Monday, August 17, 2015

Meaningful Use....What the AMA has to say about Meaningful Use

October 1, 2015 is fast approaching. That is the deadline for providers to adopt ICD-10.  In addition to that requirement Meaningful Use continues to be a bane on providers.  Physicians perceive meaningful use as less than meaningful when resources could be better used to improve EHR usability rather than  some bureaucratic bloat/.

Meaningful Use (MU) isn't working, and now the government wants to move forward with Stage 3 implementation. But if it's not fixed, that could lead to less time with patients, less innovation and costly penalties if physicians are unable to comply. Currently physician participation in MU Stage 2 sits at less than 10 percent, compared to the 80 percent adoption of EHRs.

Recently Rep. Renee Ellmers, R-N.C., introduced H.R. 3309, the "Flex IT 2 Act." This legislation would provide much needed flexibility in the MU program and enhance electronic health records (EHRs) to improve patient care and access to health information. The bill also addresses key interoperability challenges by ensuring certified EHR systems are capable of sending, receiving and seamlessly incorporating patient data.

At a recent AMA town hall meeting on EHRs and MU, the response from physicians was overwhelming: MU is not working, and physicians cannot move to a learning health system unless they have the tools to do so. They need state-of-the-art technology that can interoperate with other systems and providers.
In Washington, D.C., August means one thing—congressional recess. 


Some of the reflections spoken about at the AMA meeting:

     80% of physicians are using EHR
     Rather than improving efficient patient care, the current state of EHR design interferes with the
     goal of improving patient relationships. 
     The current administration continues to push forward with more meaningful use requirements instead
     of correcting what does not contribute to patient care.

     The proposals to change from procedural based reimbursement to value will require EHR modification
     to integrate with the proposed changes of health reform.

     The AMA's goals are to have physicians play a key role in improving patient care, improve                            interoperability, and eliminate the digital silos that have replaced paper silos.

     
     Please take advantage of this time when your members of Congress are back at home: Email or call (888) 434-6200 to be connected with their district offices, and urge them to cosponsor H.R. 3309 today!


To learn more about MU and to share your story, please visit: breaktheredtape.org






https://www.votervoice.net/Shares/BUyuPAqYACVOKAjpVYN7FAA

Oliver Sacks: My Periodic Table - The New York Times













I received an email from Oliver Sacks this morning (or rather from his staff at the Oliver Sack's Foundation.)

So what does this post have to do with health care ?  Nothing, or everything. Oliver  is a neurologist who has terminal cancer. He was diagnosed with ocular melanoma  He has had a rich productive life, not just as a physician but as an accomplished writer, admired by all.  And when he was young this man loved motorcycles, weight lifting and swimming,  several of which he still pursued.

The news was that Dr. Sack's has terminal cancer at age 82. He explains it in his genius and quirky sense of humor that those who know him will recognize by his commentary about dying.

"Bismuth is element 83. I do not think I will see my 83rd birthday, but I feel there is something hopeful, something encouraging, about having “83” around. Moreover, I have a soft spot for bismuth, a modest gray metal, often unregarded, ignored, even by metal lovers. My feeling as a doctor for the mistreated or marginalized extends into the inorganic world and finds a parallel in my feeling for bismuth.  I almost certainly will not see my polonium (84th) birthday, nor would I want any polonium around, with its intense, murderous radioactivity. But then, at the other end of my table — my periodic table — I have a beautifully machined piece of beryllium (element 4) to remind me of my childhood, and of how long ago my soon-to-end life began."

Sack's early years were not easy, as he describes his diversions from emotional pain with numbers and equations, as he eloquently states,

"I have tended since early boyhood to deal with loss — losing people dear to me — by turning to the nonhuman. When I was sent away to a boarding school as a child of 6, at the outset of the Second World War, numbers became my friends; when I returned to London at 10, the elements and the periodic table became my companions. Times of stress throughout my life have led me to turn, or return, to the physical sciences, a world where there is no life, but also no death."





