Sunday, November 30, 2014

Meet Dr Olivia! You are in for a treat.

The following might be the most adorable video in the health care world.  The purpose is to help people understand that a visit to the emergency room ("A&E," or "Accident and Emergency," in the United Kingdom) might not be the best path for treatment of certain ailments.  I present it with thanks to Mike Davidge, a Director at NHS Elect.

Here's the caption:

Meet Dr Olivia, Wales' youngest A&E consultant, and her team of 'medical students' as they meet patients in the A&E Department of a busy NHS hospital in South Wales.

(Note:  "Consultant" in the UK is an attending physician.)  Here's the video:

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

The search is over


Ah, I've finally figured out where change happens.

Have a great Thanksgiving!

Wellness programs are not doing well--or good.

A new article at the Health Affairs Blog by Al Lewis, Vik Khanna, and Shana Montrose evicerates many of the claims of wellness programs offered in the health care marketplace.  Here's how it starts:

During the last decade, workplace wellness programs have become commonplace in corporate America. The majority of US employers with 50 or more employees now offer the programs. A 2010 meta-analysis that was favorable to workplace wellness programs, published in Health Affairs, provided support for their uptake. This meta-analysis, plus a well-publicized “success” story from Safeway, coalesced into the so-called Safeway Amendment in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). That provision allows employers to tie a substantial and increasing share of employee insurance premiums to health status/behaviors, and subsidizes such program implementation by smaller employers. The assumption was that improved employee health would reduce the employer burden of health care costs.

Subsequently, however, Safeway’s story has been discredited

They continue:

Now, more than four years into the ACA, we conclude that these programs increase, rather than decrease employer spending on health care with no net health benefit. The programs also cause overutilization of screening and check-ups in generally healthy working age adult populations, put undue stress on employees, and incentivize unhealthy forms of weight-loss. Through a review of the research literature and primary sources, we have found that wellness programs produce a return-on-investment (ROI) of less than 1-to-1 savings to cost. 

More often than not wellness studies simply compare participants to “matched” non-participants or compare a subset of participants (typically high-risk individuals) to themselves over time. These studies usually show savings; however in the most carefully analyzed case, the savings from wellness activities were exclusively attributable to disease management activities for a small and very ill subset rather than from health promotion for the broader population, which reduced medical spending by only $1 for every $3 spent on the program.

They conclude:

In sum, with tens of millions of employees subjected to these unpopular and expensive programs, it is time to reconfigure workplace wellness. Because today’s conventional programs fail to pay for themselves and confer no proven net health benefit (and may on balance adversely affect health through over-diagnosis and promotion of unhealthy eating patterns), conventional wellness programs may fail the Americans with Disabilities Act’s “business necessity” standard if the financial forfeiture for non-participants is deemed coercive, as is alleged in employee lawsuits, against three companies, including Honeywell.

Especially in light of these lawsuits, a viable course of action—which is also the economically preferable solution for most companies, and won’t unfavorably impact employee health—is simply to pause, demand that their vendors and consultants answer open questions about their programs, and await more guidance from the administration. A standard that “wellness shall do no harm” . . . would be a good starting point.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Who let this through at HBR?

Harvard Business Review online often has interesting and thoughtful pieces, but this one is so self-serving as to make me gag--and wonder about the editorial policies that allowed its publication. 

The title seems innoucous enough--"Teaching Hospitals are the Best Place to Test Health Innovation." But this is no rigorous study or presentation of the article's premise.  No, when you read the thing, you discover that is a paean for the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and for a product developed by a doctor at the hospital, in which the hospital presumably has a financial interest.

It really would be interesting to analyze and test the proposition about teaching hopsitals versus non-teaching hospitals to see where clinical innovation is most likely to spread.  But this article makes no contribution along those lines.

As a piece of earned media, it is a public relations triumph.  I just never expected HBR to be taken in so easily.

Intensive training on line

I learned today of an impressive on-line educational tool produced by folks at Alfred Health in Melbourne.  It is Intensive, an educational website for doctors and other health professionals training in and practicing intensive care medicine.

This announcement appeared in May of this year:

Alfred ICU is delighted to have Chris Nickson as a senior registrar and he has designed and implemented this blog which will be a resource and repository for all our teaching and education. In the first 3 days since launching on 17/5/14, it has already had 1500 hits, 68% from overseas.

This is a well done venture and great worldwide resource.

Chris is a busy fellow on other fronts, too, involved in such activities as the SMACC (Social Media and Critical Care) conference to be held this year in Chicago.  You can listen to some of his ideas here.

Danish get a pasting

Gary Schwitzer reports on the proliferation of robotic surgery in Denmark, in a publicly financed health care system.  He quotes Frederik Joelving, a Danish journalist:
“What’s interesting is that even though our healthcare system is publicly funded, the development here is largely parallel to what’s been happening in the US: With hospitals competing to take the lead in robotic surgery and using dubious claims to market the technology, it has now become virtually impossible to have an open (let alone traditional laparoscopic) prostatectomy in most parts of the country.
So far, Denmark — a country of 5.5 million — has bought da Vinci equipment for 44 million US$, and the reimbursement for each robotic surgery is between 5000 and 10000 US$ higher than for the traditional approach. What’s more, all except one university-affiliated hospitals have stopped teaching open/laparoscopic prostate surgery. As one of my sources said, What happens when something goes wrong during a robotic surgery and you have to convert?”
Noted Gary:

The global march of the robots continues.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Pursuit of excellence at Alfred Health

I had a chance in advance of some presentations I'll be making this week at Alfred Health to view a number of the clinical process improvements at The Alfred, the system's tertiary referral teaching hospital, based in Melbourne.  The organization has spent years in adopting a culture of continuous process improvement, relying in great measure on the ideas and engagement of front-line staff.

