Saturday, July 12, 2014

Patient Satisfaction....What is it ? What it is Not

3 Reasons Patient Satisfaction is More Important Than Ever

Social media, insurance coverage and patient experience are main drivers

How to balance patient satisfaction and quality care


"In essence, we want physicians to care about satisfaction, but not too much," Joshua J. Fenton, M.D., MPH, of the University of California, Davis, recently toldMedscape in an interview following up on his team's 2012 widely cited studyindicating that highly satisfied patients had higher hospital admissions, higher drug expenditures and were even 26 percent more likely to die.
The study has garnered both support and criticism during the two years since its publication in the Archives of Internal Medicine. With the opportunity to clear up misunderstandings in how the findings have been interpreted and offer current insights, Fenton made the following points:
  • In most settings, technical quality of healthcare is invisible to patients, and therefore has a weak relationship with patient satisfaction. "For example, in preventive healthcare, there might be an unadjusted relationship between patient satisfaction and receiving an appropriate cancer screening test," Fenton said, "but when you adjust for patient characteristics and other confounding factors, that relationship is no longer present."
  • Any incentive, if weighed too heavily, can become perverse, so "excellent" satisfaction at every encounter may not be an effective goal. "When difficult issues are raised, such as a patient's ability to drive, a possible substance abuse issue, or perhaps poor exercise habits, patients may have an affective response that leads to lower satisfaction," he said. "Yet compensation schemes that unduly award maximum satisfaction would discourage these important conversations."
  • Physicians in the bottom 20th percentile of satisfaction scores may need communication training. Physicians scoring well below their peers may likely be making "simple communication missteps" that can be easily corrected with the help of a trusted supervisor, colleague or consultant, Fenton said. "On the other hand, if a physician's satisfaction scores are in the middle of the bell curve for his or her peers and this physician is doing his or her best to communicate with respect, empathy, and care, then we have no compelling evidence to force that physician to change," he concluded.

In a surprising new study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, patients who rated themselves as most satisfied with their doctors not only incurred 8.8 percent higher health expenses in a two-year period but were also 26 percent more likely to die shortly thereafter than those who rated themselves as less satisfied. In addition, the analysis of 51,946 patients' surveys revealed that although satisfied patients were less likely to visit emergency departments, they had more inpatient admissions.

More immediately, the takeaway for physicians may be that despite the benefits of patient satisfaction in keeping patients loyal and engaged, it's important that servicenot be confused with medical decision-making. In other words, there is probably no downside to offering convenient hours or streamlining a practice's phone systems, for example, but when it comes to deciding medical treatments, the "customer" is not always right.

"Practicing physicians have learned--from reimbursement systems, the medical liability environment, and clinical performance scorekeepers--that they will be rewarded for excess and penalized if they risk not doing enough," wrote Brenda Sirovich from the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vt., in an accompanying invited commentary. "It is time that we, as a profession and as a society, take responsibility for controlling this unrestrained system, by working to overcome the widespread misconception that more care is necessarily better care and to realign the incentives that help nurture this belief."


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

The New Era in Health Care

Californians report roadblocks in new era of health care

 Inaccurate provider lists are among the challenges facing customers as many transition from the ranks of the uninsured under the federal health care overhaul. Covered California, the nation’s leading state exchange, alone has signed up 1.4 million people through the Affordable Care Act.



“Health plans often use intentionally vague or confusing contracting practices, which result in consumer confusion and frustration, as physicians often do not know that they are listed as participating in certain network.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2014/07/08/6539580/californians-report-roadblocks.html#mi_rss=Latest%20News#storylink=cpMore than 1,800 complaints about the process were submitted to state regulators through June 8. Customers have complained that they haven’t received their identification cards and enrollment packets. They’ve said they had trouble navigating narrow networks to find a doctor who will take their coverage.

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Hospital CEOs--Not Doctors--among Medicine's top earners

NYT finds healthcare exec pay eclipses salaries of surgeons and general physicians
 By 


Healthcare and insurance executives' base pay outstrips physician salaries, according to an analysis for The New York Times by Compdata Surveys. 

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Veterans Administration Debacle.....New or a Chronic Problem

No one should be pleased with the recent publcity regarding the VA hospital situation.