Oliver Sacks Books










Oliver Sacks: My Periodic Table - The New York Times

Friday, August 14, 2015

Euthanasia: Has it's time come ? Do you have an Advanced Directive?

Health Reform has led to more openness and transparency. Along with preparing financially for death, how many plan how to die ?  Will you have choices ? Who should decide ?  Should relatives or children  be a part of the decision? What if you are unable to make a decision toward the end?

Physicians and patients struggle watching loved ones dwindle, suffer pain and lose any quality of life.Whether it is from incurable cancer Alzheimer's disease or chronic wasting disease,  it presents enormous conflict for loved ones.

Humans like answers that are black and white rather than shades of grey.  Our society is firmly in the grip of the ten commandments, "thou shalt not murder'.

Should we let life run it's course without interference?  Religious people would hypothesize that the process of dying is much like the act of childbirth, with gradual change leading up to the pain and ecstasy of birth.  Could it be dying is the same ?  Does the process of dying prepare us to enter a new realm, or does it all just end and go blank ?  Is suffering an important process of dying.  One might ask about people who are suddenly killed by accident, or intent?

Some would argue that with rapidly growing population and decreasing resources, and more expensive medical treatment that euthanasia is justified for some.

In Belgium and the Netherlands Euthanasia has been legalized beginning in 2007.

Comparison of the Expression and Granting of Requests for Euthanasia in Belgium in 2007 vs 2013

A Study of the First Year of the End-of-Life Clinic for Physician-Assisted Dying in the Netherlands

             Legalization of the right to die   ("Termination of Life on Request and Assisted Suicide (Review Procedures) Act" from 2002.)  (Netherlands)

            Legalization of the right to die   The Belgian parliament legalised euthanasia on 28 May 2002.[4][5]

As of June 2015, human euthanasia is legal only in the Netherlands,BelgiumColombia[1] and LuxembourgAssisted suicide is legal in SwitzerlandGermanyJapanAlbania and in the US states ofWashingtonOregonVermontNew Mexico and Montana.


W A R N I N G   The following videos of euthanasia may  be very disturbing to some. The videos present real instances of euthanasia



The author offers no opinion on right or wrong regarding euthanasia, but states that death with dignity should outweigh other considerations and should be protected by law without penalty and only to be performed with the consent of a patient.  The patient's desires should be incorporated in an Advanced Directive.

And for those with hope, there is Dr. Steven Eisenberg




On a Slippery Slope?  Euthanasia in Belgium and the Netherlands


JAMA Network | JAMA Internal Medicine | Euthanasia in Belgium and the Netherlands:  On a Slippery Slope?

Legionairres Disease Outbreak in NYC...



A sign hangs outside Lincoln Medical Center where a cooling tower has been tested and disinfected following a deadly outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in the South Bronx region, New York August 7, 2015.
REUTERS/LUCAS JACKSON

The New York City Council voted unanimously on Thursday to pass legislation that mandates strict regulations of cooling towers, a move that comes in response to the current outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease in the South Bronx. The Council voted 42-0 in favor of new regulations that will require all cooling towers be registered, tested and then disinfected if they’re found to contain Legionellabacteria. Cooling towers are used to regulate temperatures indoors and are part of ventilation systems in many modern residential buildings. Failure to comply with the law could cost a property owner as much as $25,000 in fines and a year in jail.
The current outbreak of the potentially fatal bacterial pneumonia has killed 12 people and sickened more than 100 in the South Bronx. The victims contracted the illness after breathing in contaminated water vaporized through cooling systems.

“We must do everything we can to proactively prevent outbreaks of Legionnaires’ disease, which is why legislation requiring regular inspections and testing of cooling towers is extremely important,” Jumaane Williams, city council member and chair of the committee on housing and buildings, said in statement. “Without proper maintenance, cooling towers can accrue an overgrowth of Legionella,causing what has proven to be a fatal outcome for far too many New Yorkers.”
The illness was originally called " Pontiac Disease",  named after an outbreak in Michigan. It was associated with steam cleaning of water turbines.



