Showing posts with label medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medicine. Show all posts

Chaos and Organization in Health Care Review

Chaos and Organization in Health Care
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Chaos and Organization in Health Care ReviewThere have been a great number of books analyzing health care over the past year and one suspects that this wave will continue. The book by Lee and Mongan entitled Chaos and Organization in Health Care (MIT Press, 2009) is one of the more recent. The premise of the book appears to be that the delivery of health care has problems because it is in an organizational state of chaos and if order is restored by the means proposed by the authors then all things will improve.
On page xi they specifically state that "the solution is organization" and it is from this assertion that they continue to build their argument. On page xiii they assert their proposal that a "tightly structured delivery organization" is the ideal and they proceed to use several examples throughout the book. Before continuing, I would introduce an interesting historical observation. When I spent time in and around Longwood Avenue, the Harvard Medical School area, in the 1960s, I could actually park my VW in the lot in front of one of the hospitals. By the late 1980s I had to use a multi-story garage, for what I thought was a great fee of $8. Last week I used the gigantic subterranean parking edifice for $30. The authors seem to recommend that the patients come to them, where they are collected as a group, but the vignette on parking just is the tip of the exclusion iceberg. It is quite difficult to get patients to trek to a single location for intermittent or routine care, they are all too often difficult to get to, especially for a patient who would then have to take great time from an already pressured schedule. The answer has been the single or multi-practitioner practice.
On p xii the authors speak of team based solutions to treating Diabetes. If one looks at Type 2 Diabetes, then in the overwhelming majority of cases it is s self inflicted disorder due to obesity and diet. The disease can be cured by just losing weight, and there should be actions taken to make that happen, otherwise a cost should be applied to the patient's life style choices. Assuming that nothing can be done with such a patient is just wrong and places the costs on the rest of us who comply.
On pp 39-40 the authors begin their analysis with the data from Medicare showing that patients see multiple physicians each year. They have a chart which shows that for Diabetes the Medicare patient sees 9 different physicians 3 of which are primary care and 6 of which are specialists. One will accept the data but one must question it. If the patient has Type 2 Diabetes, then we know that there are kidney, cardiac, neurological, ophthalmological, and possible endocrine issues, but if the average Medicare patient with type 2 Diabetes sees all of this every year then this is clearly an overload on any system. The authors put this data out there without adequately explaining it and allow it to speak for itself. It does not do so well.
On p 47 the authors have a table which shows the tests that Internists no longer routinely perform. Let me address a few. First, the treadmill stress test is better performed by a cardiologists just in case a patient does suffer an MI while be tested. The general internist is not prepared to handle this and the insurance could skyrocket if it were taken on, as well as the insurance company may not reimburse it. There are many reasons why not. Now for a liver biopsy. No Internist would take the risk of performing an invasive surgical procedure in their office unless there was no possible alternative. Slicing an artery in the liver is a substantial risk.
Part II starting on p 55 is where the authors begin their proposal for organization. Their overall proposal is in Chapter 6 for a Tightly Structured Health Care Delivery Organization, on p 97 and they use the VA as an example. The essence of the proposal is that one can create a dense and tightly integrated delivery system and that one gets the patients to come to that system and because of the efficiencies in this delivery mechanism the units costs and thus total costs are reduced. This is the classic centralized architecture approach introduced into production in the 1800s. Yet one questions whether that is the sole paradigm for the delivery of health care.
In Chapter 10 on p 175 the authors detail many of the reasons for lack of change. They focus on the provider and carefully list the key barriers to any form of evolution. On p 184 they present an interesting chart, charts of this type one can find in almost any environment, that one physician in the ER ordered 40% more CAT scans then the second highest ordering physician. Rather than bemoan that statistic one should try to understand why, the devil is in the details.
On p 205 the authors appear to support the bundling of payments, a plan which has worked its way into the current health care bills (2009). Bundling is a natural outgrowth of institutionalizing health care delivery. However if one can argue for the permanence of a distributed health care delivery system, which is in proximate contact with the patients, then bundling would be just another word for institutional control and the reduction of physician autonomy and patient choice. It is a sticky issue and the authors do not do credit to both sides.
On p 229 in the final chapter the authors stress that organization of providers is essential for change. They also seem to promote the single payer system approach on p 237.
The problem is that there is no financial or business analysis of the proposals. There are many generalizations and many anecdotes but frankly not a single analysis and what would be obtained by defined actions. I return to the metric we used before, namely that for any specific disease we have the total costs being:
Total Costs=Population X Incidence X Procedures per Patient X Costs per Procedure
Thus we can look at costs as driven by the four elements above. We see a growing population and thus no influence there. We can reduce incidence. Smoking has been reduced by taxing cigarettes and thus we have seen a reduction in male lung cancer incidence. Yet on the other hand we see a massive explosion in obesity and the resulting Type 2 Diabetes. A great deal can be done on incidence. On procedures; for acute coronary syndrome and the like we now have many procedures we can do today that we could not do 40 years ago and we have reduced mortality 50% as a result. Is that good, should we perform those procedures.
Then finally the costs per procedure. The last element is what the authors seem to be speaking to. What are they and how do their proposals reduce the costs and by how much. The devil is in the details, and more importantly in the numbers. It is with the numbers that the authors come up very short. The book is much too anecdotal and way too lacking in details.
Chaos and Organization in Health Care Overview

