Cost Conundrum: How Accountable Are ACO’s?

Among the many ways the Affordable Care Act tries to drive down healthcare costs is through Accountable Care Organizations.

acoJust what are ACOs? HMOs in drag? And are they working?

Here’s how we see the ACO landscape today:

  • Although their launch has been somewhat troubled, Accountable Care Organizations are here to stay.
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is driving the adoption of ACOs, with some private payers joining in.
  • Data collection and analysis hold out the promise of reducing inefficiencies.
  • ACOs don’t take on a lot of risk if they can avoid it. That in turn will affect how much money they can actually save the healthcare system.
  • In a related development, some payers – including a new industry alliance – are looking closely at the role of health insurance third-party administrators (TPAs), to see if further cost can be taken out of the system there.

What Is an ACO?

First, a bit about terminology. While ACOs undertake some responsibility for the cost of delivering care, they are not “all in,” as are HMOs. (For a good video explaining ACOs, see this from Kaiser Health News.)

Here’s how healthcare economist Austin Frakt, writing in the New York Times, explains the differences between ACOs and HMOs: Continue reading “Cost Conundrum: How Accountable Are ACO’s?”

IORT with Oncoplastic Surgery: A Beautiful Combination?

Julie Reiland SOS 2016 (1)
Julie Reiland, MD, FACS

Breast cancer care continues to see remarkable growth in knowledge of the disease and advances in treatment. That was certainly evident at the recent School of Oncoplastic Surgery (SOS), in Dallas last month.

The school, which was founded by breast surgeon Gail Lebovic, M.D. with a grant from the Mary Kay Ash Foundation, recently had its eighth annual session in Dallas. This year’s session was sponsored by the National Consortium of Breast Centers and the American Society of Breast Disease Clinical Track.

Among the highlights of that three-day training workshop was a talk by Julie Reiland, MD, FACS. An SOS faculty member, Dr. Reiland is a breast surgeon at Avera Medical Group Comprehensive Breast Care, in Sioux Falls, SD. Speaking to a packed room at SOS, Dr. Reiland talked about the convergence of oncoplastic surgery and intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT).

In particular she talked about Continue reading “IORT with Oncoplastic Surgery: A Beautiful Combination?”

Expanding Scope of Practice for Vascular Access Specialists Can Improve Quality Care

Part 2 of a two-part post.

Vascular_Access_Team_300pxThe Affordable Care Act (ACA), more commonly known as Obamacare, is 906 pages long. But amidst all that detail are a few driving goals. One of those is something few would argue with: higher quality healthcare at lower cost. That’s also the focus of a new white paper on vascular access.

It’s no wonder the ACA’s authors made that a priority. The U.S. lags behind other industrialized countries on both sides of the quality/cost equation. We have the most expensive healthcare, by far, among industrialized nations, according to both the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the healthcare-focused Commonwealth Fund. The U.S. also ranks worse than many of these nations on some measures of quality, including safety.

That brings us to Leslie Schultz, RN, Ph.D., Director of the Safety Institute at Premier, Inc., Continue reading “Expanding Scope of Practice for Vascular Access Specialists Can Improve Quality Care”

Does Infection Reporting Really Work? We Don’t Know Yet

We are now about ten years into the phenomenon of states’ requiring acute care hospitals to report healthcare-acquired infections (HAIs) to their departments of health. At this point, most U.S. states and territories have enacted such laws.

An article in the June 20 issue of the American Journal of Medical QuaInfection reporting imagelity describes trends about enactment of the laws themselves and the type of data the laws cover. An abstract of the article can be found here.

Highlights from the authors’ research:

*As of January 31, 2013, the total number of states and territories adopting mandatory reporting laws had reached 37 (71%). Most of these laws were enacted and became effective in 2006-2007.

*Nearly all states (92%) that have HAI reporting laws mandate that data on central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) in adult intensive care units be submitted to the appropriate state agency.

*About half of states (54%) require that methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections be reported. A similar number (51%) require reporting of Clostridium difficile infections.

Substantial resources have been committed to the reporting effort, both at the facility and state levels. That’s why the authors suggest that future research should focus on whether these laws have been effective in reducing HAIs, which is their intended result.

Consumers Union has long campaigned for patient safety improvements in U.S. healthcare, including the mandatory reporting of infections. You can stay abreast of their and other efforts in this regard here.

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Survey Says Infection Prevention Is Improving, but Hand Hygiene Remains a Big Challenge

Hand hygiene is the most challenging area of compliance in infection prevention, according to results of a survey conducted by Infection Control Today (ICT). Half of infection preventionists who responded to the survey identified hand hygiene as the biggest issue.