First stop was the Emergency Department with my guides Rebecca (Bec) Atkins, the Nurse Manager, and ED Deputy Director, Dr. Jeremy Stevens.  As many of my readers know, EDs often suffer from patient flow problems.  The arrival patterns and condition of incoming patients are unpredictable, and many hospitals suffer from extended lengths of stay in the ED for patients who have been admitted to wards on the hospital.  Unfortunately, such patients end up boarding in the ED awaiting available rooms, creating backlogs that work backwards all the way to emergent patient arrivals.

I don't have pictures that can demonstrate the approaches used, but the folks at The Alfred have worked through this problem and have configured the various divisions of the ED for a more uniform and predictable throughput to the rest of the hospital--notwithstanding unpredictable arrival patterns and levels of patient acuity.  Among other things, they use a multi-bed short-stay section very thoughtfully, allowing it to be a resting place for patients who need a bit of extended care and/or observation but are unlikely to need to be admitted.  While the state of Victoria sets a standard that up to 25% of short-stay patients can ultimately be admitted, The Alfred's figure is more in the range of 15%.  This indicates that the triage function and the follow-up care in the ED are well enough carried out to be more precise about which patients are likley to be admitted.

From the ED, we were off to the intensive care units, with guides Dr. Owen Roodenburg, Deputy Director of the ICU, and Sharon Hade, the Nurse Manager.  You see them here in the natural light-enhanced unit, with switchable glass windows that automatically adjust to change their light transmission properties as the sunlight changes on the building.  In addition, the smart glass is used as a divider between the patient bays, where it can be manually switched from translucent to transparent to provide privacy or to allow a sense of openness.

There's lots to report about the ICUs, but one aspect that grabbed my attention was the availability in the family waiting rooms of iPads with useful information for waiting patients.  Developed by one of the staff members and put in place this last July, this application was thoughtful, clear, and very user-friendly.  (It was designated as a finalist in the Australian Mobile and Application Design Awards for 2014.)  What follows are some of the screen shots showing the capabilities of the program.  Their purpose is self evident, so no explanation is needed:








But wait, it gets better!  Look at these scenes presenting--with utter transparency--important metrics of clinical performance: line related infections, hand hygene, and overall mortality.




And, just in case a staff member forgets to employ proper hand hygiene, here's a friendly reminder that patients and families have been encouraged to question them on the issue!


All in all, an impressive showing.  I'm looking forward to the rest of this week's activities.  Stay tuned.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Whac-A-Mole disguised as high-deductible plans

In the zeal to "bend the cost curve," the US health care system has focused on more "consumer-directed" aspects of health care, often in the form of high deductible insurance plans.  As in all such public policy moves, there are unintended consequences.

This has been recognized on the pediatric front, with the American Academy of Pediatrics taking a strong stand, as reported several month ago by Budd Shenkin:

The federal government should consider restricting high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) to adults because the plans discourage families from seeking primary care for their children, according to an updated AAP policy statement. 

But the tsunami is still coming.  Here's the report by Bob Herman at Modern Healthcare.  An excerpt:

“I thought (high-deductible plans) would level off this year and they continue to grow,” said Brigitte Nettesheim, a principal at the Chartis Group who studies the health insurer segment. “They will still be a significant portion of the type of plan designs offered.”

The proliferation of high-deductible exchange plans highlights the core issue of insurance affordability, one of the basic tenets behind the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

Those deductibles already are weighing heavily on Americans. A new survey from the Commonwealth Fund (PDF) found that three in five low-income adults and about half of adults with moderate incomes believe their deductibles are “difficult or impossible to afford.” About 13% of Americans spend 10% or more of their income on out-of-pocket healthcare costs as well.


Bob notes that the trend applies to employer sponsored as well as insurance exchange plans:

These types of plans have taken off in the employer space in recent years as more companies have tried to stem the tide of growing premium costs by putting more of the expense burden on workers. Employers also may be looking ahead to 2018, when the Affordable Care Act will levy an excise tax on so-called “Cadillac” employer health plans that offer generous benefits and little, if any, cost-sharing for employees.

The Commonwealth Fund summarizes the impact on many families:

The results of this survey show that these trends toward greater cost-sharing, combined with little or no growth in median family income, have left many working Americans in the middle and lower end of the income distribution with large healthcare cost burdens. Cost-sharing in health plans is affecting people's medical decisions in ways that should be of concern to policymakers and the medical community.

