Cooperating for better care.

Robert Whitcomb

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Causes and treatment of ‘improvement fatigue’

lunch

 

Ian Morrison, Ph.D., a healthcare consultant based in Menlo Park, Calif., asks in Hospitals & Health Networks whether we’re overstraining the ability of front-line caregivers to move from fee for service to fee for value.

“It turns out that, as long ago as 2007, a high-profile group of medical leaders pointed out …the rise of quality and improvement fatigue as a growing consequence of the increased pressures to measure and improve the quality of care. But, in the last eight years, the pace has intensified as bigger strategic commitments are being made to reach the lofty PowerPoint future of health improvement and transformation….”

“In the past few months, I have had many conversations and interactions with health system leaders ….Every one of these people, each in his or her own way, points to what I have come to term ‘improvement fatigue.”’

“They want to understand better the ‘why of change’ in a clear and coherent way, and they need help and support in changing how care is delivered while at the same time they are actually delivering care.”

“This is a key challenge for health system leaders: to learn to spot improvement fatigue and help front-line caregivers overcome it so they can continue to do what they’ve always wanted to do — care for their patients in the best possible way.”

Mr. Morrison cites as reasons for the fatigue:

Obamacare angst.

Need for explanation of the why of change.

Mixed signals.

High stakes. 

Multitasking.

The quality police.

Complexity.

The electronic health record.

 

To  treat improvement fatigue, he suggests:

 

Telling a consistent, coherent story.

Rethinking physician leadership.

Providing institutional support.

Emphasizing noble purpose.

 

 


AAFP pushes to defend hospital-employed physicians

 

 

The American Academy of Family Physicians has written  a letter to  the the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services seeking to defend the rights of family physicians employed by hospitals.

Becker’s Hospital Review reports that in a letter to Andy Slavitt, CMS acting administrator,  AAFP’s board chairman, Reid Blackwelder, M.D.,  argued that hospital-employed physicians have the right to “due process” before being fired from hospitals’ medical staff.

“We believe physicians deserve fair hearings when threatened by termination from a hospital and that fear of retribution may limit or prevent physicians from fully advocating for their patients’ best interests,” Dr. Blackwelder wrote. He added that “physicians with due process rights are more likely to protest fraudulent practices that threaten the integrity of the Medicare and Medicaid programs.”

Becker’s reported that the AAFP is asking CMS to revise the “conditions of participation” form that Medicare-participating hospitals sign, saying that AAFP believes that  hospitals and physician-staffing companies should be prohibited “from including language that facilitates physician dismissal without a fair hearing in physician employment contracts.”

 


Set your own hospital prices

By JAY HANCOCK

for Kaiser Health News

 

In the late 1990s you could have taken what hospitals charged to administer inpatient chemotherapy and bought a Ford Escort econobox. Today average chemo charges (not even counting the price of the anti-cancer drugs) are enough to pay for a Lexus GX sport-utility vehicle, government data show.

Hospital prices have risen nearly three times as much as overall inflation since Ronald Reagan was president. Health payers have tried HMOs, Accountable Care Organizations and other innovations to control them, with little effect.

A small benefits consulting firm called ELAP Services is causing commotion by suggesting an alternative: Refuse to pay. When hospitals send invoices with charges that seem to bear no relationship to their costs, the Pennsylvania firm tells its clients (generally medium-sized employers) to just say no.

Instead, employers pay hospitals a much lower amount for their services — based on ELAP’s analysis of what is reasonable after analyzing the hospitals’ own financial filings.

For facilities on the receiving end of ELAP’s unusual strategy, this is a disruption of business as usual, to say the least. Hospitals are unhappy but have failed to make headway against it in court.

“It was a leap of faith,” when Huffines Auto Dealerships, which provides coverage to 300 employees and their families, signed on to the ELAP plan a few years ago, said Eric Hartter, chief financial officer for the Texas firm.

What he says now: “This is the best form of true healthcare reform that I’ve come across.”

Huffines first worked with ELAP on charges for an employee’s back surgery. The worker had spent three days in a Dallas hospital.  The bill was $600,000, Hartter said.

Like many businesses, the dealership pays worker health costs directly. At the time it was working with a claims administrator that set up a traditional, “preferred provider” network with agreed hospital discounts.

The administrator looked at the bill and said, “‘Don’t worry. By the time we apply the discounts and everything else it’ll be down to about $300,000,’” Hartter recalled. “I said, ‘What’s the difference? That doesn’t make me feel any better.’”

Instead he had ELAP analyze the bill. The firm estimated costs for the treatment based on the hospital’s financial reports filed with Medicare. Then it added a cushion so the hospital could make a modest profit.

“We wrote a check to the hospital for $28,900 and we never heard from them again,” Hartter said.

Now Huffines and ELAP, which launched this service in 2007 and has been growing since, treat every big hospital bill the same way. The result has saved so much money that what the dealership and workers contribute for health costs stayed unchanged for six years while benefits remained the same, Hartter said.

More than 200 employers providing health coverage to about 115,000 workers and dependents have hired ELAP. Company CEO Steve Kelly said he is aware of only one other, smaller, benefits consultant with the same approach.

Normally customers who don’t pay bills get hassled or sued. This sometimes happens to ELAP clients and their workers. Hospitals send patients huge invoices for what the employer refused to pay. They hire collection agents and threaten credit scores.

