other articles explain how medicare's prospective payment as well as  DRG reimbursement plan has created this image

difficulty and increased expenditures,and how improvement might be possible if patients were seen by their primary care physicians within a few weeks after discharge.  (Does a shorter hospital stay reduce costs and/or increase readmission rates. ) Are patients stable on discharge?

Would HIT spending in this area, applied in a systematic way reduce these expenditures?  Why spend it all on EMR and HIE?

Richard Reece MD, who writes in Medinnovation Blog elaborates on how these billions of dollars might well be apportioned more wisely.

Misdirected Health IT Funding

Let it be said that the Federal Government knows how to spend money on the wrong things in the wrong way.

THE SILVER BULLET APPROACH

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One of the hypothesis (and yet to be proven) is that EMRs, and Health Information Exchanges will lower costs for medicare and private insurers.

The recent promises of using stimulus funds to promote health information technology while well intentioned has not been well thought out.

The financial structuring of the incentives is to 'rush' to implementation.  This will actually encourage the adoption of immature and inadequate electronic medical record systems. Interoperability and certifications do not ensure an efficient or  useful EMR.

Those providers who adopt this incentive thinking that the initial payoff in incentives will offset any possible penalties for delaying implementation.  Furthermore they may adopt a system that will actually cost them more in the long run, by being inadequate for their use.

This legislation for HIT funding is fueled by industry lobbyists (vendors), and organizations such as HIMMS which are largely directed by vendors themselves.

They wait at the doors of "public funding" for their take of stimulus funds. 

 

Adopter

 

Medpedia

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Ask not what you can do for your Country, ask what your kids can do for you???

 

What did we ‘baby boomers’ do right?? How come almost everything we attempt to do, turns out to harm us more than help us??

Cover you A-s

I came across this on Matt Holt's ''The Health Care Blog" this AM during my usual scan of the health blogosphere.

Blogging has surely tapped into sources that most physicians have neither the access, nor time to analyze.

The health care situation" has now been posited for the iminent financial underpinning of the economy and it's rush toward doom. Numerous bean counters will bemoan the fact that the

health care portion of the economy is increasing in relation to the GDP to the point where it is unsustainable.

 

Will a "Universal Payor" (socialized, or privatized) do anything to reverse this trend??  Most providers recognized the inherent inefficiencies and redundant bureaucratic organizations operating in the healthcare sphere.

Health care has been labelled as 'the driving force' toward financial doom as it's financial underpinning and never ending demand for services. 

In the past, venture capital funding for health care has been meager when compared to the rest of the financial world.

Tim Mullaney in The Health Care Blog  discusses the Psilos Group's plan to raise 450 million dollars. The fund support Health Care Technology and Services.

Obamacare and the Subsidy

The third-party payment system has stripped power from patients, distorted incentives and disrupted markets. It doesn’t trust patients to ch...