Kelly April Tyrrell writes about health, science and health policy. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin, where she is usually running, riding her bike, rock climbing or cross-country skiing. Follow her @kellyperil.

Trump, not health care, likely focus of midterm elections

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Changed
Fri, 09/21/2018 - 12:46

Provider community must be “creative and participative”

 

Come November 2018, Americans will return to the polls to vote for their representatives in Congress, for governors, and for state legislative seats.

Dr. Robert Berenson

Health care has been a topic of debate since the 2016 elections brought a Republican sweep to the executive and legislative branches, but other issues have since moved to the forefront. Will the midterm elections this year prove health care to be a significant issue at the polls?

Unlikely, said Robert Berenson, MD, FACP, Institute Fellow of the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute. More likely, the election will be a referendum on President Donald Trump, he said. “Things are so partisan right now and it’s all about Trump. I don’t see serious discussion about health policy.”

Ron Greeno, MD, MHM, FCCP, immediate past president of SHM and former chair of the Public Policy Committee, also doesn’t see health care rising to the top of election year issues. But that doesn’t mean health care doesn’t matter to American voters.

“Whether Democrats control the House or Republicans control the House won’t likely make a big difference in terms of impact on the things we care about,” said Dr. Greeno. “The issues they debate in Washington are not going to save the health care system. They are just debating about who is going to pay for what and for whom. To save our health care system, we have to lower the cost of care and only providers can do that.”

Dr. Ron Greeno

What the government can do, he said, is create the right incentives for providers to move away from fee for service and participate in new models that may lower the cost of care. At the same time, “the economy also has to grow at a robust pace, which will make a huge difference. So, recent increases in economic growth rate are welcomed,” said Dr. Greeno.

In 2015, Republicans and Democrats came together to pass bipartisan legislation aimed at moving the health care system away from fee for service: the Medicare and CHIP Reauthorization Act, or MACRA.

However, the law has not been without frustrations, and these concerns will likely not be part of any candidate campaigns in 2018, Dr. Greeno predicted: “There’s not a lot of appetite to reopen the statute (more than) 2 years after it passed.”

MACRA provides clinicians two pathways to reimbursement. The first track, called MIPS (Merit-Based Incentive Payment System), bases a portion of physician reimbursement on scores measured across several categories, including cost and quality. It still operates largely under a fee-for-service framework but is meant to be budget neutral; for every winner there is a loser.

The second track, called the APMs (Alternative Payment Models), requires physicians to take on substantial risk (with potential for reward), if they can achieve specific patient volumes under approved models. However, few providers qualify, especially among hospitalists, though the structure of the program makes it clear that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services intends to have most providers ultimately transition to APMs.

“There’s growing recognition that MACRA, at least the MIPS portion, was a big mistake but Congress can’t go back and say we blew it,” Dr. Berenson said. “CMS has now exempted somewhere between 550,000 and 900,000 clinicians from MACRA,” because they cannot meet the requirements of either pathway without significant hardship.1

CMS wasn’t considering hospitalists specifically when implementing the law, though hospitalists admit half of the Medicare patients in the United States, Dr. Greeno said. There are very few hospitalists currently participating in Advanced APMs and those that are, do not see the volume of patients the pathway requires.

“What hospitalists do is very conducive to alternative payment models, and we can help those alternative payment models drive improved quality and lowered costs,” said Dr. Greeno. “Hospitals use hospitalists to help them manage risk, so it’s frustrating that most hospitalists will not meet the thresholds for the APM track and benefit from the incentives created.”

However, the Society of Hospital Medicine continues to work on behalf of hospitalists. Thanks to its efforts, Dr. Greeno explained, CMS is planning in 2019 to allow hospitalists to choose to be scored under MIPS based on their hospital’s performance across reporting categories. Or, they can choose to report on their own and opt out of this new “facility-based” option.

“We are working with (CMS) to figure out how to make this new option work,” said Dr. Greeno.

At the state level, 36 governorships are up for grabs and those outcomes could influence the direction of Medicaid. In Kentucky, the Trump administration approved a waiver allowing the state to enforce work requirements for Medicaid recipients. However, on June 29, 2018, the D.C. federal district court invalidated the Kentucky HEALTH waiver approval (with the exception of Kentucky’s IMD SUD [institutions for mental disease for substance use disorders] payment waiver authority) and sent it back to HHS to reconsider. Ten other states as of August 2018 had applied for similar waivers.2 However, Dr. Berenson believes that most of what could happen to Medicaid will be a topic after the midterm elections and not before.

He also believes drug prices could become an issue in national elections, though there will not be an easy solution from either side. “Democrats will be reluctant to say they’re going to negotiate drug prices; they’re going to want the government to negotiate for Medicare-like pricing.” Republicans, on the other hand, will be reluctant to consider government regulation.

As a general principle leading into the midterms: “Democrats want to avoid an internal war about whether they are for Medicare for all or single payer or not,” Dr. Berenson said. “What I’m hoping doesn’t happen is that it becomes a litmus test for purity where you have to be for single payer. I think would be huge mistake because it’s not realistic that it would ever get there.”

However, he cites an idea from left-leaning Princeton University’s Paul Starr, a professor of sociology and public affairs, that Democrats could consider: so-called Midlife Medicare, an option that could be made available to Americans beginning at age 50 years.3 It would represent a new Medicare option, funded by general revenues and premiums, available to people age 50 years and older and those younger than 65 years who are without employer-sponsored health insurance.

Regardless, as the United States catapults toward another election that could disrupt the political system or maintain the relative status quo, Dr. Greeno said hospitalists continue to play key roles in improving American health care.

“There are programs in place where we can get the job done if we in the provider community are creative and participative,” he said. “Some of the most important work being done is coming out of the CMS Innovation Center. Hospitalists continue to be a big part of that, but we knew it would take decades of really hard work and I don’t see anything happening in the midterms to derail this or bring about a massive increase in the pace of change.”
 

References

1. Dickson V. CMS gives more small practices a pass on MACRA. Modern Healthcare. Published June 20, 2017.

2. Medicaid Waiver Tracker: Which States Have Approved and Pending Section 1115 Medicaid Waivers? Kaiser Family Foundation. Published Aug. 8, 2018.

3. Starr P. A new strategy for health care. The American Prospect. Published Jan. 4, 2018. Accessed March 5, 2018.
 

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Provider community must be “creative and participative”

Provider community must be “creative and participative”

 

Come November 2018, Americans will return to the polls to vote for their representatives in Congress, for governors, and for state legislative seats.

Dr. Robert Berenson

Health care has been a topic of debate since the 2016 elections brought a Republican sweep to the executive and legislative branches, but other issues have since moved to the forefront. Will the midterm elections this year prove health care to be a significant issue at the polls?

Unlikely, said Robert Berenson, MD, FACP, Institute Fellow of the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute. More likely, the election will be a referendum on President Donald Trump, he said. “Things are so partisan right now and it’s all about Trump. I don’t see serious discussion about health policy.”

Ron Greeno, MD, MHM, FCCP, immediate past president of SHM and former chair of the Public Policy Committee, also doesn’t see health care rising to the top of election year issues. But that doesn’t mean health care doesn’t matter to American voters.

“Whether Democrats control the House or Republicans control the House won’t likely make a big difference in terms of impact on the things we care about,” said Dr. Greeno. “The issues they debate in Washington are not going to save the health care system. They are just debating about who is going to pay for what and for whom. To save our health care system, we have to lower the cost of care and only providers can do that.”

Dr. Ron Greeno

What the government can do, he said, is create the right incentives for providers to move away from fee for service and participate in new models that may lower the cost of care. At the same time, “the economy also has to grow at a robust pace, which will make a huge difference. So, recent increases in economic growth rate are welcomed,” said Dr. Greeno.

In 2015, Republicans and Democrats came together to pass bipartisan legislation aimed at moving the health care system away from fee for service: the Medicare and CHIP Reauthorization Act, or MACRA.

However, the law has not been without frustrations, and these concerns will likely not be part of any candidate campaigns in 2018, Dr. Greeno predicted: “There’s not a lot of appetite to reopen the statute (more than) 2 years after it passed.”

MACRA provides clinicians two pathways to reimbursement. The first track, called MIPS (Merit-Based Incentive Payment System), bases a portion of physician reimbursement on scores measured across several categories, including cost and quality. It still operates largely under a fee-for-service framework but is meant to be budget neutral; for every winner there is a loser.

The second track, called the APMs (Alternative Payment Models), requires physicians to take on substantial risk (with potential for reward), if they can achieve specific patient volumes under approved models. However, few providers qualify, especially among hospitalists, though the structure of the program makes it clear that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services intends to have most providers ultimately transition to APMs.

“There’s growing recognition that MACRA, at least the MIPS portion, was a big mistake but Congress can’t go back and say we blew it,” Dr. Berenson said. “CMS has now exempted somewhere between 550,000 and 900,000 clinicians from MACRA,” because they cannot meet the requirements of either pathway without significant hardship.1

CMS wasn’t considering hospitalists specifically when implementing the law, though hospitalists admit half of the Medicare patients in the United States, Dr. Greeno said. There are very few hospitalists currently participating in Advanced APMs and those that are, do not see the volume of patients the pathway requires.

“What hospitalists do is very conducive to alternative payment models, and we can help those alternative payment models drive improved quality and lowered costs,” said Dr. Greeno. “Hospitals use hospitalists to help them manage risk, so it’s frustrating that most hospitalists will not meet the thresholds for the APM track and benefit from the incentives created.”

However, the Society of Hospital Medicine continues to work on behalf of hospitalists. Thanks to its efforts, Dr. Greeno explained, CMS is planning in 2019 to allow hospitalists to choose to be scored under MIPS based on their hospital’s performance across reporting categories. Or, they can choose to report on their own and opt out of this new “facility-based” option.

“We are working with (CMS) to figure out how to make this new option work,” said Dr. Greeno.

At the state level, 36 governorships are up for grabs and those outcomes could influence the direction of Medicaid. In Kentucky, the Trump administration approved a waiver allowing the state to enforce work requirements for Medicaid recipients. However, on June 29, 2018, the D.C. federal district court invalidated the Kentucky HEALTH waiver approval (with the exception of Kentucky’s IMD SUD [institutions for mental disease for substance use disorders] payment waiver authority) and sent it back to HHS to reconsider. Ten other states as of August 2018 had applied for similar waivers.2 However, Dr. Berenson believes that most of what could happen to Medicaid will be a topic after the midterm elections and not before.

He also believes drug prices could become an issue in national elections, though there will not be an easy solution from either side. “Democrats will be reluctant to say they’re going to negotiate drug prices; they’re going to want the government to negotiate for Medicare-like pricing.” Republicans, on the other hand, will be reluctant to consider government regulation.

As a general principle leading into the midterms: “Democrats want to avoid an internal war about whether they are for Medicare for all or single payer or not,” Dr. Berenson said. “What I’m hoping doesn’t happen is that it becomes a litmus test for purity where you have to be for single payer. I think would be huge mistake because it’s not realistic that it would ever get there.”

However, he cites an idea from left-leaning Princeton University’s Paul Starr, a professor of sociology and public affairs, that Democrats could consider: so-called Midlife Medicare, an option that could be made available to Americans beginning at age 50 years.3 It would represent a new Medicare option, funded by general revenues and premiums, available to people age 50 years and older and those younger than 65 years who are without employer-sponsored health insurance.

Regardless, as the United States catapults toward another election that could disrupt the political system or maintain the relative status quo, Dr. Greeno said hospitalists continue to play key roles in improving American health care.

“There are programs in place where we can get the job done if we in the provider community are creative and participative,” he said. “Some of the most important work being done is coming out of the CMS Innovation Center. Hospitalists continue to be a big part of that, but we knew it would take decades of really hard work and I don’t see anything happening in the midterms to derail this or bring about a massive increase in the pace of change.”
 

References

1. Dickson V. CMS gives more small practices a pass on MACRA. Modern Healthcare. Published June 20, 2017.

2. Medicaid Waiver Tracker: Which States Have Approved and Pending Section 1115 Medicaid Waivers? Kaiser Family Foundation. Published Aug. 8, 2018.

3. Starr P. A new strategy for health care. The American Prospect. Published Jan. 4, 2018. Accessed March 5, 2018.
 

 

Come November 2018, Americans will return to the polls to vote for their representatives in Congress, for governors, and for state legislative seats.

Dr. Robert Berenson

Health care has been a topic of debate since the 2016 elections brought a Republican sweep to the executive and legislative branches, but other issues have since moved to the forefront. Will the midterm elections this year prove health care to be a significant issue at the polls?

Unlikely, said Robert Berenson, MD, FACP, Institute Fellow of the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute. More likely, the election will be a referendum on President Donald Trump, he said. “Things are so partisan right now and it’s all about Trump. I don’t see serious discussion about health policy.”

Ron Greeno, MD, MHM, FCCP, immediate past president of SHM and former chair of the Public Policy Committee, also doesn’t see health care rising to the top of election year issues. But that doesn’t mean health care doesn’t matter to American voters.

“Whether Democrats control the House or Republicans control the House won’t likely make a big difference in terms of impact on the things we care about,” said Dr. Greeno. “The issues they debate in Washington are not going to save the health care system. They are just debating about who is going to pay for what and for whom. To save our health care system, we have to lower the cost of care and only providers can do that.”

Dr. Ron Greeno

What the government can do, he said, is create the right incentives for providers to move away from fee for service and participate in new models that may lower the cost of care. At the same time, “the economy also has to grow at a robust pace, which will make a huge difference. So, recent increases in economic growth rate are welcomed,” said Dr. Greeno.

In 2015, Republicans and Democrats came together to pass bipartisan legislation aimed at moving the health care system away from fee for service: the Medicare and CHIP Reauthorization Act, or MACRA.

However, the law has not been without frustrations, and these concerns will likely not be part of any candidate campaigns in 2018, Dr. Greeno predicted: “There’s not a lot of appetite to reopen the statute (more than) 2 years after it passed.”

MACRA provides clinicians two pathways to reimbursement. The first track, called MIPS (Merit-Based Incentive Payment System), bases a portion of physician reimbursement on scores measured across several categories, including cost and quality. It still operates largely under a fee-for-service framework but is meant to be budget neutral; for every winner there is a loser.

The second track, called the APMs (Alternative Payment Models), requires physicians to take on substantial risk (with potential for reward), if they can achieve specific patient volumes under approved models. However, few providers qualify, especially among hospitalists, though the structure of the program makes it clear that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services intends to have most providers ultimately transition to APMs.

“There’s growing recognition that MACRA, at least the MIPS portion, was a big mistake but Congress can’t go back and say we blew it,” Dr. Berenson said. “CMS has now exempted somewhere between 550,000 and 900,000 clinicians from MACRA,” because they cannot meet the requirements of either pathway without significant hardship.1

CMS wasn’t considering hospitalists specifically when implementing the law, though hospitalists admit half of the Medicare patients in the United States, Dr. Greeno said. There are very few hospitalists currently participating in Advanced APMs and those that are, do not see the volume of patients the pathway requires.

“What hospitalists do is very conducive to alternative payment models, and we can help those alternative payment models drive improved quality and lowered costs,” said Dr. Greeno. “Hospitals use hospitalists to help them manage risk, so it’s frustrating that most hospitalists will not meet the thresholds for the APM track and benefit from the incentives created.”

However, the Society of Hospital Medicine continues to work on behalf of hospitalists. Thanks to its efforts, Dr. Greeno explained, CMS is planning in 2019 to allow hospitalists to choose to be scored under MIPS based on their hospital’s performance across reporting categories. Or, they can choose to report on their own and opt out of this new “facility-based” option.

“We are working with (CMS) to figure out how to make this new option work,” said Dr. Greeno.

At the state level, 36 governorships are up for grabs and those outcomes could influence the direction of Medicaid. In Kentucky, the Trump administration approved a waiver allowing the state to enforce work requirements for Medicaid recipients. However, on June 29, 2018, the D.C. federal district court invalidated the Kentucky HEALTH waiver approval (with the exception of Kentucky’s IMD SUD [institutions for mental disease for substance use disorders] payment waiver authority) and sent it back to HHS to reconsider. Ten other states as of August 2018 had applied for similar waivers.2 However, Dr. Berenson believes that most of what could happen to Medicaid will be a topic after the midterm elections and not before.

He also believes drug prices could become an issue in national elections, though there will not be an easy solution from either side. “Democrats will be reluctant to say they’re going to negotiate drug prices; they’re going to want the government to negotiate for Medicare-like pricing.” Republicans, on the other hand, will be reluctant to consider government regulation.

As a general principle leading into the midterms: “Democrats want to avoid an internal war about whether they are for Medicare for all or single payer or not,” Dr. Berenson said. “What I’m hoping doesn’t happen is that it becomes a litmus test for purity where you have to be for single payer. I think would be huge mistake because it’s not realistic that it would ever get there.”

However, he cites an idea from left-leaning Princeton University’s Paul Starr, a professor of sociology and public affairs, that Democrats could consider: so-called Midlife Medicare, an option that could be made available to Americans beginning at age 50 years.3 It would represent a new Medicare option, funded by general revenues and premiums, available to people age 50 years and older and those younger than 65 years who are without employer-sponsored health insurance.

Regardless, as the United States catapults toward another election that could disrupt the political system or maintain the relative status quo, Dr. Greeno said hospitalists continue to play key roles in improving American health care.

“There are programs in place where we can get the job done if we in the provider community are creative and participative,” he said. “Some of the most important work being done is coming out of the CMS Innovation Center. Hospitalists continue to be a big part of that, but we knew it would take decades of really hard work and I don’t see anything happening in the midterms to derail this or bring about a massive increase in the pace of change.”
 

References

1. Dickson V. CMS gives more small practices a pass on MACRA. Modern Healthcare. Published June 20, 2017.

2. Medicaid Waiver Tracker: Which States Have Approved and Pending Section 1115 Medicaid Waivers? Kaiser Family Foundation. Published Aug. 8, 2018.

3. Starr P. A new strategy for health care. The American Prospect. Published Jan. 4, 2018. Accessed March 5, 2018.
 

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CMS sepsis measure a challenge to report

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Fri, 09/14/2018 - 11:52

Hospitalists can champion sepsis-improvement efforts

In October 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services implemented its first meaningful policy to attempt for addressing sepsis.

The condition – one of the leading causes of mortality among hospitalized patients – afflicts more than a million people each year in the United States, and between 15% and 30% of them die. Sepsis is one of the leading drivers of hospital readmissions, sending more patients back to the hospital than heart failure, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.1

However, while providers seem to agree that time to address sepsis is past due, not everyone has embraced the Sepsis CMS Core Measure program, or SEP-1, as the means to best achieve it. This is, in part, because of discrepancies in how sepsis is defined, the burden of reporting, and what some consider to be arbitrary clinical requirements that may not correlate with better patient outcomes.

Dr. Jeremy Kahn

“Sepsis is indeed a critical public health problem, and it’s appropriate and valuable that Medicare and other policy makers are focusing on sepsis,” said Jeremy Kahn, MD, professor of critical care medicine and health policy and management at the University of Pittsburgh. “This was really the first approach at that … but at 85-pages long, it really is an enormous effort for hospitals to adhere to this measure.”

This is because of the tension between the “intense desire to improve sepsis outcomes” and the “incredible burden” of keeping up with the necessary documentation while also providing quality care, Dr. Kahn said.

In December 2017, Dr. Kahn helped lead a study published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine aimed at trying to understand hospital perceptions of SEP-1. Over the course of 29 interviews with randomly selected hospital quality leaders across the United States, including physicians and nurses, the results came as a surprise.2

 

 

“Generally, hospitals were very supportive of the concept, and there was no pushback on the idea that we should be measuring and reporting sepsis quality to CMS,” he said.

However, the research team found that respondents believed the program’s requirements with respect to treatment and documentation were complex and not always linked to patient-centered outcomes. Meeting the SEP-1 bundles consistently required hospitals to dedicate resources that not all may have, especially those in small, rural communities and those serving as urban safety nets.

Dr. Annahieta Kalantari

Some, like emergency medicine physician Annahieta Kalantari, DO (who did not participate in the survey), feel that SEP-1 forces providers to practice “check-box” medicine and undermines successful efforts that don’t necessarily align with the CMS policy.

She arrived at her institution, Aria-Jefferson Health in Philadelphia, before CMS adopted SEP-1; at that time, she took note of the fact that the rate of sepsis mortalities in her hospital was, in her words, not great when compared with that at similar institutions. And then she helped do something about it.

“I thought, ‘We’re a Premier reporting hospital,’ so we did a gap analysis as to why and put together protocols for the hospital to follow with our sepsis patients, including a sepsis alert and a lot of education,” said Dr. Kalantari, associate program director for the emergency medicine residency program at Aria-Jefferson and a former chair of its sepsis management committee. “Before you knew it, mortalities were below benchmark.”

But once SEP-1 began, she said, the hospital was unable to check all of the boxes all of the time.

“We kept track, but we weren’t hitting all the bundles exactly within the periods of time recommended, but our mortalities were still amazing,” she said. “CMS basically picked definitions [for sepsis], and most of us don’t know what they’re basing them on because no one can agree on a definition anyway. Now they’re penalizing hospitals if they don’t hit the check marks in time, but we’d already demonstrated that our mortality and patient care was exceptional.”
She added: “I am extremely dissatisfied, as someone who provides frontline patient care, with how CMS is choosing to measure us.”

Dr. Kalantari wrote a piece in the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine in July 2017 in which she and coauthors outline the issues they take with SEP-1. They lay out the tension among the varied definitions of what sepsis is – and isn’t – and they also illuminate the apparent conflict between what CMS has officially defined and what evidence-based studies conducted since 2001 have suggested.3

In particular, CMS defines severe sepsis as an initial lactate above 2 mmol/L and septic shock as an initial lactate presentation of greater than 4 mmol/L. However, Dr. Kalantari and here coauthors argue in the paper that there is no standard definition of sepsis and that decades of attempts to achieve one have failed to reach consensus among providers. CMS, she said, fails to acknowledge this.