Here's what the "experts" offer in the way of a solution:

Experts say insurers and providers are the most influential players to educate patients about high-deductible plans and help them determine whether they are a reasonable fit. “If there's anything they can do to talk to patients more, or educate their insured folks more about some of those terms and concepts, they may end up with fewer situations where people are surprised about their out-of-pocket costs,” said Liz Hamel, the director of public opinion and survey research at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Look, most people can't even understand how to pick a cellphone calling plan that meets their needs. Do you think that people are really going to be able to be that analytical about their health insurance plans?  Even if you are good with humbers, when you choose a plan, you generally have no idea of what your medical needs are going to be for the coming year.  Having talked to many people in this situation, I'd be willing to bet that most people in the middle and lower end of the income distribution are guided by what the monthly premium will be:  That is their only way of judging affordability. No amount of "education" is going to change that.

By the way, the idea that providers will offer such education is laughable. During your next 18-minute visit, just try asking your primary care doctor to opine on insurance plans. Watch his/her eyes roll in frustrated ignorance.

And given the state of the insurance exchanges, can we expect the people at the end of the phone call to have the time and expertise to help consumers truly evaluate their personal needs?

Beyond the sad impact on individual families in any given year, I fear that the economic backlash of these policies will be a deferment of needed health care treatments and a resulting future bulge of cost increases.  We're playing Whac-A-Mole here.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Iron filagree enhances Melbourne

I'm breaking from health care today, with a throwback to my training as a city planner.  I'm spending several days in Melbourne, Australia, and had a chance to visit some of the old neighborhoods. We spent some time walking around Drummond Street, in the Carlton section of the city, and came across an incredible collection of terraced houses from the Victorian and Edwardian eras.  Fortunately, they have been preserved, and now the district is legally protected from redevelopment.

Wikipedia explains:

In the first half of the twentieth-century, terraced housing in Australia fell into disfavour and the inner-city areas where they were found were often considered slums. In the 1950s, many urban renewal programs were aimed at eradicating them entirely in favour of high-rise development. In recent decades these inner-city areas and their terraced houses have been gentrified. Terrace houses are now highly sought after in Australia, and due to their proximity to the CBD of the major cities, are often expensive.

The most noticeable characteristic of these row houses is the cast iron filagree work.  It is present on the overhang underneath balconies, where it also serves as a sunlight diffuser.  It is also used decoratively on the blaconies themselves.  My host noted that the iron originally came from pig iron that was used as ballast on the incoming ships from England and elsewhere.  (On the outgoing routes, the cargo served as ballast.) Wiki says, "Today Melbourne has more decorative cast iron than any other city in the world."

Another predominant feature is the use of polychrome brickwork.  Some of the houses have been painted over, but the original bricks are visible in quite a few.  Check out this marvelous specimen below:

Friday, November 21, 2014

What's up with the residency programs at St. Elizabeth's?

I've written about the financial difficulties leading to the closure of Quincy Medical Center and have suggested that these almost inevitably resulted from the business model employed by the private equity firm that owns this hospital system.  But are there other somewhat hidden consequences of this style of ownership?  One worth reviewing might be the system's commitment to residency training programs.

St. Elizabeth's Medical Center is the major training hospital within the Steward Health Care System.  How is it doing with regard to the long-standing and clinically important graduate medical education program that resides there?

Not so good.

The ACGME is the governing body that accredits residency programs.  It has a public website on which the status of each program is listed.  As we go through the site, we see the following programmatic problems at St. Elizabeth's in three of its largest training programs.  (The fourth, Anesthesiology, is currently accredited but up for renewal soon.)

Surgery


Internal Medicine

Psychiatry


Getting a warning or probationary designation is a very big deal.  For example, of the 9,527 programs that were ACGME accredited in 2013-2014, only 279 programs (under 3%) received such designations.  Here's the chart:


A warning is serious, but probationary status is applied when the ACGME concludes, following a site visit and review, that a program or sponsoring institution has failed to demonstrate substantial compliance with ACGME requirements. 

What's behind the St. Elizabeth situation? While the details behind these designations are not published, in general, the largest number of such citations come from persistent violations of the ACGME duty hours requirements.  Recall that, several years ago, the ACGME imposed strict limits on the number of hours per week that residents were permitted to work. These rules came about from Congressional pressure and an acknowledgement that it was not healthy for the residents, patients, and members of the public for trainees to get too little sleep (resulting in "impaired neurocognitive performance, including reduced memory consolidation, and deterioration of waking performance marked by increased rates of attentional failures.")


I have a hypothesis that when a hospital like St. Elizabeth's suffers from financial distress, there is an inclination to use residents as low-cost labor (relative to nurse practitioners and physician assistants) and assign them to extra hours of work in taking care of patients.  I'd be happy to have this hypothesis disproved, but that would require disclosure by St. Elizabeth's of the reasons for the warning and probationary ACGME designations.  The hospital is very unlikely to provide that to me!

But is there any inclination on the part of the Attorney General, the state official with authority to monitor the performance of the Steward Health system, to look into this matter?  If residents are, in fact, violating duty hours, there is the potential for harm to the public.  If residents are being assigned to cover the work that would otherwise go to paid staff, is that consistent with the employment promises made during the take-over of the system from its previous owners?

(There is also another possible reason for poor reports from the ACGME--a lack of training opportunities.  For example, if the volume of patients is too low, surgical residents don't get enough cases on which to practice. Might that being going on at St. Elizabeth's, too?)

It is too late to save Quincy Medical Center, but it is not too late for the state to review these matters and intervene.