Microscopic view of Legionela pneumophila
The bacteria are the long cylindrical figures. The cells are leucocytes, macrophages (single nucleus) polymorphonucleophages (multilobed nucleus) The nucleus is the darkly stained structure near the center of each cell. It takes up the stain more intensely since the nucleus contains DNA.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Startups Vie to Build an Uber for Health Care -

The uberization of health care access in the United States is a real  possibility.


Given the enormous change in the business of health, and it's rapid adoption of new technologies the trend may bein place for this to occur.  Insurers are desperate to control costs,and providers seem to have become pawns in the chess game of health care management.

There has already been a reduction in hospital admissions and penalties for readmissions. Outpatent care reigns, and that too will come under scrutiny.  The house call may return with the assistance of wearables, remote monitoring of cardiac EKG, thermal imaging and technician ultrasound, (technicians already perform these tests in office). Results can be electronically transmitted and analyzed remotely by a provider and other  certified mobile devices that measure blood chemistry, urine analysis. external photography, including diabetic eye screening for diabetic retinopathy.


Most of these procedures can be reimbursed for the service and provider interpretation. Insurers may w ish to contract directly with mobile health services for efficiency and to reduce administrative burden on  provider facilities.
Many rapid micro-analytic devices are in the FDA approval pipeline.

In the coming decade medicine and health care routines may become unrecognizable compared to today's practice patterns.


Eve Rorison, a nurse who works for Pager, conducts a wellness check for Facebook executive Kunal Merchant at his New York offices. Services like Pager are putting a high-tech spin on old-fashioned house calls. PHOTO: MELINDA BECK/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Can providers and regulatory bodies survive the change as providers and patients demand patient centered medicine.  Perhaps forward looking boards and licensing organizations will become leaders.

But don't hold your breath.  Current and past behavior runs counter to this change..  The synergy of HIT,increasing utilization, and the mandates of the Affordable Care Act will conspire to accelerate the process of change.





tartups Vie to Build an Uber for Health Care - WSJ

Monday, August 10, 2015

We're overdosing on medicine – it's time to embrace life's uncertainty

The more we learn about the problem of too much medicine and what’s driving it, the harder it seems to imagine effective solutions. Winding back unnecessary tests and treatments will require a raft of reforms across medical research, education and regulation.
But to enable those reforms to take root, we may need to cultivate a fundamental shift in our thinking about the limits of medicine. It’s time to free ourselves from the dangerous fantasy that medical technology can deliver us from the realities of uncertainty, ageing and death.

We’re all ill now

A growing body of evidence shows that when it comes to health care, we may simply be getting too much of a good thing. In the United States, it’s estimated that more than US$200 billion a year is squandered on unnecessary tests and treatments. In the United Kingdom, senior medical groups are calling on doctors to reduce all the wasteful things they do. And in Australia, the Choosing Wisely campaign recently kicked off with lists of unnecessary and harmful health care.
Not only are we overusing pills and procedures, we’re creating even more problems with “overdiagnosis” by labelling more and more healthy people with diseases that will never harm them.
Screening programs targeting the healthy can detect potentially deadly cancers and extend lives. But they can also find many early abnormalities that are then treated as cancers, even though they would never have caused anyone any symptoms if left undetected.
The common ups and downs of our sex lives are often re-labelled as medical dysfunctions. Older people who are simply at risk of future illness – those with high cholesterol, for instance, or reduced kidney function, or low bone mineral density – are portrayed as if they were diseased.  Have we set the threshold for illness and/or disease too low?


The more we learn about the problem of too much medicine and what’s driving it, the harder it seems to imagine effective solutions. Winding back unnecessary tests and treatments will require a raft of reforms across medical research, education and regulation.
But to enable those reforms to take root, we may need to cultivate a fundamental shift in our thinking about the limits of medicine. It’s time to free ourselves from the dangerous fantasy that medical technology can deliver us from the realities of uncertainty, ageing and death.