 

Defining sepsis

In fact, in 2016, another new definition of sepsis emerged by way of a 19-member task-force of experts: The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock, also called Sepsis-3.4 In March 2017, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign adopted this definition, which defined sepsis as a “life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection.”5

Dr. Kencee Graves

“I think the definition has always been a challenging part of sepsis,” said Kencee Graves, MD, a hospitalist at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. “The definitions came about for research purposes, so … they are not perfectly sensitive nor specific.”

However, Dr. Graves believes SEP-1 is a step in the right direction in that it brings awareness to sepsis and holds providers accountable. Several years ago, she and her colleague Devin Horton, MD, also a hospitalist at the University of Utah, embarked on a massive undertaking to address sepsis in their hospital. It was, at the time, lacking in “sepsis culture,” Dr. Horton said.

“One of the big things that motivated both of us was that we started doing chart review together and – it’s always easier with 20/20 hindsight – we were noticing that residents were missing the signs of sepsis,” Dr. Horton explained. “The clinical criteria would be there, but no one would say the word.” This is important, he said, because sepsis is time critical.

Dr. Devin J. Horton

So the pair set out to create a cultural change by sharing data and collecting input from each service and unit, which relied heavily on nursing staff to perpetuate change. They created an early warning system in the medical record and worked with units to achieve flexibility in their criteria.

While the early warning system seemed helpful on the floor, SEP-1 adherence rates changed little in the emergency department. So Dr. Graves and Dr. Horton worked out an ED-specific process map that started at triage and was modeled after myocardial infarction STEMI protocols. From April through December 2016, the ED achieved between 29.5% adherence to the SEP-1 bundles, they said according to CMS abstractor data. After the change, between January and March 2017, the ED saw 52.2% adherence.

Dr. Kalantari would like to see CMS allow hospitals to evaluate and alter their processes more individually, with the required result being lower sepsis mortality. Hospitalists, said Dr. Kahn, are well poised to champion these sepsis improvement efforts.


“Hospitalists are uniquely positioned to lead in this area because they are a visible presence and a link between providers doing multidisciplinary acute care,” he said. “The other thing hospitalists can do is insist on rolling out approaches that are evidence based and not likely to cause harm by leading to over resuscitation, or ensuring patients are receiving central-line insertions only when needed.”

This is currently a moment for hospitals to innovate and provide meaningful feedback to CMS, which, he said, is listening.

“It’s a myth that CMS rolls out policy without listening to the clinical community, but what they want is constructive criticism, not just to hear ‘We’re not ready and we have to push this down the road,’ ” Dr. Kahn said. “The time is now in the era of accountability in health care.”

 

 

References

1. Sepsis. National Institute of General Medical Sciences. https://www.nigms.nih.gov/education/pages/factsheet_sepsis.aspx. Updated Sept 2017. Accessed Jan 4, 2018.

2. Barbash I et al. Hospital perceptions of Medicare’s sepsis quality reporting initiative. J Hosp Med. 2017;12;963-8.

3. Kalantari A et al. Sepsis Definitions: The search for gold and what CMS got wrong. West J Emerg Med. 2017 Aug;18(5):951-6.

4. Singer M et. al. The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3). JAMA. 2016 Feb 23;315(8):801-10.

5. Rhodes A et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock: 2016. Intensive Care Med. 2017;43:304.

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Hospitalists can champion sepsis-improvement efforts

Hospitalists can champion sepsis-improvement efforts

In October 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services implemented its first meaningful policy to attempt for addressing sepsis.

The condition – one of the leading causes of mortality among hospitalized patients – afflicts more than a million people each year in the United States, and between 15% and 30% of them die. Sepsis is one of the leading drivers of hospital readmissions, sending more patients back to the hospital than heart failure, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.1

However, while providers seem to agree that time to address sepsis is past due, not everyone has embraced the Sepsis CMS Core Measure program, or SEP-1, as the means to best achieve it. This is, in part, because of discrepancies in how sepsis is defined, the burden of reporting, and what some consider to be arbitrary clinical requirements that may not correlate with better patient outcomes.

Dr. Jeremy Kahn

“Sepsis is indeed a critical public health problem, and it’s appropriate and valuable that Medicare and other policy makers are focusing on sepsis,” said Jeremy Kahn, MD, professor of critical care medicine and health policy and management at the University of Pittsburgh. “This was really the first approach at that … but at 85-pages long, it really is an enormous effort for hospitals to adhere to this measure.”

This is because of the tension between the “intense desire to improve sepsis outcomes” and the “incredible burden” of keeping up with the necessary documentation while also providing quality care, Dr. Kahn said.

In December 2017, Dr. Kahn helped lead a study published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine aimed at trying to understand hospital perceptions of SEP-1. Over the course of 29 interviews with randomly selected hospital quality leaders across the United States, including physicians and nurses, the results came as a surprise.2

 

 

“Generally, hospitals were very supportive of the concept, and there was no pushback on the idea that we should be measuring and reporting sepsis quality to CMS,” he said.

However, the research team found that respondents believed the program’s requirements with respect to treatment and documentation were complex and not always linked to patient-centered outcomes. Meeting the SEP-1 bundles consistently required hospitals to dedicate resources that not all may have, especially those in small, rural communities and those serving as urban safety nets.

Dr. Annahieta Kalantari

Some, like emergency medicine physician Annahieta Kalantari, DO (who did not participate in the survey), feel that SEP-1 forces providers to practice “check-box” medicine and undermines successful efforts that don’t necessarily align with the CMS policy.

She arrived at her institution, Aria-Jefferson Health in Philadelphia, before CMS adopted SEP-1; at that time, she took note of the fact that the rate of sepsis mortalities in her hospital was, in her words, not great when compared with that at similar institutions. And then she helped do something about it.

“I thought, ‘We’re a Premier reporting hospital,’ so we did a gap analysis as to why and put together protocols for the hospital to follow with our sepsis patients, including a sepsis alert and a lot of education,” said Dr. Kalantari, associate program director for the emergency medicine residency program at Aria-Jefferson and a former chair of its sepsis management committee. “Before you knew it, mortalities were below benchmark.”

But once SEP-1 began, she said, the hospital was unable to check all of the boxes all of the time.

“We kept track, but we weren’t hitting all the bundles exactly within the periods of time recommended, but our mortalities were still amazing,” she said. “CMS basically picked definitions [for sepsis], and most of us don’t know what they’re basing them on because no one can agree on a definition anyway. Now they’re penalizing hospitals if they don’t hit the check marks in time, but we’d already demonstrated that our mortality and patient care was exceptional.”
She added: “I am extremely dissatisfied, as someone who provides frontline patient care, with how CMS is choosing to measure us.”

Dr. Kalantari wrote a piece in the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine in July 2017 in which she and coauthors outline the issues they take with SEP-1. They lay out the tension among the varied definitions of what sepsis is – and isn’t – and they also illuminate the apparent conflict between what CMS has officially defined and what evidence-based studies conducted since 2001 have suggested.3

In particular, CMS defines severe sepsis as an initial lactate above 2 mmol/L and septic shock as an initial lactate presentation of greater than 4 mmol/L. However, Dr. Kalantari and here coauthors argue in the paper that there is no standard definition of sepsis and that decades of attempts to achieve one have failed to reach consensus among providers. CMS, she said, fails to acknowledge this.

 

Defining sepsis

In fact, in 2016, another new definition of sepsis emerged by way of a 19-member task-force of experts: The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock, also called Sepsis-3.4 In March 2017, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign adopted this definition, which defined sepsis as a “life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection.”5

Dr. Kencee Graves

“I think the definition has always been a challenging part of sepsis,” said Kencee Graves, MD, a hospitalist at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. “The definitions came about for research purposes, so … they are not perfectly sensitive nor specific.”

However, Dr. Graves believes SEP-1 is a step in the right direction in that it brings awareness to sepsis and holds providers accountable. Several years ago, she and her colleague Devin Horton, MD, also a hospitalist at the University of Utah, embarked on a massive undertaking to address sepsis in their hospital. It was, at the time, lacking in “sepsis culture,” Dr. Horton said.

“One of the big things that motivated both of us was that we started doing chart review together and – it’s always easier with 20/20 hindsight – we were noticing that residents were missing the signs of sepsis,” Dr. Horton explained. “The clinical criteria would be there, but no one would say the word.” This is important, he said, because sepsis is time critical.

Dr. Devin J. Horton

So the pair set out to create a cultural change by sharing data and collecting input from each service and unit, which relied heavily on nursing staff to perpetuate change. They created an early warning system in the medical record and worked with units to achieve flexibility in their criteria.

While the early warning system seemed helpful on the floor, SEP-1 adherence rates changed little in the emergency department. So Dr. Graves and Dr. Horton worked out an ED-specific process map that started at triage and was modeled after myocardial infarction STEMI protocols. From April through December 2016, the ED achieved between 29.5% adherence to the SEP-1 bundles, they said according to CMS abstractor data. After the change, between January and March 2017, the ED saw 52.2% adherence.

Dr. Kalantari would like to see CMS allow hospitals to evaluate and alter their processes more individually, with the required result being lower sepsis mortality. Hospitalists, said Dr. Kahn, are well poised to champion these sepsis improvement efforts.


“Hospitalists are uniquely positioned to lead in this area because they are a visible presence and a link between providers doing multidisciplinary acute care,” he said. “The other thing hospitalists can do is insist on rolling out approaches that are evidence based and not likely to cause harm by leading to over resuscitation, or ensuring patients are receiving central-line insertions only when needed.”

This is currently a moment for hospitals to innovate and provide meaningful feedback to CMS, which, he said, is listening.

“It’s a myth that CMS rolls out policy without listening to the clinical community, but what they want is constructive criticism, not just to hear ‘We’re not ready and we have to push this down the road,’ ” Dr. Kahn said. “The time is now in the era of accountability in health care.”

 

 

References

1. Sepsis. National Institute of General Medical Sciences. https://www.nigms.nih.gov/education/pages/factsheet_sepsis.aspx. Updated Sept 2017. Accessed Jan 4, 2018.

2. Barbash I et al. Hospital perceptions of Medicare’s sepsis quality reporting initiative. J Hosp Med. 2017;12;963-8.

3. Kalantari A et al. Sepsis Definitions: The search for gold and what CMS got wrong. West J Emerg Med. 2017 Aug;18(5):951-6.

4. Singer M et. al. The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3). JAMA. 2016 Feb 23;315(8):801-10.

5. Rhodes A et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock: 2016. Intensive Care Med. 2017;43:304.

In October 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services implemented its first meaningful policy to attempt for addressing sepsis.

The condition – one of the leading causes of mortality among hospitalized patients – afflicts more than a million people each year in the United States, and between 15% and 30% of them die. Sepsis is one of the leading drivers of hospital readmissions, sending more patients back to the hospital than heart failure, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.1

However, while providers seem to agree that time to address sepsis is past due, not everyone has embraced the Sepsis CMS Core Measure program, or SEP-1, as the means to best achieve it. This is, in part, because of discrepancies in how sepsis is defined, the burden of reporting, and what some consider to be arbitrary clinical requirements that may not correlate with better patient outcomes.

Dr. Jeremy Kahn

“Sepsis is indeed a critical public health problem, and it’s appropriate and valuable that Medicare and other policy makers are focusing on sepsis,” said Jeremy Kahn, MD, professor of critical care medicine and health policy and management at the University of Pittsburgh. “This was really the first approach at that … but at 85-pages long, it really is an enormous effort for hospitals to adhere to this measure.”

This is because of the tension between the “intense desire to improve sepsis outcomes” and the “incredible burden” of keeping up with the necessary documentation while also providing quality care, Dr. Kahn said.

In December 2017, Dr. Kahn helped lead a study published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine aimed at trying to understand hospital perceptions of SEP-1. Over the course of 29 interviews with randomly selected hospital quality leaders across the United States, including physicians and nurses, the results came as a surprise.2

 

 

“Generally, hospitals were very supportive of the concept, and there was no pushback on the idea that we should be measuring and reporting sepsis quality to CMS,” he said.

However, the research team found that respondents believed the program’s requirements with respect to treatment and documentation were complex and not always linked to patient-centered outcomes. Meeting the SEP-1 bundles consistently required hospitals to dedicate resources that not all may have, especially those in small, rural communities and those serving as urban safety nets.

Dr. Annahieta Kalantari

Some, like emergency medicine physician Annahieta Kalantari, DO (who did not participate in the survey), feel that SEP-1 forces providers to practice “check-box” medicine and undermines successful efforts that don’t necessarily align with the CMS policy.

She arrived at her institution, Aria-Jefferson Health in Philadelphia, before CMS adopted SEP-1; at that time, she took note of the fact that the rate of sepsis mortalities in her hospital was, in her words, not great when compared with that at similar institutions. And then she helped do something about it.

“I thought, ‘We’re a Premier reporting hospital,’ so we did a gap analysis as to why and put together protocols for the hospital to follow with our sepsis patients, including a sepsis alert and a lot of education,” said Dr. Kalantari, associate program director for the emergency medicine residency program at Aria-Jefferson and a former chair of its sepsis management committee. “Before you knew it, mortalities were below benchmark.”

But once SEP-1 began, she said, the hospital was unable to check all of the boxes all of the time.

“We kept track, but we weren’t hitting all the bundles exactly within the periods of time recommended, but our mortalities were still amazing,” she said. “CMS basically picked definitions [for sepsis], and most of us don’t know what they’re basing them on because no one can agree on a definition anyway. Now they’re penalizing hospitals if they don’t hit the check marks in time, but we’d already demonstrated that our mortality and patient care was exceptional.”
She added: “I am extremely dissatisfied, as someone who provides frontline patient care, with how CMS is choosing to measure us.”

Dr. Kalantari wrote a piece in the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine in July 2017 in which she and coauthors outline the issues they take with SEP-1. They lay out the tension among the varied definitions of what sepsis is – and isn’t – and they also illuminate the apparent conflict between what CMS has officially defined and what evidence-based studies conducted since 2001 have suggested.3

In particular, CMS defines severe sepsis as an initial lactate above 2 mmol/L and septic shock as an initial lactate presentation of greater than 4 mmol/L. However, Dr. Kalantari and here coauthors argue in the paper that there is no standard definition of sepsis and that decades of attempts to achieve one have failed to reach consensus among providers. CMS, she said, fails to acknowledge this.

 

Defining sepsis

In fact, in 2016, another new definition of sepsis emerged by way of a 19-member task-force of experts: The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock, also called Sepsis-3.4 In March 2017, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign adopted this definition, which defined sepsis as a “life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection.”5

Dr. Kencee Graves

“I think the definition has always been a challenging part of sepsis,” said Kencee Graves, MD, a hospitalist at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. “The definitions came about for research purposes, so … they are not perfectly sensitive nor specific.”

However, Dr. Graves believes SEP-1 is a step in the right direction in that it brings awareness to sepsis and holds providers accountable. Several years ago, she and her colleague Devin Horton, MD, also a hospitalist at the University of Utah, embarked on a massive undertaking to address sepsis in their hospital. It was, at the time, lacking in “sepsis culture,” Dr. Horton said.

“One of the big things that motivated both of us was that we started doing chart review together and – it’s always easier with 20/20 hindsight – we were noticing that residents were missing the signs of sepsis,” Dr. Horton explained. “The clinical criteria would be there, but no one would say the word.” This is important, he said, because sepsis is time critical.

Dr. Devin J. Horton

So the pair set out to create a cultural change by sharing data and collecting input from each service and unit, which relied heavily on nursing staff to perpetuate change. They created an early warning system in the medical record and worked with units to achieve flexibility in their criteria.

While the early warning system seemed helpful on the floor, SEP-1 adherence rates changed little in the emergency department. So Dr. Graves and Dr. Horton worked out an ED-specific process map that started at triage and was modeled after myocardial infarction STEMI protocols. From April through December 2016, the ED achieved between 29.5% adherence to the SEP-1 bundles, they said according to CMS abstractor data. After the change, between January and March 2017, the ED saw 52.2% adherence.

Dr. Kalantari would like to see CMS allow hospitals to evaluate and alter their processes more individually, with the required result being lower sepsis mortality. Hospitalists, said Dr. Kahn, are well poised to champion these sepsis improvement efforts.


“Hospitalists are uniquely positioned to lead in this area because they are a visible presence and a link between providers doing multidisciplinary acute care,” he said. “The other thing hospitalists can do is insist on rolling out approaches that are evidence based and not likely to cause harm by leading to over resuscitation, or ensuring patients are receiving central-line insertions only when needed.”

This is currently a moment for hospitals to innovate and provide meaningful feedback to CMS, which, he said, is listening.

“It’s a myth that CMS rolls out policy without listening to the clinical community, but what they want is constructive criticism, not just to hear ‘We’re not ready and we have to push this down the road,’ ” Dr. Kahn said. “The time is now in the era of accountability in health care.”

 

 

References

1. Sepsis. National Institute of General Medical Sciences. https://www.nigms.nih.gov/education/pages/factsheet_sepsis.aspx. Updated Sept 2017. Accessed Jan 4, 2018.

2. Barbash I et al. Hospital perceptions of Medicare’s sepsis quality reporting initiative. J Hosp Med. 2017;12;963-8.

3. Kalantari A et al. Sepsis Definitions: The search for gold and what CMS got wrong. West J Emerg Med. 2017 Aug;18(5):951-6.

4. Singer M et. al. The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3). JAMA. 2016 Feb 23;315(8):801-10.

5. Rhodes A et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock: 2016. Intensive Care Med. 2017;43:304.

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Closing the gender gap

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Hospitalists address inequity in medicine

 

It wasn’t something she planned to have happen but about 2 years ago, Vineet Arora, MD, MAPP, MHM, became what she calls an “accidental advocate” for gender parity in medicine.

“I was asked to review a paper around gender pay,” the University of Chicago Medical Center hospitalist said. “It was stunning to me just how different salaries were – between male and female physicians – even when the authors were attempting to control for various factors.”

That paper was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in September 2016 by researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). It found that even after adjustment for age, experience, specialty, faculty rank, research productivity, and clinical revenue, female physicians at 24 public medical schools in 12 states earned nearly $20,000 less per year than their male colleagues.1

Dr. Arora wrote an editorial to accompany that 2016 paper in JAMA, and in September 2017, she and her colleague at the University of Chicago, Jeanne Farnan, MD, MHPE, coauthored another piece in Annals of Internal Medicine titled, “Inpatient Notes: Gender Equality in Hospital Medicine – Are We There Yet?”2

In the 2017 paper, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan assessed recent studies documenting inequity in regard to compensation, discrimination around child-rearing, and gender disparities in medical leadership. They also discussed strategies that might improve the future outlook for female physicians.

“As I approach mid-career, I see these issues affecting my career and my colleagues’ careers and I decided we need to be doing more work in this space,” said Dr. Arora.

 

 

Fueling the conversation

When asked whether he thinks his research inspired the current conversation around gender inequity in medicine, Anupam Bapu Jena, MD, PhD – lead author of the September 2016 gender pay paper – said that while he did not initiate it, his work “has fueled the conversation.”

Dr. Anupam Bapu Jena

“This is an issue that has been going on in the scientific literature for at least 25-30 years,” said Dr. Jena, the Ruth L. Newhouse Associate Professor of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School and a physician in the department of medicine at MGH. “I am sure women in medicine have been feeling this since women entered medicine.”

Many female hospitalists hoped that, as a relatively new field, hospital medicine would avoid some of the time-worn challenges women in other specialties faced.

“The birth of hospital medicine held the promise that, as a new field, it would be immune to the ‘old boys’ club mentality that plagues established specialties,” Dr. Farnan and Dr. Arora wrote in their September 2017 Annals article. And yet, they continued, “gender disparities developed in the areas of leadership and academic productivity.”

 

 


A 2015 study in the Journal of Hospital Medicine found that just 16% of university hospital medicine divisions were led by women, and women made up just 28% of those physicians leading general internal medicine divisions. Meanwhile, female hospitalists gave just 26% of presentations at national meetings, were first authors on only 33% of publications, and were senior authors on only 21% of manuscripts.3

Dr. Jeanne Farnan
“Hospital medicine has been a very male-dominated movement,” said Dr. Farnan, associate professor of medicine at the University of Chicago. “Its leaders and giants are all men, so the idea that this was going to be breaking barriers was naiveté.”

In addition, Dr. Farnan and Dr. Arora wrote in their review, another recent survey of female physicians – primarily internists – found that 36% reported discrimination based on pregnancy, maternity leave, or breastfeeding. This was – at least in part, Dr. Farnan said – because “physician-mothers were not present at the table when discussions were held about scheduling.”

And while hospitalists have relatively flexible schedules, they can be unforgiving when it comes to traditional child care arrangements, Dr. Arora said.
 

 


But, there is hope, particularly within the Society of Hospital Medicine, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan wrote. The organization has seen an increase in female leadership – including its president-elect Nasim Afsar, MD, MBA, SFHM – and a board of directors that is split evenly between men and women. Mentorship of junior women is also on the rise, which allows opportunities for senior female physicians to teach younger women how to better negotiate and advocate for themselves.

“I think it has to come from both sides. Leadership does need to recognize that women may be less aggressive in their negotiating skills,” said Dr. Farnan. “But I think there also needs to be some recognition by women that it is okay to ask for more money.”

But it isn’t all about money, she said. “It can be negotiating for anything important in career development, career opportunities, research opportunities.” This also extends to schedule flexibility, training and more.

Leadership in hospitalist groups can help, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan wrote in their Annals article, by providing schedule flexibility, support for training, and structured on-boarding for new faculty. Citing efforts in other specialties such as cardiology and general surgery, female hospitalists may benefit from negotiation skills training, structured mentorship, and education around personal and professional development.