The ICT survey uncovered an apparent increase in compliance with best practices and methods among various institutions. Among respondents, 69% said they believe their institutions have increased compliance with infection prevention in the last five years. And 56% say they are spending more time boosting healthcare workers’ compliance.

Most respondents said they feel that their institution supports a culture of safety and accountability, and that they believe their faculty supports them in their efforts to prevent infection. Opinions are mixed, however, on whether an incentivized or punitive approach affects compliance.

Overall, this ICT survey shows a positive trend in infection compliance. While cost pressures will certainly impinge upon infection-prevention efforts, factors supporting more infection prevention include financial incentives within the Affordable Care Act, as well as the expanding adoption of improved infection-prevention technology.

Review the slide show for yourself on ICT’s website.

CDC Issues New Healthcare Infection Data for 2011

Courtesy of Becker’s Infection Control & Clinical Quality, here are 17 points from the CDC’s “Multistate Point-Prevalence Survey of Health Care-Associated Infections” for 2011.

1. In 2011, 4 percent of inpatients at acute-care hospitals had at least one HAI, totaling approximately 648,000 patients with 721,800 infections.

2. One in 25 patients will contract at least one infection during a hospital stay.

3. Approximately 75,000 patients with HAIs died during hospitalization.

4. Pneumonia and surgical site infections were the most common HAIs, each accounting for 21.8 percent of all infections.

5. Gastrointestinal infections accounted for 17.1 percent of all HAIs.

6. Urinary tract infections totaled 12.9 percent of all infections.

7. Primary bloodstream infections totaled 9.9 percent of all infections.

8. Approximately a quarter of all HAIs, 25.6 percent, were associated with medical devices, such as catheter-associated urinary tract infection, ventilator-associated pneumonia and central-catheter associated blood stream infection.

9. Approximately 43 percent of non-surgical site infections developed within 48 hours of a stay in the critical care unit.

10. Colon surgeries experienced the highest number of SSIs, at 14.5 percent, followed by hip arthroplasties (10 percent) and small bowel surgeries (6.4 percent).

11. The median interval from hospital admission to HAI symptoms was six days.

12. One in five HAIs was present on admission and was related to a previous admission to the same hospital.

13. The most common pathogen was Clostridium difficile, accounting for 12.1 percent of infections.

14. The majority of gastrointestinal infections, 70.9 percent, were due to C. diff.

15. Staphylococcus aureus accounted for 10.7 percent of infections.

16. Klebsiella pneumoniae and K. oxytoca accounted for 9.9 percent of infections.

17. Escherichia coli accounted for 9.3 percent of infections.

Why Press Releases Still Matter for Healthcare Organizations

Think the press release is a relic? Think again. Press releases should be a valuable part of every healthcare organization’s public relations efforts.

Here’s a good article explaining why: http://bit.ly/1bLZyyn


Patients and Clinicians Trust Social Media

The IMS Institute, which collects data and collaborates with the public and private sectors, has just issued a noteworthy report called “Engaging Patients through Social Media.”

Among the report’s key points:

  • Social media is a persuasive communicator:

“Patient trust in clinicians and the broad reach of social media puts healthcare professionals in a prime position to drive healthcare topics on the Web.”

  • Huge growth of social media:

Use of social networking sites grew from 8% of adults online in 2005 to 72% in 2013.

  • Online dominates print:

In making clinical decisions, physicians spend twice as much time using online resources compared to print.

  • Video is very popular:

“Physicians spend an average of 3 hours a week watching online videos for professional purposes, citing their top 3 as Medscape and YouTube, followed by videos on pharmaceutical company websites.”

  • Wiki rules:

“Wikipedia is the leading single source of healthcare information for patients AND healthcare professionals.”

“Wikipedia health pages are updated substantially and often, suggesting a need for better curation.”

  • MDs trust Wikipedia:

“Nearly 50% of U.S. physicians who go online for professional purposes use Wikipedia for information.”

Source: IMS Institute. IMS Health calls itself “the world’s leading information, services and technology company dedicated to making healthcare perform better.” The company consults to medical device, pharmaceuticals and other companies.

More on the findings at: http://bit.ly/1dvw2qW (free registration at Medscape).

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Modern Healthcare Article: Progress in Patient Safety Measures

(We are temporarily posting this article as requested by people on LinkedIn. It’s copyright by Modern Healthcare magazine.)

By Lola Butcher

Modern Healthcare

Nearly 15 years after the patient-safety movement started, deaths and injuries from poor care continue to be all too common in U.S. hospitals. For example, studies show that between 21% and 63% of urinary catheters, which frequently cause painful infections that are costly to treat, are placed in patients who do not need them.