Lean is not a program

Over two years ago, I wrote a post saying, You don't "do Lean."  Beyond suggesting that there should be a form of medical malpractice lawsuit against those consulting firms that promise hospitals that they will teach them how to "do Lean," I summarized the main point:

Lean is not a program.  It is a long-term philosophy of corporate leadership and organization that is based, above all, on respect shown to front-line staff.  There are two essential aspects, training front-line workers to be empowered and encouraged to call out problems on the "factory floor," and training managers to understand that their job is to serve those front-line workers by knowing what is going on on the front lines and responding in real time (when problems are fresh) to the call-outs.

A recent article by Emmanuel Jallas takes this theme a step further, based on a visit to a manufacturing facility.  Excerpts:

Fake Lean can be very smart. Or rather, I should say convincing at first glance.

I was visiting a facility of a great manufacturer with well known and respected products. I was told by my host, a manager at this facility, that every problem reported by associates is fixed by the team itself within five days, or by the support team under supervision of the facility manager. It all sounds impressive, right?

Maybe not.

While my guide left me alone to go speak with the factory manager, I took five minutes to just watch a team member working in this facility. At the end of this time I had 10 kaizen ideas, least four of which had to do with this person’s safety. She was bending her torso backwards every 20 seconds in order not to hit a screen with her head. She twisted her body 180° several times per minute in order to discard plastic bags in a trash bin which was right behind her. She was raising her shoulder over its normal height because of the length of her screw gun. And so on. Maybe things weren’t going so well after all.

So what is happening in this factory?

Upon further reflection and discussion with its leaders, it occurred to me that Lean was "put in place" here without any consideration for or effort made toward creating a lean culture.

The team member I observed has no chance to speak with leadership about her true problems. Not only this, she hasn’t been helped with how to see and understand them. As a result, she’s focusing less on her work and more on not hitting her head several times per minute.

He summarizes:

Taiichi Ohno was famous for asking managers to "step inside the circle" in order to develop problem- seeing, not just problem solving. Steven J. Spear has written in greater detail about this kind of skill development for managers in "Learning to Lead at Toyota" at Harvard Business Review, but coaching others to help them learn to see problems is really what this lean stuff is all about. No matter how much an organization boasts about their lean practices, or your own company does, it’s this ability to see problems that you really want to be looking for.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

The die was cast for Quincy Medical Center in 2011

I wish I could say that it was unexpected, but the current story around the closing of Quincy Medical Center in Massachusetts, after its purchase by a private equity company several years ago, was so predictable.  Short version:  The Attorney General is powerless in making the company stand by its original promises.  She can "offer to negotiate" and other elected officials can bluster all they want, but the closure is done.

Here's the original prediction:

So your private equity firm offers to buy the property, making promises to regulators and stakeholders in the community.  Few objections are raised and the deal is approved.  The private equity firm, new to health care, gives an unprecedented level of authority and autonomy to the CEO.  He rewards your confidence by executing the key elements of the business plan.  Assets are sold for short term gain, with little concern for the downstream costs: After all, the hospital properties will be flipped in a few years anyway.  The hospital system's laboratories are sold to a private laboratory service company, in return for a long-term contract to use that company.  Real estate is sold and leased back.  The system agrees to a front-end-loaded risk-based reimbursement contract with the largest private insurer, one that calls for substantial reductions from the trend of medical expenses in future years.  Physician practices in the community are purchased at above-market prices to create an increased flow of referral business to the hospitals. 

But then the money falters.  Revenues take a tumble and days in accounts receivable grow during an extended transition to a new centralized billing system that was designed to take the place of the billing systems run by each hospital.  The risk contract with the insurer starts to limit annual price increases.  Medicare and Medicaid rates are constrained by the federal and state government.  Top line revenues fall, EBIDTA falls, cash flow falls.  Finally, the private equity partners are nervous. 

They turn off the spigot and impose cash constraints on the system.  Normal maintenance of building systems is deferred.  Medical equipment expenses, too, are kept to a minimum.

The only place to save money is on staffing.  He must make dramatic cuts in the upper management levels but will also be forced to make other cuts in the clinical support and lower administrative staff. Band-aid capital spending will be permitted when unsafe conditions exist, but the hospitals will start to fall behind on upgrades of important medical equipment and devices.  He will be in a race against the clock.  Can he hold it together long enough to permit the investors to get a return in the flip?  Finally, he will realize that closing one of the hospitals has to be part of the answer.  Investors will be relieved when he does so, but the community and governmental constituencies that supported the initial acquisition will get worried. 

[It] would be around this time that regulators would begin to understand that the corporate guarantees that might stand behind the private equity firm's acquisition of the hospital system are a nullity.  The owners' resources are legally separated from those of the hospital system.  It would take years of litigation to pierce that corporate veil.  Thus, the commitments that have been made to the governmental and private constituents in the community are supported solely by the financial resources of the hospital system itself.  But that hospital system faces high debt service costs and obligations, other long-term cost commitments, and increasingly difficult revenue restrictions.

One f***ing tree!