However, both physicians recognize the challenges of implicit bias and stereotype threat that may confront many women. For example, women who exert more stereotypically “male” traits such as assertiveness and confidence may face a “harsh likability penalty because they are going against gender norms,” said Dr. Arora.
 

 

Being taken seriously

Expectations around gender norms may also affect relationships female doctors have with their patients. In a June 2017 Washington Post editorial, Faye Reiff-Pasarew, MD, describes being objectified as “cute” and “adorable” and not being taken seriously by her patients.4

“I’d had a number of interactions with patients that upset me,” said Dr. Reiff-Pasarew, assistant professor of hospital medicine, director of the humanism in medicine program, and unit medical director at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “Later, I reflected upon them and realized that bias was a systemic problem. There needs to be a conversation amongst the broader medical community about the effect that these biases have on our patients and our practice.”

In her editorial, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew explained that when a female physician is written off as too young or is not recognized as a physician, it can delay necessary care. She also touches on the challenge of earning the trust of hospitalized patients.

“There’s a lot of evidence that the success of medical therapy is influenced by the context in which it is given, beyond mere adherence to a regimen or medication,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said, noting that it is a result of “the very powerful placebo effect.

 

 


“If patients don’t trust the care they are given, it can impact outcomes,” she added. “There is a lot to being a hospitalist that is diagnostic, such as finding the correct diagnosis and implementing the appropriate treatment. However, beyond that, a huge part of this role is to be a knowledgeable caregiver, someone who guides a patient through the experience of being ill in a complex medical system. This requires immense trust.”

Dr. Faye Reiff-Pasarew
As a physician trained in medical humanities, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew has found ways around this by listening to her patients and giving them the opportunity to share their stories when appropriate. This allows her to empathize with them and better guide their care. But, she acknowledges, she and most physicians often do not have time for this, particularly in the hospital setting. Still, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew and some colleagues will offer a career development workshop at HM18 on the approach, called “Challenging Patients, Challenging Stories: A Medical Humanities Approach to Provider Burnout.”

Dr. Reiff-Pasarew also believes better mentoring and feedback opportunities would benefit female physicians and trainees. “I often see that equally knowledgeable female trainees and medical students are much more self-deprecating when presenting research,” she said. “They give disclaimers that they don’t know enough, while their male peers are more confident.”

She is quick, however, not to blame women, largely because the same social pressures that Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan acknowledged may have molded their behaviors. “I meet with residents to talk explicitly about situations where they are treated inappropriately by patients or other staff,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said. “We discuss how they might react in those situations in the future and how they can process these challenges.”

Modern American culture equips men and women with “different essential skill sets,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew noted, but she suggested men and women can learn from one another. “We should be teaching men to be more empathetic listeners, a skill that is generally taught to girls. Similarly, we need to teach women confidence, a skill predominantly taught to boys.”

Just as important, male clinicians should believe in and trust the experiences that women report having, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said. “It’s very difficult to understand the subtleties of how people are treated differently in patient interactions if you’ve never been in that situation.”
 

 

Equal compensation for equal work

Ultimately, it is in the best interest of all physicians, their employers, and their patients to ensure female physicians are satisfied and fulfilled in their professions, said Dr. Jena, and that includes recognizing and rewarding their value.

“What I am trying to argue in my work is for equal pay – equal compensation for equal work,” Dr. Jena said. “Man or woman, it’s a good idea.”

Dr. Jena, who is also a faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, said that when the contributions of a group of people are systematically undervalued, “you run the risk of having those individuals invest less in their career.” In health care, he said, “if fewer women want to go into academic medicine because they know they are underpaid, what impact does it have on new ideas when you eliminate highly successful, intelligent people from a field?”

Dr. Jena and his colleagues authored a February 2017 study in JAMA Internal Medicine that showed hospitalized Medicare patients treated by female internists have lower 30-day mortality and readmissions rates compared with those treated by male internists, including hospitalists. This included millions of hospitalizations and accounted for myriad confounders.5

 

 


“Here is evidence that women may be doing a modestly better job than men in terms of outcomes,” Dr. Jena said. “If we are in the business of underpaying and underrewarding females, we are disincentivizing female physicians from entering the field, and in certain specialties female physicians see better patient outcomes.”

Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan are optimistic that as more studies like those by Dr. Jena and colleagues are published – utilizing large data sets never before available, which account for many of the factors that have been used to justify pay and leadership disparities in the past – times will change for the better.

“There comes a time when everyone realizes a group has been wronged and it’s time to right it. I think now is the time for women. It’s tragic it’s come so late but I’m glad it’s here,” Dr. Arora said. “A lot of work is being done on the ground and in institutions to promote women leaders, to include women in search committees, and improve pay. These are always difficult discussions but now we can have transparency in salaries and we can we discuss them.”

However, Dr. Arora is also concerned about blowback, particularly as issues of sexual harassment of women in the workplace finally emerge from the shadows. “The blowback may be that more people tiptoe around women and are more cautious around them,” she said. “This could end up hurting women in the workplace. Something so deeply cemented like this doesn’t die easily and I think it requires culture change. I do think we’re on that journey and starting to see things change.”

But the real measure of that, said Dr. Farnan, is when these conversations are no longer taking place.

“We will know we’ve achieved what we want to achieve when we don’t have to discuss this anymore,” she said. “We will know we’ve achieved parity when we stop talking about it.”
 
 

 

References

1. Jena AB, Olenski AR, Blumenthal DM. Sex differences in physician salary in US public medical schools. JAMA Intern Med. 2016;176(9):1294-1304. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.3284.

2. Farnan JM and Arora VM. Gender equality in hospital medicine – are we there yet? Ann Intern Med. 2017;167(6):HO2-HO3. doi: 10.7326/M17-2119.

3. Burden M, Frank MG, Keniston A, et al. Gender disparities in leadership and scholarly productivity of academic hospitalists. J Hosp Med 2015;8;481-5. doi: 10.1002/jhm.2340.

4. Reiff-Pasarew F. I’m a young, female doctor. Calling me ‘sweetie’ won’t help me save your life. Washington Post. Published June 29, 2017. Accessed Dec. 4, 2017.

5. Tsugawa Y, Jena AB, Figueroa JF, et al. Comparison of hospital mortality and readmission rates for Medicare patients treated by male vs female physicians. JAMA Intern Med. 2017;177(2):206-13. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.7875.

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Hospitalists address inequity in medicine
Hospitalists address inequity in medicine

 

It wasn’t something she planned to have happen but about 2 years ago, Vineet Arora, MD, MAPP, MHM, became what she calls an “accidental advocate” for gender parity in medicine.

“I was asked to review a paper around gender pay,” the University of Chicago Medical Center hospitalist said. “It was stunning to me just how different salaries were – between male and female physicians – even when the authors were attempting to control for various factors.”

That paper was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in September 2016 by researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). It found that even after adjustment for age, experience, specialty, faculty rank, research productivity, and clinical revenue, female physicians at 24 public medical schools in 12 states earned nearly $20,000 less per year than their male colleagues.1

Dr. Arora wrote an editorial to accompany that 2016 paper in JAMA, and in September 2017, she and her colleague at the University of Chicago, Jeanne Farnan, MD, MHPE, coauthored another piece in Annals of Internal Medicine titled, “Inpatient Notes: Gender Equality in Hospital Medicine – Are We There Yet?”2

In the 2017 paper, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan assessed recent studies documenting inequity in regard to compensation, discrimination around child-rearing, and gender disparities in medical leadership. They also discussed strategies that might improve the future outlook for female physicians.

“As I approach mid-career, I see these issues affecting my career and my colleagues’ careers and I decided we need to be doing more work in this space,” said Dr. Arora.

 

 

Fueling the conversation

When asked whether he thinks his research inspired the current conversation around gender inequity in medicine, Anupam Bapu Jena, MD, PhD – lead author of the September 2016 gender pay paper – said that while he did not initiate it, his work “has fueled the conversation.”

Dr. Anupam Bapu Jena

“This is an issue that has been going on in the scientific literature for at least 25-30 years,” said Dr. Jena, the Ruth L. Newhouse Associate Professor of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School and a physician in the department of medicine at MGH. “I am sure women in medicine have been feeling this since women entered medicine.”

Many female hospitalists hoped that, as a relatively new field, hospital medicine would avoid some of the time-worn challenges women in other specialties faced.

“The birth of hospital medicine held the promise that, as a new field, it would be immune to the ‘old boys’ club mentality that plagues established specialties,” Dr. Farnan and Dr. Arora wrote in their September 2017 Annals article. And yet, they continued, “gender disparities developed in the areas of leadership and academic productivity.”

 

 


A 2015 study in the Journal of Hospital Medicine found that just 16% of university hospital medicine divisions were led by women, and women made up just 28% of those physicians leading general internal medicine divisions. Meanwhile, female hospitalists gave just 26% of presentations at national meetings, were first authors on only 33% of publications, and were senior authors on only 21% of manuscripts.3

Dr. Jeanne Farnan
“Hospital medicine has been a very male-dominated movement,” said Dr. Farnan, associate professor of medicine at the University of Chicago. “Its leaders and giants are all men, so the idea that this was going to be breaking barriers was naiveté.”

In addition, Dr. Farnan and Dr. Arora wrote in their review, another recent survey of female physicians – primarily internists – found that 36% reported discrimination based on pregnancy, maternity leave, or breastfeeding. This was – at least in part, Dr. Farnan said – because “physician-mothers were not present at the table when discussions were held about scheduling.”

And while hospitalists have relatively flexible schedules, they can be unforgiving when it comes to traditional child care arrangements, Dr. Arora said.
 

 


But, there is hope, particularly within the Society of Hospital Medicine, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan wrote. The organization has seen an increase in female leadership – including its president-elect Nasim Afsar, MD, MBA, SFHM – and a board of directors that is split evenly between men and women. Mentorship of junior women is also on the rise, which allows opportunities for senior female physicians to teach younger women how to better negotiate and advocate for themselves.

“I think it has to come from both sides. Leadership does need to recognize that women may be less aggressive in their negotiating skills,” said Dr. Farnan. “But I think there also needs to be some recognition by women that it is okay to ask for more money.”

But it isn’t all about money, she said. “It can be negotiating for anything important in career development, career opportunities, research opportunities.” This also extends to schedule flexibility, training and more.

Leadership in hospitalist groups can help, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan wrote in their Annals article, by providing schedule flexibility, support for training, and structured on-boarding for new faculty. Citing efforts in other specialties such as cardiology and general surgery, female hospitalists may benefit from negotiation skills training, structured mentorship, and education around personal and professional development.

However, both physicians recognize the challenges of implicit bias and stereotype threat that may confront many women. For example, women who exert more stereotypically “male” traits such as assertiveness and confidence may face a “harsh likability penalty because they are going against gender norms,” said Dr. Arora.
 

 

Being taken seriously

Expectations around gender norms may also affect relationships female doctors have with their patients. In a June 2017 Washington Post editorial, Faye Reiff-Pasarew, MD, describes being objectified as “cute” and “adorable” and not being taken seriously by her patients.4

“I’d had a number of interactions with patients that upset me,” said Dr. Reiff-Pasarew, assistant professor of hospital medicine, director of the humanism in medicine program, and unit medical director at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “Later, I reflected upon them and realized that bias was a systemic problem. There needs to be a conversation amongst the broader medical community about the effect that these biases have on our patients and our practice.”

In her editorial, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew explained that when a female physician is written off as too young or is not recognized as a physician, it can delay necessary care. She also touches on the challenge of earning the trust of hospitalized patients.

“There’s a lot of evidence that the success of medical therapy is influenced by the context in which it is given, beyond mere adherence to a regimen or medication,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said, noting that it is a result of “the very powerful placebo effect.

 

 


“If patients don’t trust the care they are given, it can impact outcomes,” she added. “There is a lot to being a hospitalist that is diagnostic, such as finding the correct diagnosis and implementing the appropriate treatment. However, beyond that, a huge part of this role is to be a knowledgeable caregiver, someone who guides a patient through the experience of being ill in a complex medical system. This requires immense trust.”

Dr. Faye Reiff-Pasarew
As a physician trained in medical humanities, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew has found ways around this by listening to her patients and giving them the opportunity to share their stories when appropriate. This allows her to empathize with them and better guide their care. But, she acknowledges, she and most physicians often do not have time for this, particularly in the hospital setting. Still, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew and some colleagues will offer a career development workshop at HM18 on the approach, called “Challenging Patients, Challenging Stories: A Medical Humanities Approach to Provider Burnout.”

Dr. Reiff-Pasarew also believes better mentoring and feedback opportunities would benefit female physicians and trainees. “I often see that equally knowledgeable female trainees and medical students are much more self-deprecating when presenting research,” she said. “They give disclaimers that they don’t know enough, while their male peers are more confident.”

She is quick, however, not to blame women, largely because the same social pressures that Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan acknowledged may have molded their behaviors. “I meet with residents to talk explicitly about situations where they are treated inappropriately by patients or other staff,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said. “We discuss how they might react in those situations in the future and how they can process these challenges.”

Modern American culture equips men and women with “different essential skill sets,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew noted, but she suggested men and women can learn from one another. “We should be teaching men to be more empathetic listeners, a skill that is generally taught to girls. Similarly, we need to teach women confidence, a skill predominantly taught to boys.”

Just as important, male clinicians should believe in and trust the experiences that women report having, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said. “It’s very difficult to understand the subtleties of how people are treated differently in patient interactions if you’ve never been in that situation.”
 

 

Equal compensation for equal work

Ultimately, it is in the best interest of all physicians, their employers, and their patients to ensure female physicians are satisfied and fulfilled in their professions, said Dr. Jena, and that includes recognizing and rewarding their value.

“What I am trying to argue in my work is for equal pay – equal compensation for equal work,” Dr. Jena said. “Man or woman, it’s a good idea.”

Dr. Jena, who is also a faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, said that when the contributions of a group of people are systematically undervalued, “you run the risk of having those individuals invest less in their career.” In health care, he said, “if fewer women want to go into academic medicine because they know they are underpaid, what impact does it have on new ideas when you eliminate highly successful, intelligent people from a field?”

Dr. Jena and his colleagues authored a February 2017 study in JAMA Internal Medicine that showed hospitalized Medicare patients treated by female internists have lower 30-day mortality and readmissions rates compared with those treated by male internists, including hospitalists. This included millions of hospitalizations and accounted for myriad confounders.5

 

 


“Here is evidence that women may be doing a modestly better job than men in terms of outcomes,” Dr. Jena said. “If we are in the business of underpaying and underrewarding females, we are disincentivizing female physicians from entering the field, and in certain specialties female physicians see better patient outcomes.”

Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan are optimistic that as more studies like those by Dr. Jena and colleagues are published – utilizing large data sets never before available, which account for many of the factors that have been used to justify pay and leadership disparities in the past – times will change for the better.

“There comes a time when everyone realizes a group has been wronged and it’s time to right it. I think now is the time for women. It’s tragic it’s come so late but I’m glad it’s here,” Dr. Arora said. “A lot of work is being done on the ground and in institutions to promote women leaders, to include women in search committees, and improve pay. These are always difficult discussions but now we can have transparency in salaries and we can we discuss them.”

However, Dr. Arora is also concerned about blowback, particularly as issues of sexual harassment of women in the workplace finally emerge from the shadows. “The blowback may be that more people tiptoe around women and are more cautious around them,” she said. “This could end up hurting women in the workplace. Something so deeply cemented like this doesn’t die easily and I think it requires culture change. I do think we’re on that journey and starting to see things change.”

But the real measure of that, said Dr. Farnan, is when these conversations are no longer taking place.

“We will know we’ve achieved what we want to achieve when we don’t have to discuss this anymore,” she said. “We will know we’ve achieved parity when we stop talking about it.”
 
 

 

References

1. Jena AB, Olenski AR, Blumenthal DM. Sex differences in physician salary in US public medical schools. JAMA Intern Med. 2016;176(9):1294-1304. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.3284.

2. Farnan JM and Arora VM. Gender equality in hospital medicine – are we there yet? Ann Intern Med. 2017;167(6):HO2-HO3. doi: 10.7326/M17-2119.

3. Burden M, Frank MG, Keniston A, et al. Gender disparities in leadership and scholarly productivity of academic hospitalists. J Hosp Med 2015;8;481-5. doi: 10.1002/jhm.2340.

4. Reiff-Pasarew F. I’m a young, female doctor. Calling me ‘sweetie’ won’t help me save your life. Washington Post. Published June 29, 2017. Accessed Dec. 4, 2017.

5. Tsugawa Y, Jena AB, Figueroa JF, et al. Comparison of hospital mortality and readmission rates for Medicare patients treated by male vs female physicians. JAMA Intern Med. 2017;177(2):206-13. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.7875.

 

It wasn’t something she planned to have happen but about 2 years ago, Vineet Arora, MD, MAPP, MHM, became what she calls an “accidental advocate” for gender parity in medicine.

“I was asked to review a paper around gender pay,” the University of Chicago Medical Center hospitalist said. “It was stunning to me just how different salaries were – between male and female physicians – even when the authors were attempting to control for various factors.”

That paper was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in September 2016 by researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). It found that even after adjustment for age, experience, specialty, faculty rank, research productivity, and clinical revenue, female physicians at 24 public medical schools in 12 states earned nearly $20,000 less per year than their male colleagues.1

Dr. Arora wrote an editorial to accompany that 2016 paper in JAMA, and in September 2017, she and her colleague at the University of Chicago, Jeanne Farnan, MD, MHPE, coauthored another piece in Annals of Internal Medicine titled, “Inpatient Notes: Gender Equality in Hospital Medicine – Are We There Yet?”2

In the 2017 paper, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan assessed recent studies documenting inequity in regard to compensation, discrimination around child-rearing, and gender disparities in medical leadership. They also discussed strategies that might improve the future outlook for female physicians.

“As I approach mid-career, I see these issues affecting my career and my colleagues’ careers and I decided we need to be doing more work in this space,” said Dr. Arora.

 

 

Fueling the conversation

When asked whether he thinks his research inspired the current conversation around gender inequity in medicine, Anupam Bapu Jena, MD, PhD – lead author of the September 2016 gender pay paper – said that while he did not initiate it, his work “has fueled the conversation.”

Dr. Anupam Bapu Jena

“This is an issue that has been going on in the scientific literature for at least 25-30 years,” said Dr. Jena, the Ruth L. Newhouse Associate Professor of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School and a physician in the department of medicine at MGH. “I am sure women in medicine have been feeling this since women entered medicine.”

Many female hospitalists hoped that, as a relatively new field, hospital medicine would avoid some of the time-worn challenges women in other specialties faced.

“The birth of hospital medicine held the promise that, as a new field, it would be immune to the ‘old boys’ club mentality that plagues established specialties,” Dr. Farnan and Dr. Arora wrote in their September 2017 Annals article. And yet, they continued, “gender disparities developed in the areas of leadership and academic productivity.”

 

 


A 2015 study in the Journal of Hospital Medicine found that just 16% of university hospital medicine divisions were led by women, and women made up just 28% of those physicians leading general internal medicine divisions. Meanwhile, female hospitalists gave just 26% of presentations at national meetings, were first authors on only 33% of publications, and were senior authors on only 21% of manuscripts.3

Dr. Jeanne Farnan
“Hospital medicine has been a very male-dominated movement,” said Dr. Farnan, associate professor of medicine at the University of Chicago. “Its leaders and giants are all men, so the idea that this was going to be breaking barriers was naiveté.”

In addition, Dr. Farnan and Dr. Arora wrote in their review, another recent survey of female physicians – primarily internists – found that 36% reported discrimination based on pregnancy, maternity leave, or breastfeeding. This was – at least in part, Dr. Farnan said – because “physician-mothers were not present at the table when discussions were held about scheduling.”

And while hospitalists have relatively flexible schedules, they can be unforgiving when it comes to traditional child care arrangements, Dr. Arora said.
 

 


But, there is hope, particularly within the Society of Hospital Medicine, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan wrote. The organization has seen an increase in female leadership – including its president-elect Nasim Afsar, MD, MBA, SFHM – and a board of directors that is split evenly between men and women. Mentorship of junior women is also on the rise, which allows opportunities for senior female physicians to teach younger women how to better negotiate and advocate for themselves.

“I think it has to come from both sides. Leadership does need to recognize that women may be less aggressive in their negotiating skills,” said Dr. Farnan. “But I think there also needs to be some recognition by women that it is okay to ask for more money.”

But it isn’t all about money, she said. “It can be negotiating for anything important in career development, career opportunities, research opportunities.” This also extends to schedule flexibility, training and more.

Leadership in hospitalist groups can help, Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan wrote in their Annals article, by providing schedule flexibility, support for training, and structured on-boarding for new faculty. Citing efforts in other specialties such as cardiology and general surgery, female hospitalists may benefit from negotiation skills training, structured mentorship, and education around personal and professional development.

However, both physicians recognize the challenges of implicit bias and stereotype threat that may confront many women. For example, women who exert more stereotypically “male” traits such as assertiveness and confidence may face a “harsh likability penalty because they are going against gender norms,” said Dr. Arora.
 

 

Being taken seriously

Expectations around gender norms may also affect relationships female doctors have with their patients. In a June 2017 Washington Post editorial, Faye Reiff-Pasarew, MD, describes being objectified as “cute” and “adorable” and not being taken seriously by her patients.4

“I’d had a number of interactions with patients that upset me,” said Dr. Reiff-Pasarew, assistant professor of hospital medicine, director of the humanism in medicine program, and unit medical director at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “Later, I reflected upon them and realized that bias was a systemic problem. There needs to be a conversation amongst the broader medical community about the effect that these biases have on our patients and our practice.”

In her editorial, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew explained that when a female physician is written off as too young or is not recognized as a physician, it can delay necessary care. She also touches on the challenge of earning the trust of hospitalized patients.

“There’s a lot of evidence that the success of medical therapy is influenced by the context in which it is given, beyond mere adherence to a regimen or medication,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said, noting that it is a result of “the very powerful placebo effect.