A set of strategies to prevent catheter-associated urinary-tract infections is one of 10 patient-safety practices being strongly recommended by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality in its report issued earlier this year, Making Health Care Safer II: An Updated Critical Analysis of Patient Safety Practices.

The practices that made the AHRQ list were found to show evidence of effectiveness in real-world use. Despite the evidence, however, experts say compliance is far from universal. Instead, compliance varies greatly from one hospital to another—and within each hospital.

“Even if you are talking about an individual organization, there will be certain areas where it’s practiced beautifully, some where it’s practiced pretty well, and some that may not be practicing it at all,” says Carol Haraden, a vice president at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. It’s “an issue everywhere around the world.”

The only antidote to poor compliance with safety practices is leadership from the executive ranks, and there hasn’t been enough of that. “The more sophisticated groups understand that this is a job for leadership because no individual can make this happen,” she says. “It really has to emanate from the top.”

Some of the practices on AHRQ’s top 10 list—proper hand hygiene and checklists to avoid wrong-site surgery, for example—seem so basic that outside observers may assume that compliance is universal. Those who understand patient safety the best say that’s not so.

‘A lot harder than people think it is’

“It’s easy to be a quarterback from the sidelines and think, ‘For goodness sake, why is this happening?’ ” Haraden says. “It’s a lot harder than people think it is. That doesn’t give anybody a pass, but I do think (patient safety) is much more challenging than it appears.”

AHRQ’s report, issued in March, updates an earlier study that analyzed the strength of evidence for various patient-safety practices. The original report was released just two years after the Institute of Medicine’s To Err is Human: Building a Safer Healthcare System published in 1999 estimated that 98,000 Americans die each year from medical errors in hospitals.

Since then, most hospitals have poured considerable money and effort into improving patient safety—with mixed results. According to this year’s report, “evidence indicates that progress has not matched the efforts and investment.” Indeed, patient-safety advocate John James reviewed four recent studies of patient harm and estimated that between 210,000 and 400,000 deaths per year are associated with poor hospital care. His research was published in the September 2013 issue of the Journal of Patient Safety.

AHRQ’s original report revealed there was scant evidence to support some practices that were believed to improve patient safety. As the patient-safety movement has matured, researchers have evaluated many practices, creating a vast pool of literature available to determine what really works.

Thus, AHRQ commissioned its Evidence-based Practice Centers—RAND Corp., University of California at San Francisco/Stanford, Johns Hopkins University and the ECRI Institute—to review 41 patient-safety practices. The researchers considered the evidence about whether a practice actually improves patient safety. Unlike the previous review, AHRQ’s latest report also examined the evidence that a practice will work in a real-world setting rather than in a controlled experiment.

“That is a new twist on evidence-based reports,” says James Battles, AHRQ’s social science analyst for patient safety.

Of the 41 practices reviewed, 20 practices were deemed to have at least moderate evidence that they are effective, and 25 practices had at least moderate evidence that they could be successfully implemented in a typical hospital. The researchers combined that information to identify 10 practices that had sufficient evidence of both effectiveness and implementation to warrant being “strongly encouraged” for adoption, while another 12 practices were classified as those that should be “encouraged” (See chart).

In general, no one tracks hospital compliance with patient-safety measures. One exception is the CMS’ core measures program, which has required hospitals since 2003 to report their compliance with certain practices for heart attack, pneumonia, heart failure and surgery patients.

Over time, however, the CMS has shifted its focus to outcomes measures such as readmission rates and hospital-acquired conditions. For example, the CMS tracks the number of catheter-associated urinary-tract infections in a hospital rather than the compliance with strategies to avoid them.

Private payers, meanwhile, are generally silent on patient-safety measures, says Dr. Sheldon Stadnyk, chief medical officer for Banner Health’s Western Region. “My guess is that it may still be hard for them to measure,” he says.

That is because, except for core measures, U.S. hospitals are not working on a standard patient-safety agenda that requires them to track—or even to work on—the same patient-safety initiatives. Just because AHRQ’s list shows the practices are proven to be effective, that does not automatically make them top priorities, Haraden says.

“You may think reducing mortality is the No. 1 priority, but some of those high-evidence practices really have very little effect on mortality,” Haraden says. “You can’t do every single thing at once, so you have to look at your population and think about which practices are going to help your patients the most.”

Sarah Krein, a researcher at the VA Ann Arbor (Mich.) Healthcare System and the University of Michigan Health System, has studied the adoption of patient-safety practices for nearly a decade.

She says most hospitals are making a good-faith effort to improve patient safety, but as more is learned about how to improve safety, the number of safety initiatives keeps growing. “People are trying to respond,” she says. “But it becomes difficult when you’re trying to use the limited resources that you have to address all of these different issues.”