VA officials, Democrats work to offset scandal damage


As Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals work toward solutions to delayed care, vulnerable Democrats want to mitigate damage from the revelations surrounding the scandal.
The VA administration has taken several steps to fix departmental problems, So far, various agencies conducted several reviews and investigations, including a report from the VA's independent office of inspector general, an internal audit and a broad review of the VA network pointing to a "corrosive culture" in which management retaliated against whistleblowers, 
In addition, the VA banned executive bonuses and made several leadership changes; VA head Eric Shinseki resigned in June, and President Barack Obama this week nominated former Proctor & Gamble CEO Bob McDonald to replace him. In the meantime, interim VA Secretary Sloan Gibson reached out to more than 100,000 wait listed veterans to schedule appointments and discuss their healthcare needs, according to the Washington Post. Furthermore, the VA removed seeing patients within 14 days of appointment requests as a goal, a target White House advisor Rob Nabors called said was unrealistic, overly vague and had potentially "incentivized inappropriate actions."
The director of Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Indianapolis is touting the results of steps the facility took to fix problems, telling visiting members of Congress that patient wait times are down two-thirds,according to the Indianapolis Star. Director Tom Mattice said the 229-bed facility reduced average wait times from 42 days to less than two weeks.

Obama to name former Proctor Gamble CEO as new VA head

Bob McDonald tapped to replace Shinseki as Secretary of Veterans Affairs



The choice of a successor to Gen Sinsheki is a bit out of the 'box' Typically the head of the VA is chosen from a list of military generals with a large amount of experience in military and government organization. Although Bob McDonald graduated from West Point and had a relatively brief career in the military, his most recent success was as head of Proctor and Gamble. His position at P&G (80 billion dollar business) gives him a strong consumer oriented approach to a product.
The VA administrative organization is heavy with ex-military personnel who have a direct path to civil service positions when they retire from their military activity. Their strength may be in organizational and hierarchal decision making, but lacks a patient oriented attitude unless they were in a health care related positon in the military.
The rigidity of the VA does not readily adapt to patient needs, and the prevailng attitude is to squeeze the patient into the system, instead of designing a system to fit the patient.
The change in leadership in this direction indicates that a 'patient centric' approach will mimic the change in other areas of health care.


Monday, June 30, 2014

Revolutionary Hologram Guided Surgery is a Heartbeat Away

It sounds like something out of a sci-fi thriller, but an Israeli holographic imaging system for the operating room is poised to revolutionize surgery in the near future.

Though only in the clinical beta prototype stage, the world’s first 3D holographic display and interaction system for medical applications was already featured on the TV show Grey’s Anatomy and has been tested successfully by surgeons at Israel’s Schneider Children’s Medical Center in Petach Tikva.
This proprietary digital technology from RealView Imaging in Yokneam projects hyper-realistic, dynamic 3D holographic images of body structures “floating in the air” without the need for special glasses or a conventional screen.
The physician can literally touch and interact precisely with the projected three-dimensional volumes, providing an unprecedented tool for planning, performing and evaluating minimally invasive surgical procedures.
As reported in the Israeli Times

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Doctors4 Patient Care Direct Payment Models

In this article Hal Scherz MD discusses direct payment models, the VA Crisis and other related items such as America's Web Radio,(available as a mobile app on iTunes) The Doctor's Lounge, and Doctors 4 Patient Care.

Doctors 4 patient care continues to be a strong force for physician opinion for freedom, and for eliminating much of the bureaucracy and governmental regulation preventing effective medical decisioins.




Tuesday, June 24, 2014

The Feds are Enforcing Privacy Rules With Stiff Fines for violating HIPAA Regulatons

Groups hit with record $4.8M HIPAA fine



And finally, not all data breaches are electronic:

This breach involved records from a hospital emergency department that should have been shredded ending up in a dumpster in front of the hospital. "It was a windy day. Security forgot to put a lid on the dumpster. The records are down the street," Hinkley recounted. Ultimately, school children nearby ended up collecting the records and returned them to the hospital. "The security guard said, 'not my job,'" said Hinkley. "How could someone seeing papers (flying about) not think, 'Gee, is that something I should think about?'"
 
The incident could well serve as the poster child for inadequate employee training, added Hinkley. The key is to "have it be owned by everybody from the first person the patient sees to the last one they see and everybody that touches their data in between."

EHRs and other digital storage or HIT network has been delayed, despite HIPAA regulations. Implementation may be delayed due to a multitiude of mandated changes in health reform. Institutions are hard pressed to comply due to financial limitation meeting all their responsibilities.