 

 


“If patients don’t trust the care they are given, it can impact outcomes,” she added. “There is a lot to being a hospitalist that is diagnostic, such as finding the correct diagnosis and implementing the appropriate treatment. However, beyond that, a huge part of this role is to be a knowledgeable caregiver, someone who guides a patient through the experience of being ill in a complex medical system. This requires immense trust.”

Dr. Faye Reiff-Pasarew
As a physician trained in medical humanities, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew has found ways around this by listening to her patients and giving them the opportunity to share their stories when appropriate. This allows her to empathize with them and better guide their care. But, she acknowledges, she and most physicians often do not have time for this, particularly in the hospital setting. Still, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew and some colleagues will offer a career development workshop at HM18 on the approach, called “Challenging Patients, Challenging Stories: A Medical Humanities Approach to Provider Burnout.”

Dr. Reiff-Pasarew also believes better mentoring and feedback opportunities would benefit female physicians and trainees. “I often see that equally knowledgeable female trainees and medical students are much more self-deprecating when presenting research,” she said. “They give disclaimers that they don’t know enough, while their male peers are more confident.”

She is quick, however, not to blame women, largely because the same social pressures that Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan acknowledged may have molded their behaviors. “I meet with residents to talk explicitly about situations where they are treated inappropriately by patients or other staff,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said. “We discuss how they might react in those situations in the future and how they can process these challenges.”

Modern American culture equips men and women with “different essential skill sets,” Dr. Reiff-Pasarew noted, but she suggested men and women can learn from one another. “We should be teaching men to be more empathetic listeners, a skill that is generally taught to girls. Similarly, we need to teach women confidence, a skill predominantly taught to boys.”

Just as important, male clinicians should believe in and trust the experiences that women report having, Dr. Reiff-Pasarew said. “It’s very difficult to understand the subtleties of how people are treated differently in patient interactions if you’ve never been in that situation.”
 

 

Equal compensation for equal work

Ultimately, it is in the best interest of all physicians, their employers, and their patients to ensure female physicians are satisfied and fulfilled in their professions, said Dr. Jena, and that includes recognizing and rewarding their value.

“What I am trying to argue in my work is for equal pay – equal compensation for equal work,” Dr. Jena said. “Man or woman, it’s a good idea.”

Dr. Jena, who is also a faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, said that when the contributions of a group of people are systematically undervalued, “you run the risk of having those individuals invest less in their career.” In health care, he said, “if fewer women want to go into academic medicine because they know they are underpaid, what impact does it have on new ideas when you eliminate highly successful, intelligent people from a field?”

Dr. Jena and his colleagues authored a February 2017 study in JAMA Internal Medicine that showed hospitalized Medicare patients treated by female internists have lower 30-day mortality and readmissions rates compared with those treated by male internists, including hospitalists. This included millions of hospitalizations and accounted for myriad confounders.5

 

 


“Here is evidence that women may be doing a modestly better job than men in terms of outcomes,” Dr. Jena said. “If we are in the business of underpaying and underrewarding females, we are disincentivizing female physicians from entering the field, and in certain specialties female physicians see better patient outcomes.”

Dr. Arora and Dr. Farnan are optimistic that as more studies like those by Dr. Jena and colleagues are published – utilizing large data sets never before available, which account for many of the factors that have been used to justify pay and leadership disparities in the past – times will change for the better.

“There comes a time when everyone realizes a group has been wronged and it’s time to right it. I think now is the time for women. It’s tragic it’s come so late but I’m glad it’s here,” Dr. Arora said. “A lot of work is being done on the ground and in institutions to promote women leaders, to include women in search committees, and improve pay. These are always difficult discussions but now we can have transparency in salaries and we can we discuss them.”

However, Dr. Arora is also concerned about blowback, particularly as issues of sexual harassment of women in the workplace finally emerge from the shadows. “The blowback may be that more people tiptoe around women and are more cautious around them,” she said. “This could end up hurting women in the workplace. Something so deeply cemented like this doesn’t die easily and I think it requires culture change. I do think we’re on that journey and starting to see things change.”

But the real measure of that, said Dr. Farnan, is when these conversations are no longer taking place.

“We will know we’ve achieved what we want to achieve when we don’t have to discuss this anymore,” she said. “We will know we’ve achieved parity when we stop talking about it.”
 
 

 

References

1. Jena AB, Olenski AR, Blumenthal DM. Sex differences in physician salary in US public medical schools. JAMA Intern Med. 2016;176(9):1294-1304. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.3284.

2. Farnan JM and Arora VM. Gender equality in hospital medicine – are we there yet? Ann Intern Med. 2017;167(6):HO2-HO3. doi: 10.7326/M17-2119.

3. Burden M, Frank MG, Keniston A, et al. Gender disparities in leadership and scholarly productivity of academic hospitalists. J Hosp Med 2015;8;481-5. doi: 10.1002/jhm.2340.

4. Reiff-Pasarew F. I’m a young, female doctor. Calling me ‘sweetie’ won’t help me save your life. Washington Post. Published June 29, 2017. Accessed Dec. 4, 2017.

5. Tsugawa Y, Jena AB, Figueroa JF, et al. Comparison of hospital mortality and readmission rates for Medicare patients treated by male vs female physicians. JAMA Intern Med. 2017;177(2):206-13. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.7875.

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A public health approach to gun violence

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Hospitalists have a role to play

 

In 2014, 33,594 people were killed by firearms in the United States. More than 21,000 of these deaths were suicides. The rest were primarily homicides and accidental shootings. Meanwhile, firearm deaths represented nearly 17% of injury deaths that year.1,2

In a 2015 Perspective published in the New England Journal of Medicine, author Chana Sacks, MD, pointed out that 20 children and adolescents are sent to the hospital daily for firearm injuries and 2,000 people each year suffer gunshot-related spinal cord injuries and “become lifelong patients.”3

At the same time, Federal Bureau of Investigation data show that the number of active shooter situations rose between 2000 and 2013, with an average of 6.4 incidents a year for the first 7 years of the study, conducted in 2013, and an average of 16.4 in the last 7 years of the study. More than 1,000 people were wounded or killed across 160 active shooter incidents, defined as an individual or individuals actively engaged in killing or trying to kill people in a populous area.4

“Gun violence is undeniably a public health issue,” said Dr. Sacks, a hospitalist at Massachusetts General Hospital and instructor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, and a vocal proponent of addressing firearms in the public health sphere. Her cousin’s 7-year-old son, Daniel Barden, was fatally shot at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in December 2012.

Yet, the notion of firearm injuries and deaths as a public health issue is, in America, an issue of contention. How can hospitalists and other health care providers avoid wading into the political thicket while also looking out for their patients?

For one, it’s not the only controversial issue with which providers are confronted, Dr. Sacks and others say. From taking sexual histories, counseling patients about abortion and adoption, and discussing end-of-life issues, clinicians may routinely face uncomfortable interactions in the name of patient care.

“It’s not a question about their right to a weapon; it’s about how individuals can stay as safe as possible and keep their families as safe as possible,” said Dr. Sacks, who also wrote in a January 2017 opinion for the American Medical Association that: “Counseling about gun safety is not political – no more so than a physician counseling a patient about cutting down on sugary beverages is an act of declaring support for New York City’s attempted ban on large-sized sodas.”5

 

 


This idea is echoed by David Hemenway, PhD, director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Boston. “You can talk about wearing your seat belt without advocating for mandatory seat belt laws,” he said.
Dr. David Hemenway


Yet in a 2014 survey of internist members of the American College of Physicians, only 66% of respondents said they believed physicians have the right to counsel patients on gun violence prevention and 58% said they never ask patients about guns in their home. That same survey showed the public is also split: While two-thirds of respondents said it was at least sometimes appropriate for providers to ask about firearms during a visit, one-third believed it was never appropriate.6

In fact, Barbara Meyer, MD, MPH, a family physician in Seattle, said she once had a patient walk out of the office when he encountered a question about firearms on the intake forms for the health system at which she was employed at the time. Today, at NeighborCare Health, the presence of firearms in the home is a question in the well-child electronic health record.

The Harvard Injury Control Research Center runs a campaign called Means Matter, designed to address suicide by firearm, the most common method of suicide in America. The campaign – backed by decades of some of the best research available – reports that people die of suicide by gun more than all other methods combined, that suicide attempts using a firearm are almost always fatal, and that firearms used by youths who commit suicide almost always belong to a parent.
 

 


“Suicide is often an impulsive act,” said Dr. Sacks, which means preventing access to firearms for patients at risk can be a matter of life and death. “There is potential for intervention there … what can be more clearly medical than suicide prevention?”

For her, that means eliminating the partisan component and equipping providers with the best evidence-based research available and with best practices. Reliable studies show that having guns at home increases the danger to families, said Dr. Hemenway, and places with fewer guns and stronger gun laws are correlated with fewer gun fatalities.7,8

“In accordance with guidelines and the best evidence out there, we should be screening patients who might be at risk for gun violence,” he said. “In some cases, interventions can be as simple and straightforward as informing patients where to get gun locks and talking to them about how to store firearms safely.”

At Massachusetts General Hospital, Dr. Sacks helped found the Gun Violence Prevention Coalition, an interdisciplinary group of physicians, nurses, physical therapists, and others committed to raising awareness and preparing providers to address gun violence. She believes strongly that physicians can act locally to help address the issue.
 

 


In Seattle, Dr. Meyer has been involved with a local group called Washington Ceasefire, prompted both by her experience as a resident in Detroit – where she was routinely exposed to the traumas of gun violence – as well as a shooting that occurred outside her daughter’s high school in Seattle years ago. The group has recently begun advocating for smart guns, which are designed to be fired only by an authorized user.

Indeed, Dr. Hemenway said research by his group suggests 300,000-500,000 guns are stolen every year, though he points out that we know almost nothing about “who, what, when, why, and where.” That’s largely because of an effective ban on gun violence research, enacted by Congress in the 1990s.9

“It’s not like there’s no evidence, but compared to the size of the problem, you want good evidence,” Dr. Hemenway said. “America has lots of guns. How can we learn to live with them?”

Gun violence affects not just those shot and killed by firearms, but also those affected by the trauma it can leave in its wake. Dr. Sacks recounts a recent visit to Massachusetts General by survivors of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Fla., which took place on June 12, 2016.
 

 


“It was a moving, intense event where we all sat around and talked about this issue,” Dr. Sacks said. “The number of people dying is horrific enough, but it’s not just that. Here were a number of young people who survived and yet whose lives will never be the same. We are undercounting the number of people affected by gun violence.”

Studies also estimate the cost of medical care related to gun violence to be roughly $620 million per year, averaging between $9,000 and $18,000 per patient in 2014.10

Despite some arguments to the contrary, addressing gun violence as a public health issue is not a distraction from other important public health issues such as opioid abuse. “It is entirely a false choice that we must only take on one issue or another,” Dr. Sacks said.

Nor should efforts to address gun violence focus only on individuals, said Dr. Hemenway, who told the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in October 2017 that: “A lesson from public health is that it is usually more effective to change the environment than to try to change people. The U.S. should use the same harm reduction approach to gun violence that it uses to treat other public health threats, like automobile crashes or air pollution, employing a wide variety of methods to reduce the problem.”

The issue must be reframed, said Dr. Sacks. This remains one of her biggest goals. “If we can find a way to act and intervene and lower [the] number [of people affected by gun violence], what could be more fundamentally in line with what we try to do every day as physicians?” she asked. “How can we reduce morbidity and mortality? That’s an answerable question and we can make sure we have pathways and approaches we can put in place to understand this. This is a solvable problem.”

 

References

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. FastStats. Injuries. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/injury.htm. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. FastStats. Suicide. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/suicide.htm. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
3. Sacks CA. In memory of Daniel – Reviving research to prevent gun violence. N Engl J Med. 2015; 372:800-801. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1415128.
4. U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation. A study of active shooter incidents in the United States between 2000 and 2013. Published Sept 16, 2013. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
5. Sacks CA. The role of physicians in preventing firearm suicides. JAMA Int Med. doi: 10.001/jamainternmed.2016.6715. Published Nov 14, 2016. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
6. Butkus R, Weissman A. Internists’ attitudes toward prevention of firearm injury. Ann Intern Med. 2014;160(12):821-827. doi: 10.7326/M13-1960.
7. Fleegler EW, Lee LK, Monuteaux MC, et al. Firearm Legislation and Firearm-Related Fatalities in the United States. JAMA Intern Med. 2013; 173(9):732-740. doi: 10.1001/jamaimternmed.2013.1286.
8. American Academy of Pediatricians. Addressing gun violence. The federal level. https://www.aap.org/en-us/advocacy-and-policy/aap-health-initiatives/Pages/Gun-Violence-Matrix--Intentional-(Federal).aspx. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
9. Rubin R. Tale of 2 agencies: CDC avoids gun violence research bit NIH funds it. JAMA. 2016;315(16):1689-1692. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.1707.
10. Howell E and Gangopadhyaya A. State variation in the hospital costs of gun violence, 2010 and 2014. The Urban Institute, Health Policy Center.

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Hospitalists have a role to play
Hospitalists have a role to play

 

In 2014, 33,594 people were killed by firearms in the United States. More than 21,000 of these deaths were suicides. The rest were primarily homicides and accidental shootings. Meanwhile, firearm deaths represented nearly 17% of injury deaths that year.1,2

In a 2015 Perspective published in the New England Journal of Medicine, author Chana Sacks, MD, pointed out that 20 children and adolescents are sent to the hospital daily for firearm injuries and 2,000 people each year suffer gunshot-related spinal cord injuries and “become lifelong patients.”3

At the same time, Federal Bureau of Investigation data show that the number of active shooter situations rose between 2000 and 2013, with an average of 6.4 incidents a year for the first 7 years of the study, conducted in 2013, and an average of 16.4 in the last 7 years of the study. More than 1,000 people were wounded or killed across 160 active shooter incidents, defined as an individual or individuals actively engaged in killing or trying to kill people in a populous area.4

“Gun violence is undeniably a public health issue,” said Dr. Sacks, a hospitalist at Massachusetts General Hospital and instructor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, and a vocal proponent of addressing firearms in the public health sphere. Her cousin’s 7-year-old son, Daniel Barden, was fatally shot at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in December 2012.

Yet, the notion of firearm injuries and deaths as a public health issue is, in America, an issue of contention. How can hospitalists and other health care providers avoid wading into the political thicket while also looking out for their patients?

For one, it’s not the only controversial issue with which providers are confronted, Dr. Sacks and others say. From taking sexual histories, counseling patients about abortion and adoption, and discussing end-of-life issues, clinicians may routinely face uncomfortable interactions in the name of patient care.

“It’s not a question about their right to a weapon; it’s about how individuals can stay as safe as possible and keep their families as safe as possible,” said Dr. Sacks, who also wrote in a January 2017 opinion for the American Medical Association that: “Counseling about gun safety is not political – no more so than a physician counseling a patient about cutting down on sugary beverages is an act of declaring support for New York City’s attempted ban on large-sized sodas.”5

 

 


This idea is echoed by David Hemenway, PhD, director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Boston. “You can talk about wearing your seat belt without advocating for mandatory seat belt laws,” he said.
Dr. David Hemenway


Yet in a 2014 survey of internist members of the American College of Physicians, only 66% of respondents said they believed physicians have the right to counsel patients on gun violence prevention and 58% said they never ask patients about guns in their home. That same survey showed the public is also split: While two-thirds of respondents said it was at least sometimes appropriate for providers to ask about firearms during a visit, one-third believed it was never appropriate.6

In fact, Barbara Meyer, MD, MPH, a family physician in Seattle, said she once had a patient walk out of the office when he encountered a question about firearms on the intake forms for the health system at which she was employed at the time. Today, at NeighborCare Health, the presence of firearms in the home is a question in the well-child electronic health record.

The Harvard Injury Control Research Center runs a campaign called Means Matter, designed to address suicide by firearm, the most common method of suicide in America. The campaign – backed by decades of some of the best research available – reports that people die of suicide by gun more than all other methods combined, that suicide attempts using a firearm are almost always fatal, and that firearms used by youths who commit suicide almost always belong to a parent.
 

 


“Suicide is often an impulsive act,” said Dr. Sacks, which means preventing access to firearms for patients at risk can be a matter of life and death. “There is potential for intervention there … what can be more clearly medical than suicide prevention?”

For her, that means eliminating the partisan component and equipping providers with the best evidence-based research available and with best practices. Reliable studies show that having guns at home increases the danger to families, said Dr. Hemenway, and places with fewer guns and stronger gun laws are correlated with fewer gun fatalities.7,8

“In accordance with guidelines and the best evidence out there, we should be screening patients who might be at risk for gun violence,” he said. “In some cases, interventions can be as simple and straightforward as informing patients where to get gun locks and talking to them about how to store firearms safely.”

At Massachusetts General Hospital, Dr. Sacks helped found the Gun Violence Prevention Coalition, an interdisciplinary group of physicians, nurses, physical therapists, and others committed to raising awareness and preparing providers to address gun violence. She believes strongly that physicians can act locally to help address the issue.
 

 


In Seattle, Dr. Meyer has been involved with a local group called Washington Ceasefire, prompted both by her experience as a resident in Detroit – where she was routinely exposed to the traumas of gun violence – as well as a shooting that occurred outside her daughter’s high school in Seattle years ago. The group has recently begun advocating for smart guns, which are designed to be fired only by an authorized user.

Indeed, Dr. Hemenway said research by his group suggests 300,000-500,000 guns are stolen every year, though he points out that we know almost nothing about “who, what, when, why, and where.” That’s largely because of an effective ban on gun violence research, enacted by Congress in the 1990s.9

“It’s not like there’s no evidence, but compared to the size of the problem, you want good evidence,” Dr. Hemenway said. “America has lots of guns. How can we learn to live with them?”

Gun violence affects not just those shot and killed by firearms, but also those affected by the trauma it can leave in its wake. Dr. Sacks recounts a recent visit to Massachusetts General by survivors of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Fla., which took place on June 12, 2016.
 

 


“It was a moving, intense event where we all sat around and talked about this issue,” Dr. Sacks said. “The number of people dying is horrific enough, but it’s not just that. Here were a number of young people who survived and yet whose lives will never be the same. We are undercounting the number of people affected by gun violence.”

Studies also estimate the cost of medical care related to gun violence to be roughly $620 million per year, averaging between $9,000 and $18,000 per patient in 2014.10

Despite some arguments to the contrary, addressing gun violence as a public health issue is not a distraction from other important public health issues such as opioid abuse. “It is entirely a false choice that we must only take on one issue or another,” Dr. Sacks said.

Nor should efforts to address gun violence focus only on individuals, said Dr. Hemenway, who told the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in October 2017 that: “A lesson from public health is that it is usually more effective to change the environment than to try to change people. The U.S. should use the same harm reduction approach to gun violence that it uses to treat other public health threats, like automobile crashes or air pollution, employing a wide variety of methods to reduce the problem.”

The issue must be reframed, said Dr. Sacks. This remains one of her biggest goals. “If we can find a way to act and intervene and lower [the] number [of people affected by gun violence], what could be more fundamentally in line with what we try to do every day as physicians?” she asked. “How can we reduce morbidity and mortality? That’s an answerable question and we can make sure we have pathways and approaches we can put in place to understand this. This is a solvable problem.”

 

 

In 2014, 33,594 people were killed by firearms in the United States. More than 21,000 of these deaths were suicides. The rest were primarily homicides and accidental shootings. Meanwhile, firearm deaths represented nearly 17% of injury deaths that year.1,2

In a 2015 Perspective published in the New England Journal of Medicine, author Chana Sacks, MD, pointed out that 20 children and adolescents are sent to the hospital daily for firearm injuries and 2,000 people each year suffer gunshot-related spinal cord injuries and “become lifelong patients.”3

At the same time, Federal Bureau of Investigation data show that the number of active shooter situations rose between 2000 and 2013, with an average of 6.4 incidents a year for the first 7 years of the study, conducted in 2013, and an average of 16.4 in the last 7 years of the study. More than 1,000 people were wounded or killed across 160 active shooter incidents, defined as an individual or individuals actively engaged in killing or trying to kill people in a populous area.4

“Gun violence is undeniably a public health issue,” said Dr. Sacks, a hospitalist at Massachusetts General Hospital and instructor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, and a vocal proponent of addressing firearms in the public health sphere. Her cousin’s 7-year-old son, Daniel Barden, was fatally shot at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in December 2012.

Yet, the notion of firearm injuries and deaths as a public health issue is, in America, an issue of contention. How can hospitalists and other health care providers avoid wading into the political thicket while also looking out for their patients?

For one, it’s not the only controversial issue with which providers are confronted, Dr. Sacks and others say. From taking sexual histories, counseling patients about abortion and adoption, and discussing end-of-life issues, clinicians may routinely face uncomfortable interactions in the name of patient care.

“It’s not a question about their right to a weapon; it’s about how individuals can stay as safe as possible and keep their families as safe as possible,” said Dr. Sacks, who also wrote in a January 2017 opinion for the American Medical Association that: “Counseling about gun safety is not political – no more so than a physician counseling a patient about cutting down on sugary beverages is an act of declaring support for New York City’s attempted ban on large-sized sodas.”5

 

 


This idea is echoed by David Hemenway, PhD, director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Boston. “You can talk about wearing your seat belt without advocating for mandatory seat belt laws,” he said.
Dr. David Hemenway


Yet in a 2014 survey of internist members of the American College of Physicians, only 66% of respondents said they believed physicians have the right to counsel patients on gun violence prevention and 58% said they never ask patients about guns in their home. That same survey showed the public is also split: While two-thirds of respondents said it was at least sometimes appropriate for providers to ask about firearms during a visit, one-third believed it was never appropriate.6

In fact, Barbara Meyer, MD, MPH, a family physician in Seattle, said she once had a patient walk out of the office when he encountered a question about firearms on the intake forms for the health system at which she was employed at the time. Today, at NeighborCare Health, the presence of firearms in the home is a question in the well-child electronic health record.