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Applied Physical Pharmacy Review

Applied Physical Pharmacy
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Applied Physical Pharmacy ReviewI have taken a class with Dr. Amiji and his book is just like his class, extremly well done. This book is very helpful for pharmacy majors, it gives thorough explanations and practice sets with all of the answers (not just the odd #'s). I would definately recomend to anyone who is taking his class as well. I have bought many textbooks that were a waste, but this is one that I will keep. It breaks down the equations into simple steps and makes daunting problems seem approachable. The theory is taught in a language that is understandable.Applied Physical Pharmacy Overview

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Current Consult Medicine 2007 Review

Current Consult Medicine 2007
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Current Consult Medicine 2007 ReviewI am new to the Current Consult in Medicine. I found it useful for a project I was writing.Current Consult Medicine 2007 Overview

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Nanotechnology: Ethics and Society (Perspectives in Nanotechnology) Review

Nanotechnology: Ethics and Society (Perspectives in Nanotechnology)
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Nanotechnology: Ethics and Society (Perspectives in Nanotechnology) ReviewNanotechnology: Ethics and Society (Perspectives in Nanotechnology)
This remarkable book treats a very difficult subject using plain English. It is not easy reading because the subject is complex but it is a powerful argument for "look before you leap" in what is forecast to be a world changing new technology.Nanotechnology: Ethics and Society (Perspectives in Nanotechnology) Overview

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Collateral Damage: A Patient, a New Procedure, and the Learning Curve Review

Collateral Damage: A Patient, a New Procedure, and the Learning Curve
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Collateral Damage: A Patient, a New Procedure, and the Learning Curve ReviewI finished this book over a week ago and have been trying to formulate my feelings about it, for which there are many, and many are very disturbing ...
When I go to a doctor, I must assume that he/she is competent and honest. I don't think these are unrealistic assumptions. But after reading "Collateral Damage," my viewpoint and my trust have been deeply and profoundly changed. What happened to Pam and Dan Walter should not happen to any of us. If mistakes are made, people of good faith, integrity and professionalism should step up ... not cover up. The patient is the victim and should not be made the villain. Yet that's exactly what happened to Pam. My heart goes out to her.
When medicine, ego, technology, and profit merge, the alliance is tainted, the system is compromised and the patient is at risk. That's exactly what happened to Pam. She didn't have a chance. Johns Hopkins' reputation is well-known. Soon Hugh Caulkins' reputation will be known as well. And perhaps the millions of dollars they receive in research money will be questioned as will their reputations. As it stands now ... we the people must speak up! Tragedies like this should not happen. And if mistakes are made, then physicians ought to take responsibility. After all, isn't the oath they take to do no harm? Someone should remind Hugh Caulkins of that.
This story is about Pam and Dan Walter. Yet it could be me or you! I was reading this book while my husband was waiting to see his cardiologist. I'd just finished reading a portion of the book that suddenly played out in front of me!!!! The cardiologist, who is treating my husband for afib, started sounding like a character in this book! I said to myself, "are you freaking kidding me?" It was all eerily familiar to Pam's story in the ease at which ablation was swiftly and easily woven into the discussion as if it were the natural progression of treatment.
Thanks to Dan Walters' book, we were armed with independent studies about the dismal record of ablation for afib. The doctor dismissed our research as worthless unless it was from the medical establishment. Interestingly, the study was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). Still, it was disregarded. And so was the cardiologist's recommendation for ablation.
I am so sorry that Pam and Dan Walter had to endure this tragic event. But if it's any solace, their story helped our story end in a positive way. So Pam, your suffering has had meaning and purpose. Dan, your work is stunning, your writing is extarordinary, and your research is impeccable. Thank you for sparing us what you and Pam have long endured.Collateral Damage: A Patient, a New Procedure, and the Learning Curve Overview

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Women's Global Health and Human Rights Review

Women's Global Health and Human Rights
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Women's Global Health and Human Rights ReviewThis is an excellent book. The chapters are very informative and give great real-life examples. This book is easy to understand. Dr. Murthy is my professor and advisor. She is a great and knowledgeable person.Women's Global Health and Human Rights Overview

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