Common practices

Patient-safety protocols touted in AHRQ report

In a survey of hospital infection prevention specialists in 2009, Krein found that at least 90% of hospitals are using some practices to prevent central line-associated bloodstream infections and ventilator-associated pneumonia. But only one practice—bladder ultrasound—to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infections was used by at least 50% of the hospitals responding to the survey.

Krein’s work documented a significant increase in the use of patient-safety practices to reduce hospital-acquired infections between 2005 and 2009, and she expects to find another increase when she analyzes data from a follow-up survey being conducted this year. She is encouraged by increasing compliance but points out that systemic change takes time.

“It really involves working with multidisciplinary teams and a broader perspective to patient-safety issues,” she says.

Many of the practices on AHRQ’s list are hardwired into leading health systems, Stadnyk says. “Some of these are so old that, if I were to encounter another (chief medical officer) in my network that says ‘We’re not doing all those,’ I would probably raise my eyebrows and say ‘Did you guys miss the boat?’ ” he says.

Banner considers many of AHRQ’s recommended practices to be a base on which to build. For example, it developed a systemwide standard that changed the way patients with total knee replacement surgery are treated: Catheters are avoided and weight-bearing ambulation starts on the day of surgery.

“Our orthopedists were not very pleased when we unrolled this. They hit us with, ‘That’s not in the literature, show me,’ ” Stadnyk says. “And what we say is, ‘We know that early ambulation and avoiding catheters whenever possible are two themes that run through all these safety things. Let’s put them together and create our own initiative.’ ”

In some cases, major campaigns that focus on a specific safety issue seem to work. More than 30% of all U.S. hospitals are participating in AHRQ’s Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program to reduce bloodstream infections and catheter-associated urinary-tract infections. AHRQ provides tool kits, implementation guides and educational sessions to help staff members on specific units improve patient safety.

By September 2012, participating intensive-care units had reduced rates for urinary-tract infections by 40%; interim results for the initiative are to be released later this year.

The central-line and catheter-associated infection programs “have reached the tipping point,” Battles says. “For the areas that we have organized technical assistance, we are feeling pretty good.”

Lola Butcher is a freelance writer based in Springfield, Mo. Reach her at lola@lolabutcher.com

Guest Blog: VGo and Aging in Place

By Eugene Spiritus, M.D.
Chief Medical OfficerVGo with older woman
VGo Communications

While smart phones, computers and tablets have allowed people to better see and communicate with each other over distance, the arrival of the VGo telepresence robot has added a new dimension to aging in place.

Tools such as VGo will be increasingly valuable as the American population ages. According to the AARP, 90% of people over the age of 65 would prefer to remain in their own residence as they age. Many Baby Boomers must now take on the role of caregiver for aging parents or provide economic support in the form of paid caregivers. A recent study suggests that by 2026 there will not be enough caregivers, paid or unpaid, to support the growing population of seniors.

By looking at seniors who have been able to remain in their homes, research suggests that success in remaining in one’s residence in old age is usually a function of being able to successfully manage illness, avoid accidents and injuries, and maintain communication with friends and family. Also, according to a survey by AARP, a majority of seniors said it was important to stay involved and continually learn.

In his book The Creative Destruction of Medicine, Eric Topol talks about the “new medicine.” It results from the convergence of wireless sensors, genomics, imaging, information systems, mobile connectivity, the Internet, social networking and computing power. While the future holds great promise for “individualized medicine,” the question remains: Are there now technologies and approaches for seniors who may not be technologically sophisticated?

Technologies are available and affordable that capitalize on smart phones and the Internet to collect and store data such as weight, blood pressure, blood sugar, sleep efficiency and oxygen level. Most of these can be done with little or no understanding of technology. Even more valuable are websites that allow elders to learn from others and track any illness.

Seniors with chronic disease may take more than 10 medicines a day and consequently are more prone to errors that may lead to disability or death. There are now a number of e-tools available including simple pillboxes, complex organizers with dispensers and alarms, vibrating watches, and smart phone apps with reminders. Recently the FDA approved a system that uses a small sensor to track pill taking and send the information to a smart phone.

VGo, because it is a lightweight, affordable robot that is controlled remotely from either a laptop computer or iPad, allows caregivers and family members to visit and interact with elders from across town — or anywhere in the world that has a high-speed Internet connection or Verizon 4G. This telepresence robot has been shown to be an effective tool in the period after hospital discharge, to ensure care plans are being carried out and to have close follow-up without requiring the patient to leave home.

The VGo is being widely accepted by patients, family members and care providers, because it offers a cost-effective means of follow-up, engagement and social interaction.