The Harvard Injury Control Research Center runs a campaign called Means Matter, designed to address suicide by firearm, the most common method of suicide in America. The campaign – backed by decades of some of the best research available – reports that people die of suicide by gun more than all other methods combined, that suicide attempts using a firearm are almost always fatal, and that firearms used by youths who commit suicide almost always belong to a parent.
 

 


“Suicide is often an impulsive act,” said Dr. Sacks, which means preventing access to firearms for patients at risk can be a matter of life and death. “There is potential for intervention there … what can be more clearly medical than suicide prevention?”

For her, that means eliminating the partisan component and equipping providers with the best evidence-based research available and with best practices. Reliable studies show that having guns at home increases the danger to families, said Dr. Hemenway, and places with fewer guns and stronger gun laws are correlated with fewer gun fatalities.7,8

“In accordance with guidelines and the best evidence out there, we should be screening patients who might be at risk for gun violence,” he said. “In some cases, interventions can be as simple and straightforward as informing patients where to get gun locks and talking to them about how to store firearms safely.”

At Massachusetts General Hospital, Dr. Sacks helped found the Gun Violence Prevention Coalition, an interdisciplinary group of physicians, nurses, physical therapists, and others committed to raising awareness and preparing providers to address gun violence. She believes strongly that physicians can act locally to help address the issue.
 

 


In Seattle, Dr. Meyer has been involved with a local group called Washington Ceasefire, prompted both by her experience as a resident in Detroit – where she was routinely exposed to the traumas of gun violence – as well as a shooting that occurred outside her daughter’s high school in Seattle years ago. The group has recently begun advocating for smart guns, which are designed to be fired only by an authorized user.

Indeed, Dr. Hemenway said research by his group suggests 300,000-500,000 guns are stolen every year, though he points out that we know almost nothing about “who, what, when, why, and where.” That’s largely because of an effective ban on gun violence research, enacted by Congress in the 1990s.9

“It’s not like there’s no evidence, but compared to the size of the problem, you want good evidence,” Dr. Hemenway said. “America has lots of guns. How can we learn to live with them?”

Gun violence affects not just those shot and killed by firearms, but also those affected by the trauma it can leave in its wake. Dr. Sacks recounts a recent visit to Massachusetts General by survivors of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Fla., which took place on June 12, 2016.
 

 


“It was a moving, intense event where we all sat around and talked about this issue,” Dr. Sacks said. “The number of people dying is horrific enough, but it’s not just that. Here were a number of young people who survived and yet whose lives will never be the same. We are undercounting the number of people affected by gun violence.”

Studies also estimate the cost of medical care related to gun violence to be roughly $620 million per year, averaging between $9,000 and $18,000 per patient in 2014.10

Despite some arguments to the contrary, addressing gun violence as a public health issue is not a distraction from other important public health issues such as opioid abuse. “It is entirely a false choice that we must only take on one issue or another,” Dr. Sacks said.

Nor should efforts to address gun violence focus only on individuals, said Dr. Hemenway, who told the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in October 2017 that: “A lesson from public health is that it is usually more effective to change the environment than to try to change people. The U.S. should use the same harm reduction approach to gun violence that it uses to treat other public health threats, like automobile crashes or air pollution, employing a wide variety of methods to reduce the problem.”

The issue must be reframed, said Dr. Sacks. This remains one of her biggest goals. “If we can find a way to act and intervene and lower [the] number [of people affected by gun violence], what could be more fundamentally in line with what we try to do every day as physicians?” she asked. “How can we reduce morbidity and mortality? That’s an answerable question and we can make sure we have pathways and approaches we can put in place to understand this. This is a solvable problem.”

 

References

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. FastStats. Injuries. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/injury.htm. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. FastStats. Suicide. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/suicide.htm. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
3. Sacks CA. In memory of Daniel – Reviving research to prevent gun violence. N Engl J Med. 2015; 372:800-801. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1415128.
4. U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation. A study of active shooter incidents in the United States between 2000 and 2013. Published Sept 16, 2013. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
5. Sacks CA. The role of physicians in preventing firearm suicides. JAMA Int Med. doi: 10.001/jamainternmed.2016.6715. Published Nov 14, 2016. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
6. Butkus R, Weissman A. Internists’ attitudes toward prevention of firearm injury. Ann Intern Med. 2014;160(12):821-827. doi: 10.7326/M13-1960.
7. Fleegler EW, Lee LK, Monuteaux MC, et al. Firearm Legislation and Firearm-Related Fatalities in the United States. JAMA Intern Med. 2013; 173(9):732-740. doi: 10.1001/jamaimternmed.2013.1286.
8. American Academy of Pediatricians. Addressing gun violence. The federal level. https://www.aap.org/en-us/advocacy-and-policy/aap-health-initiatives/Pages/Gun-Violence-Matrix--Intentional-(Federal).aspx. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
9. Rubin R. Tale of 2 agencies: CDC avoids gun violence research bit NIH funds it. JAMA. 2016;315(16):1689-1692. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.1707.
10. Howell E and Gangopadhyaya A. State variation in the hospital costs of gun violence, 2010 and 2014. The Urban Institute, Health Policy Center.

References

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. FastStats. Injuries. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/injury.htm. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. FastStats. Suicide. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/suicide.htm. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
3. Sacks CA. In memory of Daniel – Reviving research to prevent gun violence. N Engl J Med. 2015; 372:800-801. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1415128.
4. U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation. A study of active shooter incidents in the United States between 2000 and 2013. Published Sept 16, 2013. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
5. Sacks CA. The role of physicians in preventing firearm suicides. JAMA Int Med. doi: 10.001/jamainternmed.2016.6715. Published Nov 14, 2016. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
6. Butkus R, Weissman A. Internists’ attitudes toward prevention of firearm injury. Ann Intern Med. 2014;160(12):821-827. doi: 10.7326/M13-1960.
7. Fleegler EW, Lee LK, Monuteaux MC, et al. Firearm Legislation and Firearm-Related Fatalities in the United States. JAMA Intern Med. 2013; 173(9):732-740. doi: 10.1001/jamaimternmed.2013.1286.
8. American Academy of Pediatricians. Addressing gun violence. The federal level. https://www.aap.org/en-us/advocacy-and-policy/aap-health-initiatives/Pages/Gun-Violence-Matrix--Intentional-(Federal).aspx. Accessed Nov 20, 2017.
9. Rubin R. Tale of 2 agencies: CDC avoids gun violence research bit NIH funds it. JAMA. 2016;315(16):1689-1692. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.1707.
10. Howell E and Gangopadhyaya A. State variation in the hospital costs of gun violence, 2010 and 2014. The Urban Institute, Health Policy Center.

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Building a better U.S. health care system

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More community-level investments and partnerships needed

 

Since 2010, when Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act – also known as Obamacare – without a single Republican vote, the GOP has vowed to repeal and replace it. With the election of Donald Trump in November 2016, Republicans gained control of the presidency and Congress and hoped to put Obamacare on the chopping block.

Dr. Ashish Jha

Although the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) individual mandate was eliminated in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed in late 2017, Republican leaders have been unable to secure the votes they need for a full repeal of Obamacare and a complete reboot of the American health care system. That may be, in part, because in the search for a better American health care system, there is no single right answer. In few places is that more clear than when making comparisons of health care systems across the world.

“Comparisons are fun, and everyone loves rankings,” said Ashish Jha, MD, MPH, a physician with the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Global Health Institute in Cambridge, Mass. Last fall Shah published an analysis on his personal blog comparing health care in the United States with that in seven high-income nations.1 It was prompted by a similar side-by-side comparison he participated in with other experts for the New York Times.2 “The most important part is we get to ask questions about things we care about, like ‘What do other countries do when they’re better than us?’ We’re not going to adopt any country’s model wholesale, but we can learn from them,” he said.

For instance, just 7.4% of people in Switzerland (according to data from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) skip medical tests, treatments, or follow-ups because of costs, compared with 21.3% in the United States. Meanwhile, the United States leads in innovation, producing 57% of new drugs (according to the Milken Institute), which is more than Switzerland’s 13% and Germany’s 6%.1

Although many Americans tend to think that health care in other developed nations is entirely single payer or government run, systems across Europe and the rest of the globe vary immensely in how they approach health care. One thing common among high-income nations, however, is some form of universal health care. In Canada, for example, the government funds health insurance for care delivered in the private sector. In Australia, public hospitals provide free inpatient care. In France, the Ministry of Health sets prices, budgets, and funding levels.2

“There are really two main purposes” when it comes to international comparisons, said Eric Schneider, MD, senior vice president for policy and research for the Commonwealth Fund. “The first is to understand how other countries perform, and the second is what lessons can we learn from the way care is financed, organized, and delivered in other nations and how we might import some of those ideas to the U.S. and improve policies here.”

The Affordable Care Act, Dr. Jha said, was something of the ultimate test for applying lessons learned in other countries and those put forward over the past decades in the United States by policy experts and leaders in health care thinking.

“The Affordable Care Act includes several ideas that are prevalent in other countries, particularly around how to expand insurance coverage and how to subsidize the poor so they can have good insurance coverage, too,” said Dr. Schneider. “The notion of essential health benefits, the mandate for insurance, the notion of subsidies, in some ways, these were all borrowed from abroad.”

For instance, health care in The Netherlands – which, like the United States, also relies on private health insurers – ranked among the highest of other high-income countries in the world in The Commonwealth Fund’s 2017 international comparison, published in July 2017.3 The Dutch have standardized their health benefits, reducing administrative burden for providers and making copayments more predictable for patients.

Dr. Schneider believes that the United States should continue to build on the progress of the Affordable Care Act – particularly since more than 20 million Americans have gained insurance coverage since the passage of the law (91% of Americans are insured today).4 And the ACA has renewed focus in the United States on improving and strengthening primary care and changing the incentives around care delivery.

Some Democrats and Republicans in Congress have started working on bipartisan solutions to solve some of the problems inherent in the ACA – or those engineered by those who oppose it.

Dr. Joshua Lenchus
“I think we have an opportunity to move forward,” said Joshua Lenchus, DO, FACP, SFHM, chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine Public Policy Committee. “I think complete repeal of the ACA is unlikely to see success. Until someone comes up with something that maintains close to the number of people insured now but changes the direction we’re headed in, this is what we’re stuck with.”

That direction is, at least in part, a health care system with spending that continues to rank among the highest in the world.1,3 The United States spends more than 17% of its GDP on health care, compared with the 11.4% spent by Switzerland, which Jha ranked as having the best health care system among the high-income nations he evaluated.1Craig Garthwaite, a conservative health economist at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in Evanston, Ill., called the Swiss health care system a “better-functioning version of the Affordable Care Act” in the New York Times’ head-to-head debate.2

However, Dr. Lenchus noted that Switzerland’s system may not be scalable to a country the size of the United States. At 8.5 million people, Switzerland’s population is on par with that of New York City. The U.S. system must support more than 323 million people.

And international comparisons can be challenging for other reasons, as Dr. Jha wrote in a JAMA Viewpoint piece in August 2017 with coauthor Irene Papanicolas, PhD, of the London School of Economics, because they must account for the limitations of data, consider different values in national systems, and define the boundaries of the health system.5 For instance, Dr. Schneider said, some other high-income countries also invest more in housing, nutrition, and transportation than does the United States, which reduces the detrimental impact of social determinants of health, like poverty, poor nutrition, and homelessness.

Dr. Lenchus believes better health care in the United States hinges on more community-level investments and partnerships and on more focus on the social determinants of health. “To some degree, this country should be able to leverage the resources we have at a community level to improve the health of that community’s population,” he said. “Hospitalists are in a prime position to do that.”

Indeed, the Commonwealth Fund report concluded the United States excels on measures that involve the doctor-patient relationship – like end-of-life discussions and chronic disease management – and on preventive measures like screening mammography and adult influenza vaccination.

In a New England Journal of Medicine Perspective published in July 2017, Dr. Schneider and a coauthor outlined four strategies to improve health care in the United States, gleaned from comparisons abroad: ensure universal and adequate health insurance coverage, strengthen primary care, reduce administrative burden, and reduce income-related disparities.6

Regardless of how the United States goes about achieving a better health care system, Dr. Jha said we should stop the partisan rhetoric.

“Where I find a lot of consensus is we should have more competition and less monopoly,” he said. “Liberals and conservatives should be able to get together and say: We are really going to have competitive markets, and we should see the prices of health care services fall; we should see premiums come down, and it would make the coverage problem a lot easier to solve.”
 

 

 

References

1. Jha A. Judging health systems: focusing on what matters. An Ounce of Evidence. Published Sep 18, 2017. Last accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://blogs.sph.harvard.edu/ashish-jha/.

2. Carroll AE et al. The best health care system in the world: Which one would you pick? New York Times. Published Sep 18, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/09/18/upshot/best-health-care-system-country-bracket.html?action=click&contentCollection=upshot&region=rank&module=package&version=highlights&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=sectionfront.

3. Schneider EC et al. Mirror, mirror 2017: International comparison reflects flaws and opportunities for better U.S. health care. The Commonwealth Fund. Published Jul 14, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2017/jul/mirror-mirror-international-comparisons-2017.

4. Martinez ME et al. Health insurance coverage: Early release of estimates from the national health interview survey, January-September 2016. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics. Published Feb, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhis/earlyrelease/insur201702.pdf.

5. Papanicolas I et al. Challenges in international comparison of health care systems. JAMA. 2017 Aug 8;318(6):515-6. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2646461.

6. Schneider EC et al. From last to first – Could the U.S. health care system become the best in the world? N Engl J Med. 2017 Sep 7; 377(10):901-4.

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More community-level investments and partnerships needed
More community-level investments and partnerships needed

 

Since 2010, when Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act – also known as Obamacare – without a single Republican vote, the GOP has vowed to repeal and replace it. With the election of Donald Trump in November 2016, Republicans gained control of the presidency and Congress and hoped to put Obamacare on the chopping block.

Dr. Ashish Jha

Although the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) individual mandate was eliminated in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed in late 2017, Republican leaders have been unable to secure the votes they need for a full repeal of Obamacare and a complete reboot of the American health care system. That may be, in part, because in the search for a better American health care system, there is no single right answer. In few places is that more clear than when making comparisons of health care systems across the world.

“Comparisons are fun, and everyone loves rankings,” said Ashish Jha, MD, MPH, a physician with the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Global Health Institute in Cambridge, Mass. Last fall Shah published an analysis on his personal blog comparing health care in the United States with that in seven high-income nations.1 It was prompted by a similar side-by-side comparison he participated in with other experts for the New York Times.2 “The most important part is we get to ask questions about things we care about, like ‘What do other countries do when they’re better than us?’ We’re not going to adopt any country’s model wholesale, but we can learn from them,” he said.

For instance, just 7.4% of people in Switzerland (according to data from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) skip medical tests, treatments, or follow-ups because of costs, compared with 21.3% in the United States. Meanwhile, the United States leads in innovation, producing 57% of new drugs (according to the Milken Institute), which is more than Switzerland’s 13% and Germany’s 6%.1

Although many Americans tend to think that health care in other developed nations is entirely single payer or government run, systems across Europe and the rest of the globe vary immensely in how they approach health care. One thing common among high-income nations, however, is some form of universal health care. In Canada, for example, the government funds health insurance for care delivered in the private sector. In Australia, public hospitals provide free inpatient care. In France, the Ministry of Health sets prices, budgets, and funding levels.2

“There are really two main purposes” when it comes to international comparisons, said Eric Schneider, MD, senior vice president for policy and research for the Commonwealth Fund. “The first is to understand how other countries perform, and the second is what lessons can we learn from the way care is financed, organized, and delivered in other nations and how we might import some of those ideas to the U.S. and improve policies here.”

The Affordable Care Act, Dr. Jha said, was something of the ultimate test for applying lessons learned in other countries and those put forward over the past decades in the United States by policy experts and leaders in health care thinking.

“The Affordable Care Act includes several ideas that are prevalent in other countries, particularly around how to expand insurance coverage and how to subsidize the poor so they can have good insurance coverage, too,” said Dr. Schneider. “The notion of essential health benefits, the mandate for insurance, the notion of subsidies, in some ways, these were all borrowed from abroad.”

For instance, health care in The Netherlands – which, like the United States, also relies on private health insurers – ranked among the highest of other high-income countries in the world in The Commonwealth Fund’s 2017 international comparison, published in July 2017.3 The Dutch have standardized their health benefits, reducing administrative burden for providers and making copayments more predictable for patients.

Dr. Schneider believes that the United States should continue to build on the progress of the Affordable Care Act – particularly since more than 20 million Americans have gained insurance coverage since the passage of the law (91% of Americans are insured today).4 And the ACA has renewed focus in the United States on improving and strengthening primary care and changing the incentives around care delivery.

Some Democrats and Republicans in Congress have started working on bipartisan solutions to solve some of the problems inherent in the ACA – or those engineered by those who oppose it.

Dr. Joshua Lenchus
“I think we have an opportunity to move forward,” said Joshua Lenchus, DO, FACP, SFHM, chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine Public Policy Committee. “I think complete repeal of the ACA is unlikely to see success. Until someone comes up with something that maintains close to the number of people insured now but changes the direction we’re headed in, this is what we’re stuck with.”

That direction is, at least in part, a health care system with spending that continues to rank among the highest in the world.1,3 The United States spends more than 17% of its GDP on health care, compared with the 11.4% spent by Switzerland, which Jha ranked as having the best health care system among the high-income nations he evaluated.1Craig Garthwaite, a conservative health economist at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in Evanston, Ill., called the Swiss health care system a “better-functioning version of the Affordable Care Act” in the New York Times’ head-to-head debate.2

However, Dr. Lenchus noted that Switzerland’s system may not be scalable to a country the size of the United States. At 8.5 million people, Switzerland’s population is on par with that of New York City. The U.S. system must support more than 323 million people.

And international comparisons can be challenging for other reasons, as Dr. Jha wrote in a JAMA Viewpoint piece in August 2017 with coauthor Irene Papanicolas, PhD, of the London School of Economics, because they must account for the limitations of data, consider different values in national systems, and define the boundaries of the health system.5 For instance, Dr. Schneider said, some other high-income countries also invest more in housing, nutrition, and transportation than does the United States, which reduces the detrimental impact of social determinants of health, like poverty, poor nutrition, and homelessness.

Dr. Lenchus believes better health care in the United States hinges on more community-level investments and partnerships and on more focus on the social determinants of health. “To some degree, this country should be able to leverage the resources we have at a community level to improve the health of that community’s population,” he said. “Hospitalists are in a prime position to do that.”

Indeed, the Commonwealth Fund report concluded the United States excels on measures that involve the doctor-patient relationship – like end-of-life discussions and chronic disease management – and on preventive measures like screening mammography and adult influenza vaccination.

In a New England Journal of Medicine Perspective published in July 2017, Dr. Schneider and a coauthor outlined four strategies to improve health care in the United States, gleaned from comparisons abroad: ensure universal and adequate health insurance coverage, strengthen primary care, reduce administrative burden, and reduce income-related disparities.6

Regardless of how the United States goes about achieving a better health care system, Dr. Jha said we should stop the partisan rhetoric.

“Where I find a lot of consensus is we should have more competition and less monopoly,” he said. “Liberals and conservatives should be able to get together and say: We are really going to have competitive markets, and we should see the prices of health care services fall; we should see premiums come down, and it would make the coverage problem a lot easier to solve.”
 

 

 

References

1. Jha A. Judging health systems: focusing on what matters. An Ounce of Evidence. Published Sep 18, 2017. Last accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://blogs.sph.harvard.edu/ashish-jha/.

2. Carroll AE et al. The best health care system in the world: Which one would you pick? New York Times. Published Sep 18, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/09/18/upshot/best-health-care-system-country-bracket.html?action=click&contentCollection=upshot&region=rank&module=package&version=highlights&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=sectionfront.

3. Schneider EC et al. Mirror, mirror 2017: International comparison reflects flaws and opportunities for better U.S. health care. The Commonwealth Fund. Published Jul 14, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2017/jul/mirror-mirror-international-comparisons-2017.

4. Martinez ME et al. Health insurance coverage: Early release of estimates from the national health interview survey, January-September 2016. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics. Published Feb, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhis/earlyrelease/insur201702.pdf.

5. Papanicolas I et al. Challenges in international comparison of health care systems. JAMA. 2017 Aug 8;318(6):515-6. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2646461.

6. Schneider EC et al. From last to first – Could the U.S. health care system become the best in the world? N Engl J Med. 2017 Sep 7; 377(10):901-4.

 

Since 2010, when Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act – also known as Obamacare – without a single Republican vote, the GOP has vowed to repeal and replace it. With the election of Donald Trump in November 2016, Republicans gained control of the presidency and Congress and hoped to put Obamacare on the chopping block.

Dr. Ashish Jha

Although the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) individual mandate was eliminated in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed in late 2017, Republican leaders have been unable to secure the votes they need for a full repeal of Obamacare and a complete reboot of the American health care system. That may be, in part, because in the search for a better American health care system, there is no single right answer. In few places is that more clear than when making comparisons of health care systems across the world.

“Comparisons are fun, and everyone loves rankings,” said Ashish Jha, MD, MPH, a physician with the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Global Health Institute in Cambridge, Mass. Last fall Shah published an analysis on his personal blog comparing health care in the United States with that in seven high-income nations.1 It was prompted by a similar side-by-side comparison he participated in with other experts for the New York Times.2 “The most important part is we get to ask questions about things we care about, like ‘What do other countries do when they’re better than us?’ We’re not going to adopt any country’s model wholesale, but we can learn from them,” he said.