Image by Simon Stevens
Thanks to Janice Lynch Schuster for forwarding me this terrific article about stereotypes, in this case visual stereotypes about Africa.  The story is emblematic of our country's lack of understanding of other parts of the world.  I encountered this from friends and colleagues before, during, and after my recent trip to South Africa.  The lede:

Last week, Africa Is a Country, a blog that documents and skewers Western misconceptions of Africa, ran a fascinating story about book design. It posted a collage of 36 covers of books that were either set in Africa or written by African writers. The texts of the books were as diverse as the geography they covered: Nigeria, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, Mozambique. They were written in wildly divergent styles, by writers that included several Nobel Prize winners. Yet all of books’ covers featured an acacia tree, an orange sunset over the veld, or both.

In short,” the post said, “the covers of most novels ‘about Africa’ seem to have been designed by someone whose principal idea of the continent comes from The Lion King.”

Like most Americans, book designers tend not to know all that much about the rest of the world, and since they don’t always have the time to respond to a book on its own terms, they resort to visual clichés. 

The diagnosis:

We’re comfortable with this visual image of Africa because it’s safe. It presents ‘otherness’ in a way that’s easy to understand.   

Change comes slowly. One day, Mendelsund [Peter Mendelsund—who is an associate art director of Knopf] predicts, there will be a best-selling novel by an African writer that happens to use a different visual aesthetic, and its success will introduce a new set of arbitrary images to represent Africa in Western eyes. “But right now, we’re in the age of the tree,” he says. “For that vast continent, in all its diversity, you get that one fucking tree.” 

Millions of healthier lives on WIHI

Madge Kaplan writes:

The next WIHI broadcast — 100 Million Healthier Lives by 2020 — will take place on Thursday, November 20, from 2 to 3 PM ET, and I hope you'll tune in.
Our guests will include:
  • Soma Stout, MD, MS, Executive External Lead for Health Improvement, Institute for Healthcare
    Improvement (IHI)
  • Erin Healy, JD, Director, Knowledge Sharing, Community Solutions
  • Kevin Barnett, DrPH, MCP, Senior Investigator, Public Health Institute
  • Ninon Lewis, MS, Director, Triple Aim for Populations, IHI
Enroll Now

When IHI first introduced the framework of the Triple Aim in 2008, we couldn’t have imagined how much it would resonate with health and health care improvers all over the world. Six years and much on the ground experience later, this pursuit of better experience of care, better health, and lower costs, is taking a new, exciting turn and we want to tell you about these developments on the November 20 WIHI: 100 Million Healthier Lives by 2020.
 
The title of the show reflects the ambitions and visions of a new Guiding Coalition that was launched this October by IHI and some 30 founding partners with the goal of making a demonstrable improvement in the health of communities on a global scale… starting in the US. One of the driving principles behind the effort  which over 200 individuals and organizations from across public health, community health, health care, policy, and more have already signed on to — is to learn from and support community innovations and initiatives that are right now having an impact on people’s health. Millions stand to gain if what’s effective is better understood and spread. 
But how does change of this sort happen in measurable ways…especially to achieve the goal of improving the health of 100 million people over the next five years? And, how can hospitals and health care organizations not just say they want to support and strengthen community efforts around health, but actually become part of the fabric and infrastructure and two-way learning that makes it possible? That’s where our guests come in. From direct experience, each has a piece of the picture of the steps needed, fueled by the belief that the time has come to put health care and health together in one strategic frame to achieve results on an entirely new level. 
Your thinking and experience and participation in this effort are needed, too! Soma Stout, Erin Healey, Kevin Barnett, Ninon Lewis, and WIHI host Madge Kaplan look forward to engaging with you on the November 20 WIHI. 
You can enroll for the broadcast here. We'd also appreciate it if you would spread the word about the show via Twitter.

Integrating art into patient quality and safety

Well, I discovered a veritable treasure trove of health care quality and safety advocates here in Melbourne, some of whom I have "known" for years on social media and some new encounters.  We all had lunch together, organized by Marie Bismark, and I was brought up to date on some of the things happening here.  I'll just mention a couple for now, with more to follow.

Catherine Crock (seen here with Marie) heads up the Australian Institute for Patient and Family Centred Care.  As noted on their website:

The Australian Institute for Patient & Family Centred Care brings patients, families and healthcare professionals to the table together, to transform people’s experience of healthcare. We aim to achieve this through a three-fold approach:
  1. Develop partnerships between patients, their families and health professionals
  2. Create a culture that is both supportive and effective
  3. Improve healthcare environments through high-quality integrated art, architecture and design.

There are two programs of note that I'd like to share.  One is Hear Me, a 40-minute HealthPlay written by playwright Alan Hopgood.  The play focuses on the importance of patient and family involvement and empowerment as partners in their own health care.  AIPFCC makes the play available to requesting health care institutions and performs it for them.  Catherine notes:

There is enormous potential for improving the quality and safety of healthcare by encouraging communication and partnerships between patients, families and health professionals and fostering an employee empowerment culture. The play can have a significant and novel role in the education of patients, families and staff.

Following the performance, the audience participates in a stimulating facilitated discussion forum (30 minutes), led by a trained facilitator, on team communication, clinical incident disclosure and patient centred care. The forum is a critical component of the play, allowing for debrief, practical application and ideas for change. 

The play has been performed in many locations in Victoria, with excellent reviews.

The other program is called Hush, and comprises a series of musical pieces. Catherine introduced music into The Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne, to reduce the stress of hospital procedures for the children, Catherine recognised the effectiveness of involving patients and their families in the treatment program.  Now, a large number of CDs (some shown above) are available for people to use in their own settings.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Product placement, to a new level

Speaking of Intuitive Surgical, do any of my readers find anything wrong with this announcement?