We’re all ill now

A growing body of evidence shows that when it comes to health care, we may simply be getting too much of a good thing. In the United States, it’s estimated that more than US$200 billion a year is squandered on unnecessary tests and treatments. In the United Kingdom, senior medical groups are calling on doctors to reduce all the wasteful things they do. And in Australia, the Choosing Wisely campaign recently kicked off with lists of unnecessary and harmful health care.
Not only are we overusing pills and procedures, we’re creating even more problems with “overdiagnosis” by labelling more and more healthy people with diseases that will never harm them.
Screening programs targeting the healthy can detect potentially deadly cancers and extend lives. But they can also find many early abnormalities that are then treated as cancers, even though they would never have caused anyone any symptoms if left undetected.
The common ups and downs of our sex lives are often re-labelled as medical dysfunctions. Older people who are simply at risk of future illness – those with high cholesterol, for instance, or reduced kidney function, or low bone mineral density – are portrayed as if they were diseased.
The doctors expanding disease definitions and lowering the thresholds at which diagnoses are made are often being paid directly by the companies that stand to benefit from turning millions more people into patients.

Fundamental shifts in thinking

Indeed, intolerance of uncertainty has been suggested as among the most important drivers of medical excess. Doctors order ever more tests to try, often in vain, to be sure about what they’re seeing – to be more certain. But disease and the benefits and harms of treating it are inevitably fraught with uncertainty because we’re trying to apply knowledge derived from populations to unique individuals.
More broadly, uncertainty is the basis of all scientific creativity, intellectual freedom and political resistance. We should nurture uncertainty, treasure it and teach its value, rather than be afraid of it.
No matter how much the marketers of medicines try to make us feel broken by the
mere passing of time, ageing is not a disease. Disease definitions that equate “normal” with being young are fundamentally flawed and require urgent review.


Everyone must die and everyone, patients and doctors alike, is more or less fearful of dying. So, it’s perhaps not surprising that we so often turn to biotechnical approaches rather than paying real attention to the care of the dying – a core purpose of medicine.
But, there are many positive signs of change within medicine. The Choosing Wisely campaign mentioned above is a partnership between doctors and wider civil society. And it’s now an international movement to wind back excess medicine.
A new approach called shared decision making is promoting much more honest conversations between doctors and the people they care for, embracing uncertainty about benefits and harms, rather than peddling false hopes. Another new approach among GPs called quaternary prevention is urging doctors to protect people from unnecessary medical labels and unwarranted tests and treatments.

Quaternary prevention is a group of measures taken to prevent, decrease and/or alleviate the harm caused by health activities. Health activities not only generally produce benefits, but also harm. That is to say, although medical intervention is mainly favourable, there is a dynamic balance that requires continuous assessment of the clinical situation as naturally only those health activities that achieve more benefit than harm at the end are justified. Quaternary prevention is the avoidance of unnecessary medical activity, such as "check-ups". In another example, quaternary prevention is the recommendation of preventive measures of proven efficacy. As regards diagnosis, quaternary prevention is, for example, the avoidance of screening without foundation, such as in prostate cancer. The appropriate use of antibiotics in upper respiratory tract infections serves as an example of quaternary prevention in the field of treatment. Another example is the application of the correct rehabilitation techniques in non-specific low back pain, such as swimming and maintaining an active life as much as possible. Not to forget other important "non-classic" aspects in the elderly, such as to limit the harm that can be caused by physical movement restriction devices. These and other examples in daily practice are considered in this article to encourage the continual assessment of quaternary prevention, the classic primum non nocere "first, do no harm".



We're overdosing on medicine – it's time to embrace life's uncertainty

Small Businesses Face New Obamacare Threat - Forbes

Small Businesses Face New Obamacare Threat - Forbes

Survival

We talk a lot about fixing healthcare, but none of it matters if the people delivering care cannot survive the system themselves. More than ...