ELAP fights back with lawyers and several arguments: How can hospitals justifiably charge employers and their workers so much more than they accept from Medicare, the government program for seniors? How can hospitals bill $30 for a gauze pad? How can employee-patients consent to prices they will never see until after they’ve been discharged?

The American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals did not respond to requests for comment about ELAP.

ELAP is not merely a medical-bill auditor, like many other companies, combing hospital statements for errors. It sets the reimbursement, telling hospitals what clients will pay.

Eventually, “overwhelmingly, the providers just accept the payment” and leave patients alone, Kelly said. A federal district judge in Georgia decided a 2012 case against a hospital and in favor of ELAP and its furniture chain client.

Most patients being dunned by hospitals are unlikely to meet with the same success on their own, lacking backup from ELAP and its legal firepower.

Under ELAP’s main model, neither employers nor their claims administrators sign contracts with hospitals. Employers detail the reimbursement process in documents establishing how the plan covers workers. That gives it legal weight, ELAP has argued in court. ELAP agrees to handle all hospital bills for an employer and defend workers from collections in return for a percentage fee tied to total hospital charges.

There is no hospital network. Employees may use almost any facility. Payments are made later based on ELAP’s analysis.

That may change, Kelly said. Often it makes sense even for medium-sized employers tocontract directly with hospitals to treat their workers, he said. That way prices are clear.

But for now ELAP clients such as Huffines and IBT Industrial Solutions are giving hospitals a different dose of medicine.

At IBT, a Kansas distributor of bearings and motors, “runaway health costs were starting to threaten the long-term viability of our company,” said chief financial officer Greg Drown. After reading “Bitter Pill,” a critical Time magazine piece about hospitals, IBT executives decided to try something else.

They hired ELAP, which was “not a simple or risk-free move,” cautions Drown.

About one IBT worker in five using a hospital gets “balance billed” for amounts the employer won’t pay, he said. That can take months to resolve even with ELAP’s legal support. But ELAP’s program cut health costs by about a fourth, he added.

Recently managers at a big medical system in metro Kansas City “finally figured out we were doing something a little bit different,” sent “a nasty letter” and followed up with a call, he said.

The hospital executive on the phone “was very condescending and thought I was stupid and had been duped by a predatory consultant and had been sold a — quote — crappy plan,” Drown said.

Drown listened. He told the man he would consult with his colleagues and reply.

“I called him back a week or two later and left him a rather detailed voicemail that said, ‘We’re not changing anything. We’re staying where we are.’ And the guy never called me back.”


The disruption of medical education

 

pennmed

 

The University of Pennsylvania Medical School, founded in 1765– the oldest medical school in the U.S.

 

How online courses and community-based training sites could not only improve education for future physicians, but make for better and more affordable healthcare for everyone.


Physician alignment from 3 perspectives

 

This Becker’s Hospital Review discussion includes:
  • How hospital-physician relationships have changed in the last five years.
  • Pay for performance vs. fee for service.
  • Developing physician leaders.

For physicians going independent

Herewith  some tips for physicians tired of being run by health system bean counters and eager to go into (or return to) private practice.


EHR’s reduce diabetics’ prescribing problems

 

A new study find that using electronic health records reduces the number of prescribing problems in patients with diabetes.

 


Patient satisfaction drops, use rises

 

unhappy

 

A new report from the American Consumer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) finds that overall patient satisfaction has dropped.

The ACSI uses data culled from the more than 70,000 consumer interviews it conducts annually to score industries on a scale of 0 to 100. The healthcare sector overall had a 75.1 in 2015, down  3.2 points from its 2014 score, which means that patient satisfaction is at its “lowest level in nearly a decade,” according to the report.

But while customer satisfaction may be down, demand for healthcare services is  up. Preliminary figures suggest that household healthcare spending rose nearly 6 percent in 2014, which would be the largest increase since the start of the 2008-2009 recession, the report states.

The influx of patients newly insured under the Affordable Care Act and the flood of aging and sickening Baby Boomers probably explain most of the increase.

 


Tufts, BMC merger talks fall apart

 
Boston Medical Center and Tufts Medical Center have called off their merger talks aimed at what would have been the biggest alliance of two hospitals in the hospital-rich city in nearly two decades.

 

The Boston Globe reported that they couldn’t overcome “differences in culture, mission, and strategies for the future.”

“Culture always trumps strategy,” Ellen Lutch Bender, president of the consulting firm Bender Strategies LLC, told The Globe.

However, officials said that the two institutions remain open to future collaborations.

 


Nurses detail special treatment for the rich

 

In a Politico article to promote her new book, Alexandra Robbins details some of the healthcare industry’s  glaring class-divisions after she interviewed many nurses. The book vividly demonstrates the ever-widening gap between the very rich and everyone else in the treatment they get almost everywhere.

The book is called The Nurses: A Year of Secrets, Drama, and Miracles with the Heroes of the Hospital.

Nurses  told Ms. Robbins about the luxury treatment that rich celebrities  receive in hospitals, often unknown to rank-and-file patients at the same hospitals.

Rich and/or influential patients often get bigger rooms, big-screen TVs, luxurious furniture, better food and even separate floors.

It gets worse:  Nurses also indicated that resources for VIP’s can hurt other patients’ care.  Consider that one nurse said it her hospital  moved critically ill patients away from the nursing station to make way for VIP patients who needed required less observation and care.

 


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