For instance, just 7.4% of people in Switzerland (according to data from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) skip medical tests, treatments, or follow-ups because of costs, compared with 21.3% in the United States. Meanwhile, the United States leads in innovation, producing 57% of new drugs (according to the Milken Institute), which is more than Switzerland’s 13% and Germany’s 6%.1

Although many Americans tend to think that health care in other developed nations is entirely single payer or government run, systems across Europe and the rest of the globe vary immensely in how they approach health care. One thing common among high-income nations, however, is some form of universal health care. In Canada, for example, the government funds health insurance for care delivered in the private sector. In Australia, public hospitals provide free inpatient care. In France, the Ministry of Health sets prices, budgets, and funding levels.2

“There are really two main purposes” when it comes to international comparisons, said Eric Schneider, MD, senior vice president for policy and research for the Commonwealth Fund. “The first is to understand how other countries perform, and the second is what lessons can we learn from the way care is financed, organized, and delivered in other nations and how we might import some of those ideas to the U.S. and improve policies here.”

The Affordable Care Act, Dr. Jha said, was something of the ultimate test for applying lessons learned in other countries and those put forward over the past decades in the United States by policy experts and leaders in health care thinking.

“The Affordable Care Act includes several ideas that are prevalent in other countries, particularly around how to expand insurance coverage and how to subsidize the poor so they can have good insurance coverage, too,” said Dr. Schneider. “The notion of essential health benefits, the mandate for insurance, the notion of subsidies, in some ways, these were all borrowed from abroad.”

For instance, health care in The Netherlands – which, like the United States, also relies on private health insurers – ranked among the highest of other high-income countries in the world in The Commonwealth Fund’s 2017 international comparison, published in July 2017.3 The Dutch have standardized their health benefits, reducing administrative burden for providers and making copayments more predictable for patients.

Dr. Schneider believes that the United States should continue to build on the progress of the Affordable Care Act – particularly since more than 20 million Americans have gained insurance coverage since the passage of the law (91% of Americans are insured today).4 And the ACA has renewed focus in the United States on improving and strengthening primary care and changing the incentives around care delivery.

Some Democrats and Republicans in Congress have started working on bipartisan solutions to solve some of the problems inherent in the ACA – or those engineered by those who oppose it.

Dr. Joshua Lenchus
“I think we have an opportunity to move forward,” said Joshua Lenchus, DO, FACP, SFHM, chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine Public Policy Committee. “I think complete repeal of the ACA is unlikely to see success. Until someone comes up with something that maintains close to the number of people insured now but changes the direction we’re headed in, this is what we’re stuck with.”

That direction is, at least in part, a health care system with spending that continues to rank among the highest in the world.1,3 The United States spends more than 17% of its GDP on health care, compared with the 11.4% spent by Switzerland, which Jha ranked as having the best health care system among the high-income nations he evaluated.1Craig Garthwaite, a conservative health economist at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in Evanston, Ill., called the Swiss health care system a “better-functioning version of the Affordable Care Act” in the New York Times’ head-to-head debate.2

However, Dr. Lenchus noted that Switzerland’s system may not be scalable to a country the size of the United States. At 8.5 million people, Switzerland’s population is on par with that of New York City. The U.S. system must support more than 323 million people.

And international comparisons can be challenging for other reasons, as Dr. Jha wrote in a JAMA Viewpoint piece in August 2017 with coauthor Irene Papanicolas, PhD, of the London School of Economics, because they must account for the limitations of data, consider different values in national systems, and define the boundaries of the health system.5 For instance, Dr. Schneider said, some other high-income countries also invest more in housing, nutrition, and transportation than does the United States, which reduces the detrimental impact of social determinants of health, like poverty, poor nutrition, and homelessness.

Dr. Lenchus believes better health care in the United States hinges on more community-level investments and partnerships and on more focus on the social determinants of health. “To some degree, this country should be able to leverage the resources we have at a community level to improve the health of that community’s population,” he said. “Hospitalists are in a prime position to do that.”

Indeed, the Commonwealth Fund report concluded the United States excels on measures that involve the doctor-patient relationship – like end-of-life discussions and chronic disease management – and on preventive measures like screening mammography and adult influenza vaccination.

In a New England Journal of Medicine Perspective published in July 2017, Dr. Schneider and a coauthor outlined four strategies to improve health care in the United States, gleaned from comparisons abroad: ensure universal and adequate health insurance coverage, strengthen primary care, reduce administrative burden, and reduce income-related disparities.6

Regardless of how the United States goes about achieving a better health care system, Dr. Jha said we should stop the partisan rhetoric.

“Where I find a lot of consensus is we should have more competition and less monopoly,” he said. “Liberals and conservatives should be able to get together and say: We are really going to have competitive markets, and we should see the prices of health care services fall; we should see premiums come down, and it would make the coverage problem a lot easier to solve.”
 

 

 

References

1. Jha A. Judging health systems: focusing on what matters. An Ounce of Evidence. Published Sep 18, 2017. Last accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://blogs.sph.harvard.edu/ashish-jha/.

2. Carroll AE et al. The best health care system in the world: Which one would you pick? New York Times. Published Sep 18, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/09/18/upshot/best-health-care-system-country-bracket.html?action=click&contentCollection=upshot&region=rank&module=package&version=highlights&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=sectionfront.

3. Schneider EC et al. Mirror, mirror 2017: International comparison reflects flaws and opportunities for better U.S. health care. The Commonwealth Fund. Published Jul 14, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2017/jul/mirror-mirror-international-comparisons-2017.

4. Martinez ME et al. Health insurance coverage: Early release of estimates from the national health interview survey, January-September 2016. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics. Published Feb, 2017. Accessed Oct 19, 2017. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhis/earlyrelease/insur201702.pdf.

5. Papanicolas I et al. Challenges in international comparison of health care systems. JAMA. 2017 Aug 8;318(6):515-6. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2646461.

6. Schneider EC et al. From last to first – Could the U.S. health care system become the best in the world? N Engl J Med. 2017 Sep 7; 377(10):901-4.

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Is it time for health policy M&Ms?

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Changed
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Preparing hospitalists to effectively advocate for specific policy changes

 

What would happen if hospitalists began to incorporate health policy into morbidity and mortality (M&M) conferences? That was a question Chris Moriates, MD, explored in an entry for SHM’s The Hospital Leader blog1 and an idea that caused a minor stir on Twitter when he proposed it last summer.

In late July 2017, the U.S. Senate was debating a bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act, without a clear vision for replacing it. In response, physicians around the country took to Twitter to share their sentiments about repeal under the hashtag #DoctorsSpeakOut. In one such tweet, Dr. Moriates, assistant dean for health care value and an associate professor of internal medicine at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas, Austin, said this, in 140 characters: “We recently had idea: health policy M&M for residents to discuss adverse outcomes we see as result of lack of access.”

Dr. Christopher Moriates
Would this lead to more informed physicians? Improved patient advocacy? Increased understanding of the socioeconomic determinants of health? Better hospital performance? So far, the idea remains untested, but Dr. Moriates and some of his colleagues seem optimistic it could work.

The idea began with a conversation Dr. Moriates had with Beth Miller, MD, program director for the Dell Medical School Internal Medicine Residency Program. “We were meeting and talking about revamping the [resident] M&M conference to have more learning objectives and put in place best practices,” Dr. Moriates said. “Dr. Miller suggested it could be a good forum [for health policy] because it’s an area where we all come together and there’s a natural hook to it, since it is case-based, thus we can use it to recognize the drivers within the system that lead to bad outcomes.”

In his SHM blog post, Dr. Moriates said he has increasingly observed adverse events that result from issues related to health policy. He provided an example: “A patient I admitted for ‘expedited work-up’ for rectal bleeding after he told me he had been trying to get a recommended colonoscopy for many months but could not get it scheduled due to his lack of insurance. He had colon cancer that had spread.”

In another example, he conjured a hypothetical (though not impractical) case where a patient prescribed blood thinners upon hospital discharge returns to the hospital soon after with a blood clot. Unable to afford the medication, or seek primary care follow-up, this kind of patient is readmitted through no direct fault of his physicians. Yet, the patient is worse off and the hospital takes the hit on readmissions penalties.

Dr. Moriates believes that viewing a case like this through a health policy lens is not only moving, but critical to better understanding health care delivery, particularly in an environment where physician performance is measured, in part, by outcomes. He now believes health policy M&Ms would be valuable to all hospital-based physicians, not just residents.

“Hospitalists are being asked to hit these value-based performance metrics, like readmissions and length of stay, and while we deal with the consequences, we are not always the best informed” with respect to policy, he said. “We could use this forum to teach health policy topics and continually update people and contribute, in real time, to all these different discussions and understand how things are changing or could change and impact our patients.”

Dr. Nadereh Pourat
Keeping up with rapidly changing health policy is a full-time job and few physicians have time to do it, said Nadereh Pourat, PhD, director of research at the University of California, Los Angeles Center for Health Policy Research. “Doctors get almost all of their training on clinical practice with little on policy and its impact of their practice,” she said. Health policy M&Ms could provide a way for more policy-engaged physicians to educate and inform their less-engaged colleagues and trainees.

“It’s important for physicians to know the policies that are aligned with, and the policies that may undermine, what they’re doing in their practice to improve their patients’ health,” Pourat said.

This knowledge can benefit physicians, too, Pourat added, because health policy M&Ms could help providers understand the goals of particular policies and in turn adjust their own behaviors and expectations.

“Physicians could discuss, what are the underlying issues or root causes, like the decision not to expand Medicaid here in Texas,” Dr. Moriates said. “Not all of these things you can fix, but you’re exposing those stories and perhaps we can come up with some actionable steps. How do we ensure in the future that our patients are able to fulfill their prescription so we’re not just sending someone out assuming they will but not knowing they’re unable to afford it?”

Similar to other domains in which physician leaders become champions, such as antibiotic stewardship, Dr. Pourat suggested that hospitalists could champion policy awareness through the kind of M&Ms Dr. Moriates proposed.

While journal clubs and lectures are great ways for hospitalists to learn more about health policy, the emotionally gripping nature of M&Ms could inspire more physicians to act in favor of policies that benefit their patients and themselves, Dr. Moriates said.

For example, physicians may write to or visit legislative offices, or author op-eds in their local newspapers. This collective action carries the potential to effect change. And it need not be partisan.

“I believe that if health policy issues were more explicitly integrated into M&Ms then clinicians would be more inclined and prepared to effectively advocate for specific policy changes,” he wrote in his blog post. “Perhaps entire groups would be moved to engage in the political process.”

On Twitter, even before Dr. Moriates’ first tweet about health policy M&Ms, New Jersey–based Jennifer Chuang, MD, an adolescent medicine physician, wrote: “M&M is heart-wrenching in academic hospitals. I dare @SenateGOP to present their role in M&M’s to come if ACA is repealed.”

While Dr. Moriates believes the chances are quite small that legislators and policymakers would attend health policy M&Ms, he called the notion “provocative and intriguing.”

In his blog post, Dr. Moriates invites state legislators and local members of Congress to join him in reviewing M&M cases where patients have been negatively affected by policy. He also emphasized that, like most modern M&Ms, the point should not be derision or finger-pointing, but an opportunity to learn how policy translates into practice.

Physicians may learn from legislators, too, he said in his blog post. “Just as policymakers could see legislation through the eyes of practitioners and their patients, this is where we as physicians could possibly learn from our legislators,” he wrote. “We may recognize the potential trade-offs, downsides, and barriers to proposals that to us may have seemed like no-brainers.”

What’s clear, said Dr. Pourat, who is also a professor in the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and the School of Dentistry, is that Dr. Moriates’ blog post and tweet are “touching an important point for a lot of physicians during this whole debate over health reform.”

President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to fully repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act but Republican efforts have thus far been stymied. In the meantime, some physicians are watching closely, knowing that whatever comes next will continue to affect them and their patients.
 

Source

1. Moriates C. Is it time for health policy M&Ms? The Hospital Leader. Aug 16, 2017. http://thehospitalleader.org/is-it-time-for-health-policy-mms/. Accessed 2017 Sep 14.

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Preparing hospitalists to effectively advocate for specific policy changes
Preparing hospitalists to effectively advocate for specific policy changes

 

What would happen if hospitalists began to incorporate health policy into morbidity and mortality (M&M) conferences? That was a question Chris Moriates, MD, explored in an entry for SHM’s The Hospital Leader blog1 and an idea that caused a minor stir on Twitter when he proposed it last summer.

In late July 2017, the U.S. Senate was debating a bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act, without a clear vision for replacing it. In response, physicians around the country took to Twitter to share their sentiments about repeal under the hashtag #DoctorsSpeakOut. In one such tweet, Dr. Moriates, assistant dean for health care value and an associate professor of internal medicine at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas, Austin, said this, in 140 characters: “We recently had idea: health policy M&M for residents to discuss adverse outcomes we see as result of lack of access.”

Dr. Christopher Moriates
Would this lead to more informed physicians? Improved patient advocacy? Increased understanding of the socioeconomic determinants of health? Better hospital performance? So far, the idea remains untested, but Dr. Moriates and some of his colleagues seem optimistic it could work.

The idea began with a conversation Dr. Moriates had with Beth Miller, MD, program director for the Dell Medical School Internal Medicine Residency Program. “We were meeting and talking about revamping the [resident] M&M conference to have more learning objectives and put in place best practices,” Dr. Moriates said. “Dr. Miller suggested it could be a good forum [for health policy] because it’s an area where we all come together and there’s a natural hook to it, since it is case-based, thus we can use it to recognize the drivers within the system that lead to bad outcomes.”

In his SHM blog post, Dr. Moriates said he has increasingly observed adverse events that result from issues related to health policy. He provided an example: “A patient I admitted for ‘expedited work-up’ for rectal bleeding after he told me he had been trying to get a recommended colonoscopy for many months but could not get it scheduled due to his lack of insurance. He had colon cancer that had spread.”

In another example, he conjured a hypothetical (though not impractical) case where a patient prescribed blood thinners upon hospital discharge returns to the hospital soon after with a blood clot. Unable to afford the medication, or seek primary care follow-up, this kind of patient is readmitted through no direct fault of his physicians. Yet, the patient is worse off and the hospital takes the hit on readmissions penalties.

Dr. Moriates believes that viewing a case like this through a health policy lens is not only moving, but critical to better understanding health care delivery, particularly in an environment where physician performance is measured, in part, by outcomes. He now believes health policy M&Ms would be valuable to all hospital-based physicians, not just residents.

“Hospitalists are being asked to hit these value-based performance metrics, like readmissions and length of stay, and while we deal with the consequences, we are not always the best informed” with respect to policy, he said. “We could use this forum to teach health policy topics and continually update people and contribute, in real time, to all these different discussions and understand how things are changing or could change and impact our patients.”

Dr. Nadereh Pourat
Keeping up with rapidly changing health policy is a full-time job and few physicians have time to do it, said Nadereh Pourat, PhD, director of research at the University of California, Los Angeles Center for Health Policy Research. “Doctors get almost all of their training on clinical practice with little on policy and its impact of their practice,” she said. Health policy M&Ms could provide a way for more policy-engaged physicians to educate and inform their less-engaged colleagues and trainees.

“It’s important for physicians to know the policies that are aligned with, and the policies that may undermine, what they’re doing in their practice to improve their patients’ health,” Pourat said.

This knowledge can benefit physicians, too, Pourat added, because health policy M&Ms could help providers understand the goals of particular policies and in turn adjust their own behaviors and expectations.

“Physicians could discuss, what are the underlying issues or root causes, like the decision not to expand Medicaid here in Texas,” Dr. Moriates said. “Not all of these things you can fix, but you’re exposing those stories and perhaps we can come up with some actionable steps. How do we ensure in the future that our patients are able to fulfill their prescription so we’re not just sending someone out assuming they will but not knowing they’re unable to afford it?”

Similar to other domains in which physician leaders become champions, such as antibiotic stewardship, Dr. Pourat suggested that hospitalists could champion policy awareness through the kind of M&Ms Dr. Moriates proposed.

While journal clubs and lectures are great ways for hospitalists to learn more about health policy, the emotionally gripping nature of M&Ms could inspire more physicians to act in favor of policies that benefit their patients and themselves, Dr. Moriates said.

For example, physicians may write to or visit legislative offices, or author op-eds in their local newspapers. This collective action carries the potential to effect change. And it need not be partisan.

“I believe that if health policy issues were more explicitly integrated into M&Ms then clinicians would be more inclined and prepared to effectively advocate for specific policy changes,” he wrote in his blog post. “Perhaps entire groups would be moved to engage in the political process.”

On Twitter, even before Dr. Moriates’ first tweet about health policy M&Ms, New Jersey–based Jennifer Chuang, MD, an adolescent medicine physician, wrote: “M&M is heart-wrenching in academic hospitals. I dare @SenateGOP to present their role in M&M’s to come if ACA is repealed.”

While Dr. Moriates believes the chances are quite small that legislators and policymakers would attend health policy M&Ms, he called the notion “provocative and intriguing.”

In his blog post, Dr. Moriates invites state legislators and local members of Congress to join him in reviewing M&M cases where patients have been negatively affected by policy. He also emphasized that, like most modern M&Ms, the point should not be derision or finger-pointing, but an opportunity to learn how policy translates into practice.

Physicians may learn from legislators, too, he said in his blog post. “Just as policymakers could see legislation through the eyes of practitioners and their patients, this is where we as physicians could possibly learn from our legislators,” he wrote. “We may recognize the potential trade-offs, downsides, and barriers to proposals that to us may have seemed like no-brainers.”

What’s clear, said Dr. Pourat, who is also a professor in the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and the School of Dentistry, is that Dr. Moriates’ blog post and tweet are “touching an important point for a lot of physicians during this whole debate over health reform.”

President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to fully repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act but Republican efforts have thus far been stymied. In the meantime, some physicians are watching closely, knowing that whatever comes next will continue to affect them and their patients.
 

Source

1. Moriates C. Is it time for health policy M&Ms? The Hospital Leader. Aug 16, 2017. http://thehospitalleader.org/is-it-time-for-health-policy-mms/. Accessed 2017 Sep 14.

 

What would happen if hospitalists began to incorporate health policy into morbidity and mortality (M&M) conferences? That was a question Chris Moriates, MD, explored in an entry for SHM’s The Hospital Leader blog1 and an idea that caused a minor stir on Twitter when he proposed it last summer.

In late July 2017, the U.S. Senate was debating a bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act, without a clear vision for replacing it. In response, physicians around the country took to Twitter to share their sentiments about repeal under the hashtag #DoctorsSpeakOut. In one such tweet, Dr. Moriates, assistant dean for health care value and an associate professor of internal medicine at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas, Austin, said this, in 140 characters: “We recently had idea: health policy M&M for residents to discuss adverse outcomes we see as result of lack of access.”

Dr. Christopher Moriates
Would this lead to more informed physicians? Improved patient advocacy? Increased understanding of the socioeconomic determinants of health? Better hospital performance? So far, the idea remains untested, but Dr. Moriates and some of his colleagues seem optimistic it could work.

The idea began with a conversation Dr. Moriates had with Beth Miller, MD, program director for the Dell Medical School Internal Medicine Residency Program. “We were meeting and talking about revamping the [resident] M&M conference to have more learning objectives and put in place best practices,” Dr. Moriates said. “Dr. Miller suggested it could be a good forum [for health policy] because it’s an area where we all come together and there’s a natural hook to it, since it is case-based, thus we can use it to recognize the drivers within the system that lead to bad outcomes.”

In his SHM blog post, Dr. Moriates said he has increasingly observed adverse events that result from issues related to health policy. He provided an example: “A patient I admitted for ‘expedited work-up’ for rectal bleeding after he told me he had been trying to get a recommended colonoscopy for many months but could not get it scheduled due to his lack of insurance. He had colon cancer that had spread.”

In another example, he conjured a hypothetical (though not impractical) case where a patient prescribed blood thinners upon hospital discharge returns to the hospital soon after with a blood clot. Unable to afford the medication, or seek primary care follow-up, this kind of patient is readmitted through no direct fault of his physicians. Yet, the patient is worse off and the hospital takes the hit on readmissions penalties.

Dr. Moriates believes that viewing a case like this through a health policy lens is not only moving, but critical to better understanding health care delivery, particularly in an environment where physician performance is measured, in part, by outcomes. He now believes health policy M&Ms would be valuable to all hospital-based physicians, not just residents.

“Hospitalists are being asked to hit these value-based performance metrics, like readmissions and length of stay, and while we deal with the consequences, we are not always the best informed” with respect to policy, he said. “We could use this forum to teach health policy topics and continually update people and contribute, in real time, to all these different discussions and understand how things are changing or could change and impact our patients.”

Dr. Nadereh Pourat
Keeping up with rapidly changing health policy is a full-time job and few physicians have time to do it, said Nadereh Pourat, PhD, director of research at the University of California, Los Angeles Center for Health Policy Research. “Doctors get almost all of their training on clinical practice with little on policy and its impact of their practice,” she said. Health policy M&Ms could provide a way for more policy-engaged physicians to educate and inform their less-engaged colleagues and trainees.

“It’s important for physicians to know the policies that are aligned with, and the policies that may undermine, what they’re doing in their practice to improve their patients’ health,” Pourat said.

This knowledge can benefit physicians, too, Pourat added, because health policy M&Ms could help providers understand the goals of particular policies and in turn adjust their own behaviors and expectations.

“Physicians could discuss, what are the underlying issues or root causes, like the decision not to expand Medicaid here in Texas,” Dr. Moriates said. “Not all of these things you can fix, but you’re exposing those stories and perhaps we can come up with some actionable steps. How do we ensure in the future that our patients are able to fulfill their prescription so we’re not just sending someone out assuming they will but not knowing they’re unable to afford it?”

Similar to other domains in which physician leaders become champions, such as antibiotic stewardship, Dr. Pourat suggested that hospitalists could champion policy awareness through the kind of M&Ms Dr. Moriates proposed.

While journal clubs and lectures are great ways for hospitalists to learn more about health policy, the emotionally gripping nature of M&Ms could inspire more physicians to act in favor of policies that benefit their patients and themselves, Dr. Moriates said.