Intuitive Surgical (Nasdaq:ISRG) has awarded technology grants to five top U.S. medical centers to increase training opportunities in minimally invasive surgical techniques. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Duke University, Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), University of Texas Southwestern and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis will each receive a da Vinci System console and Skills Simulator™ equipment for one year. 

I do.  It's this: The line between academic inquiry and education and commercial strategies has become so blurred as to be meaningless.

A bit like killing a fly with nuclear weapons

Not all publicity is good, even if you are Intuitive Surgical, the publicity-seeking makers of the daVinci robot.  They must go nuts when they see allusions like this about their machine:

The surgeons also plan to remove his gallbladder, full of painful stones, although given the routine nature of that procedure they admit that using the robot is “a bit like killing a fly with nuclear weapons.”

“People accept robotics in their life all the time,” Moser told the Herald ahead of Clauss’ surgery. “We have drones — robots blowing up enemies, robots flying planes."

"Government efficiency" is an oxymoron

I always appreciate and pay attention to the thoughtful observations of Sachin Jain, and this article in the Journal of General Internal Medicine is no exception.  It's called "Big Plans, Poor Execution: The Importance of Governmental Managerial Innovation to Health Care Reform."

Here's the introduction:

The Affordable Care Act (ACA)'s implementation failures including the launch of healthcare.gov and delays of several key provisions of the legislation have threatened continued support for the law. At the core of the public's misgivings is trust in whether government agencies can effectively implement programs of importance on massive scale. The ACA rollout has exposed deep flaws in the ways in which federal agencies manage the implementation of legislative efforts. For these reasons, we strongly believe that health policy reform must occur alongside innovation and reform of the managerial processes of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and its constituent agencies. In this paper we draw on experiences implementing significant health care policy legislation to explore the fundamental management challenges that have hampered the implementation of the ACA, and threaten the future viability of government-led health care reform.

The authors go on to itemize the problems:

The first is the overly burdensome and bureaucratic process of soliciting, vetting, and awarding con- tracts. Initially designed as safeguards against kickbacks, regulations have evolved to the point where contracts are awarded to firms with the most experience in navigating the federal procurement process, rather than those with the most experience and skills in the content area.

Second, the operational units within each agency responsible for managing contracts and implementing reforms are too far removed from the procurement process.

Finally, the rigidity encountered early in the contracting process is mirrored in constraints around termination.

These problems are compounded, say the authors, because "federal agencies often struggle to attract and retain appropriate, competitive talent."

After recommending changes, they conclude:

Implementation is the ultimate test of any legislative effort,a difficult reality currently facing the supporters and architects of the ACA. Challenges with the ACA have uncovered fundamental flaws in the federal government's managerial structures for executing complex legislative agendas. If we expect our federal health agencies to take a frontline role in reforming health care, so too must we pay attention to reforming these institutions. 

Well, many of these points are so true, and their impact has been felt over the years in defense and non-defense governmental programs.  (The one with which I would disagree, for the most part, is the one about attracting talented people.)  The recommendations made are thoughtful and appropriate.

But the truth of the matter is that the basic structures underlying federal procurement will not change much.  As noted by the authors, many were designed to prevent corruption: In so doing, Congress made an explicit trade-off between obtaining efficiency and preventing crime. Other federal procurement rules were frankly designed by lobbyists for entrenched government contractors: There is a whole industry of inside-the-Beltway firms that have survived and grown off of federal largess.  Their core competence is influencing the body politic to protect their interests.  Other firms do not have the time or interest to engage in the influence-peddling business and wisely choose to spend their time serving the private sector.

Every well-meaning Administration comes into office thinking that it is going to introduce more "business-like" procedures into the federal government.  Some succeed to a certain extent, but most fail.  It is not an activity that generates public support or political rewards.

So, in my opinion, what is required is a more sophisticated and thoughtful approach to writing the law when you are hoping to invent a new program or policy.  The ACA was an immensely complicated piece of legislation.  Many components relied on having an effective, efficient, and timely procurement plan.  It may have been naive to expect that implementation would be successful.

In addition, whatever problems existed at the procurement regulatory level of the government were aggravated by the fact that the high-level managerial structure, support, and oversight put in place by the President and his Secretary of Health and Human Services were inadequate.  The recommendations contained in this article are thoughtful, but no amount of bureaucratic redesign can survive against incompetent leadership.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Learning from Smart Patients

Roni Zeiger, Gilles Frydman, and colleagues have been successfully plugging away for some time in the development of Smart Patients, "an online community where patients and caregivers learn from each other about treatments, clinical trials, the latest science, and how it all fits into the context of their experience."

A sign of the success is that a growing number of doctors and other clinicians have been asking if they might join Smart Patients to learn what the patients and caregivers are saying.  Roni and Gilles have been designing a way of allowing this but that still is respectful of a strong desire to keep the space devoted to the patients and caregivers.

So now, they are launching Learn from Smart Patients, to create learning materials based on conversations in Smart Patients--but the curated conversations are de-identified and used with patient permission.

Three health care institutions have signed up so far:

The George Washington University School of Nursing is piloting the service with Nurse Practitioner students studying the role of caregivers. 

Physicians at Allegheny Health Network (AHN) will use the new service to better understand the needs of cancer patients. 

At Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC), clinicians who care for patients and families affected by cystic fibrosis are reviewing and discussing issues that arise in the Smart Patients cystic fibrosis community. 

I'm hoping other centers decide to sign up, as I am really excited to see where this all leads.  I have a feeling it is going to lead to helpful insights and stronger partnerships between clinicians and families--consistent with my hope for more patient-driven care.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

“Deny and defend” has become an indefensible approach to medical error.

Please check out this excellent article by Bruce L. Lambert and Timothy B. McDonald.  Key excerpts:

In our research on communication and resolution approaches to malpractice, patients and families who have been victims of medical errors tell us that without hearing an explanation or apology, every hour that passes after the initial harm event feels like an additional injury.

Fortunately, there is now a viable alternative.

Several hospitals around the country, notably the University of Michigan and the University of Illinois at Chicago, have adopted the so-called communication and resolution approach to unexpected patient harm.

This approach emphasizes rapid reporting of harm events, rapid communication with patients and families, and rapid investigations to identify possible system failures and to determine whether or not the patient was harmed by inappropriate care.

When an investigation reveals inappropriate care, the health professionals who were involved meet with the patient and family, admit liability, describe in detail what happened, apologize and offer emotional support, and maintain contact for ongoing communications.

Depending on the nature and severity of the harm, the hospital will often waive fees and charges related to the care that caused the harm, waive fees for subsequent care to remedy the harm, and offer financial settlements to compensate patients and families for pain and suffering and for the cost of ongoing care — all without litigation.

Research shows that communication and resolution programs have many benefits. Those include fewer claims and lawsuits, increased reporting of near misses and errors, more rapid settlements for patients, lower malpractice insurance costs, lower legal fees and expenses for hospitals, and less defensive medicine being practiced by physicians.

More importantly, telling the truth to patients after they have been harmed by medical errors is the right thing to do. It is more just, equitable, and humane.

It is better for providers too, who are often traumatized by unintentionally harming the people they were trying to heal, and who are prevented from apologizing, and even speaking, to patients and families.

“Deny and defend” has become an indefensible approach to medical error. The time has come to abandon it.

In Katoomba


A weekend break between health care presentations in Sydney and Melbourne: Some views of the Blue Mountains and local flora west of Sydney, Australia.



Thursday, November 13, 2014

If we were on the Serengeti, we would not be the lions.

I have often viewed hospitalists as "the real doctors" in a hospital, people whose inclination, geographic location, and practice patterns allow them to be fully engaged in creating a partnership between the clinical staff and patients and families.  But this view is not always widely adopted by other medical specialties.  Brad Flansbaum offers this essay about the status--perceived and real--of hospitalist doctors vis-a-vis other practitioners in hospitals.  He titles it, "Do I look like a PGY?"

I engaged my team in a short non-scientific exercise. I asked them to plot their impression of how the world at large, defined broadly, views the worth of various specialties versus how they see them.  They assessed the following four disciplines: intensivists, cardiologists, palliative care docs and hospitalists.

He wryly notes:

Do you notice a pattern? If you don’t, let me make it easy: if we were on the Serengeti, we would not be the lions.  

Beyond the humor, there are serious questions raised about the profession:

Now I could speculate about how any specialist might rate themselves and the biases each would bring to the table. I could also speculate proceduralists and physicians engaged in high tech care have deeply embedded cultural advantages in U.S. medicine—and no matter how we spin the story, docs without toys will always drop to the lower rungs of the ladder.

However, I think our station has much to do with our need to mature as a field, and how the public (and HM) views a young, unassimilated specialty.

Many of us still lack confidence. 

An interesting call to arms of sorts for a group of doctors who, in my mind, have shown that they can be at the forefront of clinical process improvement.  Brad's article suggests that more can come, and should come, from this dedicated group.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

TOP 5 is tops!

As noted below, I've been having a wonderful time meeting with folks at the New South Wales Clinical Excellence Commission.  This is an agency with a broad-ranging agenda to improve the safety and quality of patient based care in Australia's largest state.

The CEC has a slew of initiatives, and I thought I would share one with you from their Partnering with Patients program.  The overall objective of PwP is to include patients and family as care team members to promote safety and quality.

The particular program I present here is called TOP 5.  It is lovely in its simplicity and low cost . . . and in the power of its results. It could be replicated anywhere there is a will. 

The idea is to come up with strategies to help caregivers who are responsible for dealing with people with dementia--and particularly the anxiety and agitation that can characterize this disease in the presence of certain environmental factors.  As described by the CEC, "TOP 5 is a simple process that encourages health professionals to engage with carers to gain non-clinical information to help personalise care. This information is then made available to every member of the care team, thus improving communication."


5 strategies are developed after consultation between staff and the carer to ensure they are workable in the ward setting. The agreed strategies are recorded on an identifiable TOP 5 form and included in the patient's bed chart notes, enabling all staff to access this information and support the care provided. Up to five strategies may be recorded, however, in some cases there may only be one or two relevant strategies.