For example, physicians may write to or visit legislative offices, or author op-eds in their local newspapers. This collective action carries the potential to effect change. And it need not be partisan.

“I believe that if health policy issues were more explicitly integrated into M&Ms then clinicians would be more inclined and prepared to effectively advocate for specific policy changes,” he wrote in his blog post. “Perhaps entire groups would be moved to engage in the political process.”

On Twitter, even before Dr. Moriates’ first tweet about health policy M&Ms, New Jersey–based Jennifer Chuang, MD, an adolescent medicine physician, wrote: “M&M is heart-wrenching in academic hospitals. I dare @SenateGOP to present their role in M&M’s to come if ACA is repealed.”

While Dr. Moriates believes the chances are quite small that legislators and policymakers would attend health policy M&Ms, he called the notion “provocative and intriguing.”

In his blog post, Dr. Moriates invites state legislators and local members of Congress to join him in reviewing M&M cases where patients have been negatively affected by policy. He also emphasized that, like most modern M&Ms, the point should not be derision or finger-pointing, but an opportunity to learn how policy translates into practice.

Physicians may learn from legislators, too, he said in his blog post. “Just as policymakers could see legislation through the eyes of practitioners and their patients, this is where we as physicians could possibly learn from our legislators,” he wrote. “We may recognize the potential trade-offs, downsides, and barriers to proposals that to us may have seemed like no-brainers.”

What’s clear, said Dr. Pourat, who is also a professor in the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and the School of Dentistry, is that Dr. Moriates’ blog post and tweet are “touching an important point for a lot of physicians during this whole debate over health reform.”

President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to fully repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act but Republican efforts have thus far been stymied. In the meantime, some physicians are watching closely, knowing that whatever comes next will continue to affect them and their patients.
 

Source

1. Moriates C. Is it time for health policy M&Ms? The Hospital Leader. Aug 16, 2017. http://thehospitalleader.org/is-it-time-for-health-policy-mms/. Accessed 2017 Sep 14.

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Hospitals will feel the squeeze of DSH payment changes

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Fri, 09/14/2018 - 11:56
Rule could mean loss of quality physicians, services

 

Earlier this year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized fundamental changes to how it reimburses hospitals for uncompensated care costs. When first proposed, the move raised alarm among physicians, hospitals, health systems, state health departments, and others around the country, and even prompted a lawsuit in New Hampshire.

In the months since the official adoption by the CMS, it remains unclear how the change will affect hospitals around the country, particularly the safety net hospitals that rely on these payments most.

Dr. John McHugh
The rule alters the formula previously used to determine disproportionate share (DSH) payments, meant to fill in the gap for those hospitals treating large numbers of Medicaid and uninsured patients. The change is a reinterpretation of regulations that the CMS says have been codified but unenforced since the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, that say the agency will reimburse DSH-qualified hospitals for the uncompensated costs they incur providing care (inpatient and outpatient) to Medicaid-eligible and uninsured patients. The agency argues that payments made on behalf of these same patients by Medicare, the patients themselves, and other third-party party payers should be considered revenue and not contribute to individual hospitals’ DSH limits. Previously, the CMS primarily based payments on the number of Medicaid and uninsured patients any given hospital treated.1

In its final rule issued in April 2017 and finalized on August 2, 2017, the federal agency said the intent of the change is to more fairly distribute a fixed amount of DSH funds to the hospitals most in need. It also argued the change is a more consistent interpretation of the existing statute [Section 1923(g)], provides clarification around language that has been the subject of inquiry over the last decade, and promotes what it calls “fiscal integrity.”

“These allotments essentially establish a finite pool of available federal DSH funds that states use to pay the federal portion of payments to all qualifying hospitals in each state,” the final rule reads. “As states often use most or all of their federal DSH allotment, in practice, if one hospital gets more DSH funding, other DSH-eligible hospitals in the state may get less.”

This is not, however, the way all parties see it. For instance, in a comment submitted to the CMS in September 2016, the National Association of Urban Hospitals expressed its concern that DSH payments already are inadequate to cover the financial burden associated with providing care in low-income communities, such as translation services and the costs of employing physicians to practice in more challenged settings.2

In a letter to the CMS, the Minnesota Department of Human Services said it agrees with the agency that DSH payments should not be used to “subsidize costs that have been paid by Medicare and other insurers” but disagrees with the agency’s approach. Its argument includes a challenge to the CMS’ statutory authority to change the formula based on existing language.3

“I think the reason it’s contentious is because when you’re dealing with a fixed dollar amount and you’re talking about redistributing dollars, someone is going to lose,” said John McHugh, PhD, professor of health management at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. “A facility receiving DSH payments is already dealing with high levels of uncompensated care; the hospitals are operating on very thin margins. They are very often getting by because of these payments.”

Despite the CMS’ seemingly good intentions, Bradley Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM, a hospitalist at Geisinger Health System and member of the SHM Public Policy Committee, remains skeptical that the hospitals that need and deserve DSH payments will actually see more redistributed in their favor.

Dr. Bradley Flansbaum
“Inner city, safety-net hospitals are always fighting for a piece of the pie,” he said, noting that a percentage of larger health systems and midsized hospitals also take advantage of DSH payments. “Their payer mix is more favorable, yet they game the system for these funds,” Dr. Flansbaum added.

If hospitals in need see fewer DSH dollars, Dr. McHugh noted, they will feel the squeeze.

“It’s not easy to operate safety net hospitals,” he said. “And on top of that, hospitals have been operating under a certain assumption and it’s changing, and it takes time to incorporate those changes. There will probably be some fallout for the first couple of years as hospitals are adapting their practices. It could mean loss of services. It could mean the loss of quality physicians and quality staffing, and that can impact patient care.”
 

 

 

How will hospitals adapt?

The CMS did not give hospitals transition time. The reinterpretation became effective in June 2017, just 60 days after the agency issued the final rule. Dr. McHugh said he is not sure why the agency did not build in time for hospitals to adapt, particularly given the uncertainty around the national uninsured rate going forward, with so many potential changes to the American health care system under a new administration.

How any of these changes trickle down to hospitalists remains to be seen, said Dr. Flansbaum. Dr. McHugh believes it could lead to increased patient loads, higher turnover and churn, and fewer experienced physicians in safety net hospitals as younger doctors are hired and burn out. “At the end of the day, that feeds into patient care and patient satisfaction and quality,” he said.

However, hospitals across the country have been living with this “slow burn” for a long time, said Dr. Flansbaum, though not necessarily due to inadequate DSH payments. At least in some areas, reimbursements have gone down, hospital occupancy rates have declined, rural hospitals have closed, hospitals have consolidated, and people have been laid off.

It’s important to ensure the hospitals providing care for high levels of uninsured or underinsured patients receive the help they need, he said, and it’s also important to examine the role hospitals play as a whole in the American health care system.

“It’s an expensive system,” he said. “We have we created a system where, unlike other countries that have developed more vigorous primary or outpatient care, we have created an inpatient health system.”

With the CMS’ change, the government is the only entity that seems to win across the board, Dr. McHugh said. He said he would not be surprised if analysts looked to see how hospitals were affected by it in coming months.

But, he remains optimistic. In fact, the final rule also came with an $800 million increase in the amount of uncompensated care payments for acute care hospitals in fiscal year 2018, the CMS says.4

“Hospitals are adaptable,” Dr. McHugh said. “I think what you’ll see is this will spur some innovation in terms of patient care maybe a few years down the road. It may hit some stumbling blocks in the early going but there may be some positive changes in the future.”
 

References

1. Medicaid Program; Disproportionate Share Hospital Payments –Treatment of Third Party Payers in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services final rule. Citation 82 FR 16114. Published April 3, 2017. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2017/04/03/2017-06538/medicaid-program-disproportionate-share-hospital-payments-treatment-of-third-party-payers-in

2. Kugler E. 2016-09-14 NAUH Medicaid Program DSH Payments – Treatment of Third Party Payer in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs. September 14, 2016. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0144-0020

3. Berg A. Proposed Rule on Disproportionate Share Hospital Payments – Treatment of Third Party Payers in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs, CMS-2399-P. September 14, 2016. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0144-0046

4. CMS finalizes 2018 payment and policy updates for Medicare hospital admissions. Published August 2, 2017. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Press-releases/2017-Press-releases-items/2017-08-02.html

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Rule could mean loss of quality physicians, services
Rule could mean loss of quality physicians, services

 

Earlier this year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized fundamental changes to how it reimburses hospitals for uncompensated care costs. When first proposed, the move raised alarm among physicians, hospitals, health systems, state health departments, and others around the country, and even prompted a lawsuit in New Hampshire.

In the months since the official adoption by the CMS, it remains unclear how the change will affect hospitals around the country, particularly the safety net hospitals that rely on these payments most.

Dr. John McHugh
The rule alters the formula previously used to determine disproportionate share (DSH) payments, meant to fill in the gap for those hospitals treating large numbers of Medicaid and uninsured patients. The change is a reinterpretation of regulations that the CMS says have been codified but unenforced since the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, that say the agency will reimburse DSH-qualified hospitals for the uncompensated costs they incur providing care (inpatient and outpatient) to Medicaid-eligible and uninsured patients. The agency argues that payments made on behalf of these same patients by Medicare, the patients themselves, and other third-party party payers should be considered revenue and not contribute to individual hospitals’ DSH limits. Previously, the CMS primarily based payments on the number of Medicaid and uninsured patients any given hospital treated.1

In its final rule issued in April 2017 and finalized on August 2, 2017, the federal agency said the intent of the change is to more fairly distribute a fixed amount of DSH funds to the hospitals most in need. It also argued the change is a more consistent interpretation of the existing statute [Section 1923(g)], provides clarification around language that has been the subject of inquiry over the last decade, and promotes what it calls “fiscal integrity.”

“These allotments essentially establish a finite pool of available federal DSH funds that states use to pay the federal portion of payments to all qualifying hospitals in each state,” the final rule reads. “As states often use most or all of their federal DSH allotment, in practice, if one hospital gets more DSH funding, other DSH-eligible hospitals in the state may get less.”

This is not, however, the way all parties see it. For instance, in a comment submitted to the CMS in September 2016, the National Association of Urban Hospitals expressed its concern that DSH payments already are inadequate to cover the financial burden associated with providing care in low-income communities, such as translation services and the costs of employing physicians to practice in more challenged settings.2

In a letter to the CMS, the Minnesota Department of Human Services said it agrees with the agency that DSH payments should not be used to “subsidize costs that have been paid by Medicare and other insurers” but disagrees with the agency’s approach. Its argument includes a challenge to the CMS’ statutory authority to change the formula based on existing language.3

“I think the reason it’s contentious is because when you’re dealing with a fixed dollar amount and you’re talking about redistributing dollars, someone is going to lose,” said John McHugh, PhD, professor of health management at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. “A facility receiving DSH payments is already dealing with high levels of uncompensated care; the hospitals are operating on very thin margins. They are very often getting by because of these payments.”

Despite the CMS’ seemingly good intentions, Bradley Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM, a hospitalist at Geisinger Health System and member of the SHM Public Policy Committee, remains skeptical that the hospitals that need and deserve DSH payments will actually see more redistributed in their favor.

Dr. Bradley Flansbaum
“Inner city, safety-net hospitals are always fighting for a piece of the pie,” he said, noting that a percentage of larger health systems and midsized hospitals also take advantage of DSH payments. “Their payer mix is more favorable, yet they game the system for these funds,” Dr. Flansbaum added.

If hospitals in need see fewer DSH dollars, Dr. McHugh noted, they will feel the squeeze.

“It’s not easy to operate safety net hospitals,” he said. “And on top of that, hospitals have been operating under a certain assumption and it’s changing, and it takes time to incorporate those changes. There will probably be some fallout for the first couple of years as hospitals are adapting their practices. It could mean loss of services. It could mean the loss of quality physicians and quality staffing, and that can impact patient care.”
 

 

 

How will hospitals adapt?

The CMS did not give hospitals transition time. The reinterpretation became effective in June 2017, just 60 days after the agency issued the final rule. Dr. McHugh said he is not sure why the agency did not build in time for hospitals to adapt, particularly given the uncertainty around the national uninsured rate going forward, with so many potential changes to the American health care system under a new administration.

How any of these changes trickle down to hospitalists remains to be seen, said Dr. Flansbaum. Dr. McHugh believes it could lead to increased patient loads, higher turnover and churn, and fewer experienced physicians in safety net hospitals as younger doctors are hired and burn out. “At the end of the day, that feeds into patient care and patient satisfaction and quality,” he said.

However, hospitals across the country have been living with this “slow burn” for a long time, said Dr. Flansbaum, though not necessarily due to inadequate DSH payments. At least in some areas, reimbursements have gone down, hospital occupancy rates have declined, rural hospitals have closed, hospitals have consolidated, and people have been laid off.

It’s important to ensure the hospitals providing care for high levels of uninsured or underinsured patients receive the help they need, he said, and it’s also important to examine the role hospitals play as a whole in the American health care system.

“It’s an expensive system,” he said. “We have we created a system where, unlike other countries that have developed more vigorous primary or outpatient care, we have created an inpatient health system.”

With the CMS’ change, the government is the only entity that seems to win across the board, Dr. McHugh said. He said he would not be surprised if analysts looked to see how hospitals were affected by it in coming months.

But, he remains optimistic. In fact, the final rule also came with an $800 million increase in the amount of uncompensated care payments for acute care hospitals in fiscal year 2018, the CMS says.4

“Hospitals are adaptable,” Dr. McHugh said. “I think what you’ll see is this will spur some innovation in terms of patient care maybe a few years down the road. It may hit some stumbling blocks in the early going but there may be some positive changes in the future.”
 

References

1. Medicaid Program; Disproportionate Share Hospital Payments –Treatment of Third Party Payers in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services final rule. Citation 82 FR 16114. Published April 3, 2017. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2017/04/03/2017-06538/medicaid-program-disproportionate-share-hospital-payments-treatment-of-third-party-payers-in

2. Kugler E. 2016-09-14 NAUH Medicaid Program DSH Payments – Treatment of Third Party Payer in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs. September 14, 2016. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0144-0020

3. Berg A. Proposed Rule on Disproportionate Share Hospital Payments – Treatment of Third Party Payers in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs, CMS-2399-P. September 14, 2016. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0144-0046

4. CMS finalizes 2018 payment and policy updates for Medicare hospital admissions. Published August 2, 2017. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Press-releases/2017-Press-releases-items/2017-08-02.html

 

Earlier this year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized fundamental changes to how it reimburses hospitals for uncompensated care costs. When first proposed, the move raised alarm among physicians, hospitals, health systems, state health departments, and others around the country, and even prompted a lawsuit in New Hampshire.

In the months since the official adoption by the CMS, it remains unclear how the change will affect hospitals around the country, particularly the safety net hospitals that rely on these payments most.

Dr. John McHugh
The rule alters the formula previously used to determine disproportionate share (DSH) payments, meant to fill in the gap for those hospitals treating large numbers of Medicaid and uninsured patients. The change is a reinterpretation of regulations that the CMS says have been codified but unenforced since the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, that say the agency will reimburse DSH-qualified hospitals for the uncompensated costs they incur providing care (inpatient and outpatient) to Medicaid-eligible and uninsured patients. The agency argues that payments made on behalf of these same patients by Medicare, the patients themselves, and other third-party party payers should be considered revenue and not contribute to individual hospitals’ DSH limits. Previously, the CMS primarily based payments on the number of Medicaid and uninsured patients any given hospital treated.1

In its final rule issued in April 2017 and finalized on August 2, 2017, the federal agency said the intent of the change is to more fairly distribute a fixed amount of DSH funds to the hospitals most in need. It also argued the change is a more consistent interpretation of the existing statute [Section 1923(g)], provides clarification around language that has been the subject of inquiry over the last decade, and promotes what it calls “fiscal integrity.”

“These allotments essentially establish a finite pool of available federal DSH funds that states use to pay the federal portion of payments to all qualifying hospitals in each state,” the final rule reads. “As states often use most or all of their federal DSH allotment, in practice, if one hospital gets more DSH funding, other DSH-eligible hospitals in the state may get less.”

This is not, however, the way all parties see it. For instance, in a comment submitted to the CMS in September 2016, the National Association of Urban Hospitals expressed its concern that DSH payments already are inadequate to cover the financial burden associated with providing care in low-income communities, such as translation services and the costs of employing physicians to practice in more challenged settings.2

In a letter to the CMS, the Minnesota Department of Human Services said it agrees with the agency that DSH payments should not be used to “subsidize costs that have been paid by Medicare and other insurers” but disagrees with the agency’s approach. Its argument includes a challenge to the CMS’ statutory authority to change the formula based on existing language.3

“I think the reason it’s contentious is because when you’re dealing with a fixed dollar amount and you’re talking about redistributing dollars, someone is going to lose,” said John McHugh, PhD, professor of health management at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. “A facility receiving DSH payments is already dealing with high levels of uncompensated care; the hospitals are operating on very thin margins. They are very often getting by because of these payments.”

Despite the CMS’ seemingly good intentions, Bradley Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM, a hospitalist at Geisinger Health System and member of the SHM Public Policy Committee, remains skeptical that the hospitals that need and deserve DSH payments will actually see more redistributed in their favor.

Dr. Bradley Flansbaum
“Inner city, safety-net hospitals are always fighting for a piece of the pie,” he said, noting that a percentage of larger health systems and midsized hospitals also take advantage of DSH payments. “Their payer mix is more favorable, yet they game the system for these funds,” Dr. Flansbaum added.

If hospitals in need see fewer DSH dollars, Dr. McHugh noted, they will feel the squeeze.

“It’s not easy to operate safety net hospitals,” he said. “And on top of that, hospitals have been operating under a certain assumption and it’s changing, and it takes time to incorporate those changes. There will probably be some fallout for the first couple of years as hospitals are adapting their practices. It could mean loss of services. It could mean the loss of quality physicians and quality staffing, and that can impact patient care.”
 

 

 

How will hospitals adapt?

The CMS did not give hospitals transition time. The reinterpretation became effective in June 2017, just 60 days after the agency issued the final rule. Dr. McHugh said he is not sure why the agency did not build in time for hospitals to adapt, particularly given the uncertainty around the national uninsured rate going forward, with so many potential changes to the American health care system under a new administration.

How any of these changes trickle down to hospitalists remains to be seen, said Dr. Flansbaum. Dr. McHugh believes it could lead to increased patient loads, higher turnover and churn, and fewer experienced physicians in safety net hospitals as younger doctors are hired and burn out. “At the end of the day, that feeds into patient care and patient satisfaction and quality,” he said.

However, hospitals across the country have been living with this “slow burn” for a long time, said Dr. Flansbaum, though not necessarily due to inadequate DSH payments. At least in some areas, reimbursements have gone down, hospital occupancy rates have declined, rural hospitals have closed, hospitals have consolidated, and people have been laid off.

It’s important to ensure the hospitals providing care for high levels of uninsured or underinsured patients receive the help they need, he said, and it’s also important to examine the role hospitals play as a whole in the American health care system.

“It’s an expensive system,” he said. “We have we created a system where, unlike other countries that have developed more vigorous primary or outpatient care, we have created an inpatient health system.”

With the CMS’ change, the government is the only entity that seems to win across the board, Dr. McHugh said. He said he would not be surprised if analysts looked to see how hospitals were affected by it in coming months.

But, he remains optimistic. In fact, the final rule also came with an $800 million increase in the amount of uncompensated care payments for acute care hospitals in fiscal year 2018, the CMS says.4

“Hospitals are adaptable,” Dr. McHugh said. “I think what you’ll see is this will spur some innovation in terms of patient care maybe a few years down the road. It may hit some stumbling blocks in the early going but there may be some positive changes in the future.”
 

References

1. Medicaid Program; Disproportionate Share Hospital Payments –Treatment of Third Party Payers in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services final rule. Citation 82 FR 16114. Published April 3, 2017. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2017/04/03/2017-06538/medicaid-program-disproportionate-share-hospital-payments-treatment-of-third-party-payers-in

2. Kugler E. 2016-09-14 NAUH Medicaid Program DSH Payments – Treatment of Third Party Payer in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs. September 14, 2016. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0144-0020

3. Berg A. Proposed Rule on Disproportionate Share Hospital Payments – Treatment of Third Party Payers in Calculating Uncompensated Care Costs, CMS-2399-P. September 14, 2016. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0144-0046

4. CMS finalizes 2018 payment and policy updates for Medicare hospital admissions. Published August 2, 2017. Last accessed August 14, 2017. https://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Press-releases/2017-Press-releases-items/2017-08-02.html

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How hospitalists can focus on health equity

Article Type
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Fri, 09/14/2018 - 11:56
Achieving health equity requires removing the ‘obstacles to health’

 

A decade ago, most hospitalists and hospital leaders were not thinking about health equity, let alone discussing it.

“It used to be we could say: ‘We saved your life but everything else is beyond our control,’ ” said Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of Hospital Medicine at Northwell Health in New York, and associate professor of medicine at Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine and Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

But today?

”We have a better understanding that what affects the health of most of our patients is what happens outside the four walls of the hospital,” he said. “Now, we can work with case managers and community-based organizations to help address housing and food. We can at least steer our patients to resources and help them with the social determinants of their health.”

Dr. Kevin Smothers
That’s because the social determinants of health – diet, inactivity, substance abuse, poverty, and more – “account for nearly 75% of disease,” said Kevin Smothers, MD, FACEP, vice president and chief medical officer at Adventist HealthCare Shady Grove Medical Center in Rockville, Md. “Health care providers are only able to ‘fix’ about 15 percent of the causes of poor health.”  

A report recently published by the University of California, San Francisco, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) takes on the definition of health equity.1 Because, as one of the report’s authors, Paula Braveman, MD, MPH, professor of Family and Community Medicine and director of the Center on Social Disparities in Health at UCSF, argued in a Health Affairs blog post in June 2017: “Clarity is particularly important because pursuing equity often involves engaging diverse audiences and stakeholders, each with their own constituents, beliefs, and agendas. And in an era of data, a sound definition is crucial to shape the benchmarks against which progress can be measured.”