Dr. Karen Luxford, Director, Patient Based Care, and Anne Axam, the project coordinator, kindly gave me some examples, which I summarize here:

One gentleman had been a paramedic.  All the "bells and whistles" that are typical in a community hospital setting only escalated his anxiety:  He felt he needed to jump into action at a each "emergency." The strategy that was developed was to speak to him as if he were member of the team--using professional terminology--and advise him that "another car is responding." He would then become settled. 

Another example was Mr. G, a very gentle and proud man, who would become very agitated after his shower. "A discussion with his wife helped us learn that he became very upset if he did not have his watch on his wrist. She always made sure it was replaced as soon as possible." The strategy that was developed was that, during his shower, the staff would reassure Mr G that they would put his watch back on after he was dry, and then they would put his watch back on as soon as possible. With his watch on his wrist he did not become agitated. 

A third example.  A gentleman (Bob) without a primary carer was admitted to the service. He used to get very agitated each morning at 4:30 and was very difficult to settle. One day a visitor came into the room and recognised Bob. The staff asked the visitor if he knew anything about Bob that might explain his daily agitation. He was able to shed some light on the situation: Bob used to manage a delivery yard and part of his job was to get the trucks on the road by 4:30am. The strategy adopted was for the staff to just say, "Bob, the trucks are all gone" and he would settle down. 

Beyond this reduction of anxiety, which is reason enough to run the program, I look forward to learning more about the possible clinical benefits of TOP 5.  The program reminds me of a similar approach adopted in Saskatchewan to help avoid falls among the elderly with dementia. One success story involved a gentleman who regularly fell, usually when experiencing stress.

The staff noticed that the man enjoyed being engaged in small motor physical tasks and also being near the staff.  In fact, when both occurred, his stress levels were noticably lower. So the staff invented a task for the man, repeatedly putting pennies into a cup, and they arranged for him to be in frequent proximity to the staff.  In the months since they organized this approach, he has had no falls whatsoever.

I'm willing to bet that we'll hear similar results from the CEC, and I look forward to their future reports on this program and other initiatives.

Getting acquainted with clinical governance in Sydney

I've been having a wonderful time meeting with folks at the New South Wales Clinical Excellence Commission.  This is an agency with a broad-ranging agenda to improve the safety and quality of patient based care in Australia's largest state.  Today's audience were principally the Directors of Clinical Governance, the people responsible for enhancing clinical care in the 17 local health districts spread across the state.  Also attending was Kim Oates (left), Director of Undergraduate Quality and Safety Education for the CEC.

My primary topic was on leadership approaches that help bring about the cultural change necessary to reduce harm in hospitals, drawing especially on lessons from my book Goal Play!

Following this, we engaged in a negotiation module using one of my favorite exercises, Michael Wheeler's "Win as Much as You Can."  Here you see some reactions of the participants as they experienced relationship changes with some of their colleagues as the game progressed.  It was an important lesson in considering the structure, context, and people engaged in a negotiation, all with an eye to creating sustainable negotiated agreements that can bring value to the parties.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Now this is leadership!

Now this is leadership, from the Board of Trustees who approved the plan, to the CEO and his folks who conceived it, to everyone who played a role.  What a model for other hospitals!

The email is from Jeffrey Thompson, CEO of Gundersen Health System in Wisconsin, to everyone in the system.

Dear colleagues:

Today we will make a big announcement about our energy program. We are accomplishing something no one else in healthcare has done. This is really a big deal around the country. This is a common theme for us, but others are amazed. The point of this note is to help you understand the why and the how so it is easier for you to understand how it fits into our mission and easier for you to answer questions.

The accomplishment is we have had several days where we produce more energy than we use. October 14th was the first day that we hit this mark. This means instead of paying millions in natural gas and electric bills we are producing our own. We will extend this to many more days, then weeks, then months. We are using natural gas from landfills and cows, hardwood chips from local sawmills, wind, geothermal wells, and very importantly, conservation.

Why we embarked on this journey has many parts. We believed:
·         it will decrease the pollution we were producing that adds to the health burden of our region and nation,
·         it will save the organization money that can be spent on patient care, staff salaries, or used to keep our prices down,
·         it will boost our local economy, instead of coal from Wyoming (for electricity) and natural gas from Texas ( for heat) – what we do spend  is on local sources
·         it helps define us as an organization, a strong corporate citizen, concerned about the broad health and well-being of our region; both physical and economic health.
Where did the money come from to do all this?  Funding for our conservation projects came out of our regular operating funds. And it was a great bargain. We spent $2 million dollars one time on conservation and reduced our energy costs by $1.2 million every year after; a much better return than any of our personal saving accounts or checkbooks. For other big projects we took money out of savings, not the salary or benefit pool, and used it to invest in these long term projects. Because of our timing and innovation we also received 11 million in state and federal money that would have gone somewhere else in the country if we had not won it.

The effects of this work (in addition to saving money, decreasing pollution and boosting the local economy) has been increased staff pride, enhanced recruiting, community inspiration, as well as national and international recognition for Gundersen and La Crosse.

Has this effort decreased our other important objectives? The best data would say our quality, service, and financial health is as good as it has ever been.

Are we done? Not yet. There is still plenty of waste you can help us decrease. We also have many opportunities to expand our sustainability and waste management programs. Beyond that, it is to help other staff and other communities understand, that a great healthcare organization needs to take care of patients, their families, and our whole community, and that is what we are trying to do every day .

Thanks for your help to make us better, and to help lead our communities.