Measurement is an unavoidable aspect of the practice of medicine in the 21st century and both Dr. Fitterman and Dr. Smothers say hospitals must start focusing on the nonmedical factors that influence health to find success.

“Payment reform is forcing delivery reform,” Dr. Fitterman said.

A report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine estimates that racial health disparities alone – not including other marginalized groups – could cost health insurers as much as $337 billion between 2009 and 2018.2 “Hospitals and hospitalists have to focus on health disparities in order to address the multitude of chronic medical conditions they treat,” said Dr. Smothers.

For the purposes of measurement, the authors of the RWJF report conclude that “health equity means reducing and ultimately eliminating disparities in health and its determinants that adversely affect excluded or marginalized groups.” The report attempts to define health equity as a means of specifically addressing it.

“Population health means taking care of the wider population, in terms of health and cost,” said Dr. Fitterman. “But if you’re just looking at the average health of a population you could still be missing pockets of disparity, since there will be pockets that excel and pockets of disparity but the average looks good. If we’re not careful how we measure it, we may leave some groups behind.”

Achieving health equity, the RWJF report says, requires removing the “obstacles to health such as poverty, discrimination, and their consequences, including powerlessness and lack of access to good jobs with fair pay, quality education and housing, safe environments, and health care.” Health equity means that everyone must have “a fair and just opportunity to be as healthy as possible.”

It lays out four “key steps” to achieve health equity: 1. Identify important health disparities; 2. Change and implement policies, laws, systems, environments, and practices to reduce inequities in the opportunities and resources needed to be healthier; 3. Evaluate and monitor efforts using short- and long-term measures; and 4. Reassess strategies in light of process and outcomes, plan next steps.

Everyone can be a part of the solutions to address health disparities, Dr. Fitterman said. He was not involved in the report. For hospitalists interested in addressing health equity, Dr. Braveman had two recommendations:

• Choose to practice at a hospital that serves large numbers of socially disadvantaged people;

• Put particular effort into helping the most socially disadvantaged patients in their hospitals.

This should include understanding the conditions that bring disadvantaged people to the hospital in disproportionate numbers, Dr. Braveman said, and getting involved in initiatives intended to address them. For example, after observing that disproportionate numbers of poor kids are hospitalized with asthma, hospitalists might connect with community groups that can help address pest abatement in low-income housing.

Health equity efforts should not just focus on socioeconomically or racially disadvantaged groups either, Dr. Braveman and Dr. Fitterman argue. They must also address others who are marginalized, like patients who are disabled, elderly, obese, non–English speaking, or gender nonconforming.

Dr. Fitterman said his hospital leadership has made health equity a priority and believes successful health equity practices involve good leadership, becoming aware of and addressing unconscious bias, and efforts to address the social determinants that can cut through health disparities.

“The focus of our last leadership retreat was diversity and health disparities,” Dr. Fitterman said. “It starts at the top down. I bring that to our faculty and site directors: everyone takes an online test to raise their awareness of unconscious bias.”

Dr. Smothers serves on the board of the Center for Health Equity and Wellness at Adventist HealthCare, which works to improve access to “culturally appropriate care, and provides community wellness outreach and education.” He said that, in addition to programs at the Center which address disparities, his hospital has also established teams of doctors, nurses, case managers, and transitional care nurses to help redirect patients to “more appropriate, less costly services, such as primary care, urgent care, home care, and subacute care,” when it is in the patient’s best interest.

Not only are Adventist’s hospitalists aware of community resources available to their patients, they are also culturally diverse, Dr. Smothers said, noting that they are “well equipped to manage our diverse patient population, including those who lack adequate health care.”

Additionally, Dr. Smothers said: “We engage our hospitalists in care coordination, encouraging them to make recommendations on alternative treatment locations and/or options at the point of entry.” And all admitted patients with chronic conditions are provided with a month’s supply of medication and schedule transportation for their follow-up appointment upon discharge.

“We need to inquire about social determinants that may prohibit our success with our patients,” said Dr. Fitterman. “You are not always going to be able to fix it, but it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try.”
 

References

1. Braveman P, et al. What is health equity? And what difference does a definition make? Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Published May 2017. Accessed July 15, 2017.

2. Communities in Action: Pathways to Health Equity. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Published Jan. 11, 2017. Accessed July 15, 2017.

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Achieving health equity requires removing the ‘obstacles to health’
Achieving health equity requires removing the ‘obstacles to health’

 

A decade ago, most hospitalists and hospital leaders were not thinking about health equity, let alone discussing it.

“It used to be we could say: ‘We saved your life but everything else is beyond our control,’ ” said Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of Hospital Medicine at Northwell Health in New York, and associate professor of medicine at Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine and Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

But today?

”We have a better understanding that what affects the health of most of our patients is what happens outside the four walls of the hospital,” he said. “Now, we can work with case managers and community-based organizations to help address housing and food. We can at least steer our patients to resources and help them with the social determinants of their health.”

Dr. Kevin Smothers
That’s because the social determinants of health – diet, inactivity, substance abuse, poverty, and more – “account for nearly 75% of disease,” said Kevin Smothers, MD, FACEP, vice president and chief medical officer at Adventist HealthCare Shady Grove Medical Center in Rockville, Md. “Health care providers are only able to ‘fix’ about 15 percent of the causes of poor health.”  

A report recently published by the University of California, San Francisco, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) takes on the definition of health equity.1 Because, as one of the report’s authors, Paula Braveman, MD, MPH, professor of Family and Community Medicine and director of the Center on Social Disparities in Health at UCSF, argued in a Health Affairs blog post in June 2017: “Clarity is particularly important because pursuing equity often involves engaging diverse audiences and stakeholders, each with their own constituents, beliefs, and agendas. And in an era of data, a sound definition is crucial to shape the benchmarks against which progress can be measured.”

Measurement is an unavoidable aspect of the practice of medicine in the 21st century and both Dr. Fitterman and Dr. Smothers say hospitals must start focusing on the nonmedical factors that influence health to find success.

“Payment reform is forcing delivery reform,” Dr. Fitterman said.

A report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine estimates that racial health disparities alone – not including other marginalized groups – could cost health insurers as much as $337 billion between 2009 and 2018.2 “Hospitals and hospitalists have to focus on health disparities in order to address the multitude of chronic medical conditions they treat,” said Dr. Smothers.

For the purposes of measurement, the authors of the RWJF report conclude that “health equity means reducing and ultimately eliminating disparities in health and its determinants that adversely affect excluded or marginalized groups.” The report attempts to define health equity as a means of specifically addressing it.

“Population health means taking care of the wider population, in terms of health and cost,” said Dr. Fitterman. “But if you’re just looking at the average health of a population you could still be missing pockets of disparity, since there will be pockets that excel and pockets of disparity but the average looks good. If we’re not careful how we measure it, we may leave some groups behind.”

Achieving health equity, the RWJF report says, requires removing the “obstacles to health such as poverty, discrimination, and their consequences, including powerlessness and lack of access to good jobs with fair pay, quality education and housing, safe environments, and health care.” Health equity means that everyone must have “a fair and just opportunity to be as healthy as possible.”

It lays out four “key steps” to achieve health equity: 1. Identify important health disparities; 2. Change and implement policies, laws, systems, environments, and practices to reduce inequities in the opportunities and resources needed to be healthier; 3. Evaluate and monitor efforts using short- and long-term measures; and 4. Reassess strategies in light of process and outcomes, plan next steps.

Everyone can be a part of the solutions to address health disparities, Dr. Fitterman said. He was not involved in the report. For hospitalists interested in addressing health equity, Dr. Braveman had two recommendations:

• Choose to practice at a hospital that serves large numbers of socially disadvantaged people;

• Put particular effort into helping the most socially disadvantaged patients in their hospitals.

This should include understanding the conditions that bring disadvantaged people to the hospital in disproportionate numbers, Dr. Braveman said, and getting involved in initiatives intended to address them. For example, after observing that disproportionate numbers of poor kids are hospitalized with asthma, hospitalists might connect with community groups that can help address pest abatement in low-income housing.

Health equity efforts should not just focus on socioeconomically or racially disadvantaged groups either, Dr. Braveman and Dr. Fitterman argue. They must also address others who are marginalized, like patients who are disabled, elderly, obese, non–English speaking, or gender nonconforming.

Dr. Fitterman said his hospital leadership has made health equity a priority and believes successful health equity practices involve good leadership, becoming aware of and addressing unconscious bias, and efforts to address the social determinants that can cut through health disparities.

“The focus of our last leadership retreat was diversity and health disparities,” Dr. Fitterman said. “It starts at the top down. I bring that to our faculty and site directors: everyone takes an online test to raise their awareness of unconscious bias.”

Dr. Smothers serves on the board of the Center for Health Equity and Wellness at Adventist HealthCare, which works to improve access to “culturally appropriate care, and provides community wellness outreach and education.” He said that, in addition to programs at the Center which address disparities, his hospital has also established teams of doctors, nurses, case managers, and transitional care nurses to help redirect patients to “more appropriate, less costly services, such as primary care, urgent care, home care, and subacute care,” when it is in the patient’s best interest.

Not only are Adventist’s hospitalists aware of community resources available to their patients, they are also culturally diverse, Dr. Smothers said, noting that they are “well equipped to manage our diverse patient population, including those who lack adequate health care.”

Additionally, Dr. Smothers said: “We engage our hospitalists in care coordination, encouraging them to make recommendations on alternative treatment locations and/or options at the point of entry.” And all admitted patients with chronic conditions are provided with a month’s supply of medication and schedule transportation for their follow-up appointment upon discharge.

“We need to inquire about social determinants that may prohibit our success with our patients,” said Dr. Fitterman. “You are not always going to be able to fix it, but it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try.”
 

References

1. Braveman P, et al. What is health equity? And what difference does a definition make? Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Published May 2017. Accessed July 15, 2017.

2. Communities in Action: Pathways to Health Equity. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Published Jan. 11, 2017. Accessed July 15, 2017.

 

A decade ago, most hospitalists and hospital leaders were not thinking about health equity, let alone discussing it.

“It used to be we could say: ‘We saved your life but everything else is beyond our control,’ ” said Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of Hospital Medicine at Northwell Health in New York, and associate professor of medicine at Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine and Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

But today?

”We have a better understanding that what affects the health of most of our patients is what happens outside the four walls of the hospital,” he said. “Now, we can work with case managers and community-based organizations to help address housing and food. We can at least steer our patients to resources and help them with the social determinants of their health.”

Dr. Kevin Smothers
That’s because the social determinants of health – diet, inactivity, substance abuse, poverty, and more – “account for nearly 75% of disease,” said Kevin Smothers, MD, FACEP, vice president and chief medical officer at Adventist HealthCare Shady Grove Medical Center in Rockville, Md. “Health care providers are only able to ‘fix’ about 15 percent of the causes of poor health.”  

A report recently published by the University of California, San Francisco, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) takes on the definition of health equity.1 Because, as one of the report’s authors, Paula Braveman, MD, MPH, professor of Family and Community Medicine and director of the Center on Social Disparities in Health at UCSF, argued in a Health Affairs blog post in June 2017: “Clarity is particularly important because pursuing equity often involves engaging diverse audiences and stakeholders, each with their own constituents, beliefs, and agendas. And in an era of data, a sound definition is crucial to shape the benchmarks against which progress can be measured.”

Measurement is an unavoidable aspect of the practice of medicine in the 21st century and both Dr. Fitterman and Dr. Smothers say hospitals must start focusing on the nonmedical factors that influence health to find success.

“Payment reform is forcing delivery reform,” Dr. Fitterman said.

A report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine estimates that racial health disparities alone – not including other marginalized groups – could cost health insurers as much as $337 billion between 2009 and 2018.2 “Hospitals and hospitalists have to focus on health disparities in order to address the multitude of chronic medical conditions they treat,” said Dr. Smothers.

For the purposes of measurement, the authors of the RWJF report conclude that “health equity means reducing and ultimately eliminating disparities in health and its determinants that adversely affect excluded or marginalized groups.” The report attempts to define health equity as a means of specifically addressing it.

“Population health means taking care of the wider population, in terms of health and cost,” said Dr. Fitterman. “But if you’re just looking at the average health of a population you could still be missing pockets of disparity, since there will be pockets that excel and pockets of disparity but the average looks good. If we’re not careful how we measure it, we may leave some groups behind.”

Achieving health equity, the RWJF report says, requires removing the “obstacles to health such as poverty, discrimination, and their consequences, including powerlessness and lack of access to good jobs with fair pay, quality education and housing, safe environments, and health care.” Health equity means that everyone must have “a fair and just opportunity to be as healthy as possible.”

It lays out four “key steps” to achieve health equity: 1. Identify important health disparities; 2. Change and implement policies, laws, systems, environments, and practices to reduce inequities in the opportunities and resources needed to be healthier; 3. Evaluate and monitor efforts using short- and long-term measures; and 4. Reassess strategies in light of process and outcomes, plan next steps.

Everyone can be a part of the solutions to address health disparities, Dr. Fitterman said. He was not involved in the report. For hospitalists interested in addressing health equity, Dr. Braveman had two recommendations:

• Choose to practice at a hospital that serves large numbers of socially disadvantaged people;

• Put particular effort into helping the most socially disadvantaged patients in their hospitals.

This should include understanding the conditions that bring disadvantaged people to the hospital in disproportionate numbers, Dr. Braveman said, and getting involved in initiatives intended to address them. For example, after observing that disproportionate numbers of poor kids are hospitalized with asthma, hospitalists might connect with community groups that can help address pest abatement in low-income housing.

Health equity efforts should not just focus on socioeconomically or racially disadvantaged groups either, Dr. Braveman and Dr. Fitterman argue. They must also address others who are marginalized, like patients who are disabled, elderly, obese, non–English speaking, or gender nonconforming.

Dr. Fitterman said his hospital leadership has made health equity a priority and believes successful health equity practices involve good leadership, becoming aware of and addressing unconscious bias, and efforts to address the social determinants that can cut through health disparities.

“The focus of our last leadership retreat was diversity and health disparities,” Dr. Fitterman said. “It starts at the top down. I bring that to our faculty and site directors: everyone takes an online test to raise their awareness of unconscious bias.”

Dr. Smothers serves on the board of the Center for Health Equity and Wellness at Adventist HealthCare, which works to improve access to “culturally appropriate care, and provides community wellness outreach and education.” He said that, in addition to programs at the Center which address disparities, his hospital has also established teams of doctors, nurses, case managers, and transitional care nurses to help redirect patients to “more appropriate, less costly services, such as primary care, urgent care, home care, and subacute care,” when it is in the patient’s best interest.

Not only are Adventist’s hospitalists aware of community resources available to their patients, they are also culturally diverse, Dr. Smothers said, noting that they are “well equipped to manage our diverse patient population, including those who lack adequate health care.”

Additionally, Dr. Smothers said: “We engage our hospitalists in care coordination, encouraging them to make recommendations on alternative treatment locations and/or options at the point of entry.” And all admitted patients with chronic conditions are provided with a month’s supply of medication and schedule transportation for their follow-up appointment upon discharge.

“We need to inquire about social determinants that may prohibit our success with our patients,” said Dr. Fitterman. “You are not always going to be able to fix it, but it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try.”
 

References

1. Braveman P, et al. What is health equity? And what difference does a definition make? Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Published May 2017. Accessed July 15, 2017.

2. Communities in Action: Pathways to Health Equity. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Published Jan. 11, 2017. Accessed July 15, 2017.

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Pediatric hospitalists take on the challenge of antibiotic stewardship

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Quality-improvement approach aligns well with stewardship

 

When Carol Glaser, MD, was in training, the philosophy around antibiotic prescribing often went something like this: “Ten days of antibiotics is good, but let’s do a few more days just to be sure,” she said.

Today, however, the new mantra is “less is more.” Dr. Glaser is an experienced pediatric infectious disease physician and the lead physician for pediatric antimicrobial stewardship at The Permanente Medical Group, Kaiser Permanente, at the Oakland (Calif.) Medical Center. While antibiotic stewardship is an issue relevant to nearly all hospitalists, for pediatric patients, the considerations can be unique and particularly serious.

Dr. Shah
For instance, “we know there is a potential impact [of antibiotics] on the microbiome, and, from a pediatric standpoint, it’s not entirely clear what the consequences are for those types of changes,” said pediatric hospitalist Samir Shah, MD, MSCE, SFHM. “With children, the potential consequences may be far more significant, and we’re just at the cusp of beginning to understand what those are. … It’s important to think about long-term consequences in the face of uncertainty.”

Dr. Shah, a pediatric infectious disease physician at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, spoke last spring at HM17, the Society of Hospital Medicine’s annual meeting. His talk drew from issues raised on pediatric hospital medicine electronic mailing lists and from audience questions. These centered on decisions regarding the use of intravenous versus oral antibiotics for pediatric patients – or what he refers to as intravenous-to-oral conversion – as well as antibiotic treatment duration.

“For many conditions in pediatrics, we used to treat with intravenous antibiotics initially – and sometimes for the entire course – and now we’re using oral antibiotics for the entire course,” Dr. Shah said. He noted that urinary tract infections were once treated with IV antibiotics in the hospital but are now routinely treated orally in an outpatient setting.

Dr. Shah cited two studies, both of which he coauthored as part of the Pediatric Research in Inpatient Settings Network, which compared intravenous versus oral antibiotics treatments given after discharge: The first, published in JAMA Pediatrics in 2014, examined treatment for osteomyelitis, while the second, which focused on complicated pneumonia, was published in Pediatrics in 2016.1,2

Both were observational, retrospective studies involving more than 2,000 children across more than 30 hospitals. The JAMA Pediatrics study found that roughly half of the patients were discharged with a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) line, and half were prescribed oral antibiotics. In some hospitals, 100% of patients were sent home with a PICC line, and in others, all children were sent home on oral antibiotics. Although treatment failure rates were the same for both groups, 15% of the patients sent home with a PICC line had to return to the emergency department because of PICC-related complications. Some were hospitalized.1

The Pediatrics study found less variation in PICC versus oral antibiotic use across hospitals for patients with complicated pneumonia, but the treatment failure rate was slightly higher for PICC patients at 3.2%, compared with 2.6% for those on oral antibiotics. This difference, however, was not statistically significant. PICC-related complications were observed in 7.1% of patients with PICC lines also were more likely to experience adverse drug reactions, compared with patients on oral antibiotics.2

“PICC lines have some advantages, particularly when children are unable or unwilling to take oral antibiotics, but they also have risks” said Dr. Shah. “If outcomes are equivalent, why would you subject patients to the risks of a catheter? And, every time they get a fever at home with a PICC line, they need urgent evaluation for the possibility of a catheter-associated bacterial infection. There is an emotional cost, as well, to taking care of catheters in the home setting.”

Additionally, economic pressures are compelling hospitals to reduce costs and resource utilization while maintaining or improving the quality of care, Dr. Shah pointed out. “Hospitalists do many things well, and quality improvement is one of those areas. That approach really aligns with antimicrobial stewardship, and there is greater incentive with episode-based payment models and financial penalties for excess readmissions. Reducing post-discharge IV antibiotic use aligns with stewardship goals and reduces the likelihood of hospital readmissions.”

The hospital medicine division at Dr. Shah’s hospital helped assemble a multidisciplinary team involving emergency physicians, pharmacists, nursing staff, hospitalists, and infectious disease physicians to encourage the use of appropriate, narrow-spectrum antibiotics and reduce the duration of antibiotic therapies. For example, skin and soft-tissue infections that were once treated for 10-14 days are now sufficiently treated in 5-7days. These efforts to improve outcomes through better adherence to evidence-based practices, including better stewardship, earned the team the SHM Teamwork in Quality Improvement Award in 2014.

“Quality improvement is really about changing the system, and hospitalists, who excel in QI, are poised to help drive antimicrobial stewardship efforts,” Dr. Shah said.

At Oakland Medical Center, Dr. Glaser helped implement handshake rounds, an idea they adopted from a group in Colorado. Every day, with every patient, the antimicrobial stewardship team meets with representatives of the teams – pediatric intensive care, the wards, the NICU, and others – to review antibiotic treatment plans for the choice of antimicrobial drug, for the duration of treatment, and for specific conditions. “We work really closely with hospitalists and our strong pediatric pharmacy team every day to ask: ‘Do we have the right dose? Do we really need to use this antibiotic?’ ” Dr. Glaser said.

Last year, she also worked to incorporate antimicrobial stewardship principles into the hospital’s residency program. “I think the most important thing we’re doing is changing the culture,” she said. “For these young physicians, we’re giving them the knowledge to empower them rather than telling them what to do and giving them a better, fundamental understanding of infectious disease.”

For instance, most pediatric respiratory illnesses are caused by a virus, yet physicians will still prescribe antibiotics for a host of reasons – including the expectations of parents, the guesswork that can go into diagnosing a young patient who cannot describe what is wrong, and the fear that children will get sicker if an antibiotic is not started early.

“A lot of it is figuring out the best approach with the least amount of side effects but covering what we need to cover for a given patient,” she said.

A number of physicians from Dr. Glaser’s team presented stewardship data from their hospital at the July 2017 Pediatric Hospital Medicine meeting in Nashville, demonstrating that, overall, they are using fewer antibiotics and that fewer of those used are broad spectrum. This satisfies the “pillars of stewardship,” Dr. Glaser said. Use antibiotics only when you need them, use them only as long as you need, and then make sure you use the most narrow-spectrum antibiotic you possibly can, she said.

Oakland Medical Center has benefited from a strong commitment to antimicrobial stewardship efforts, Dr. Glaser said, noting that many programs may lack such support, a problem that can be one of the biggest hurdles antimicrobial stewardship efforts face. The support at her hospital “has been an immense help in getting our program to where it is today.”
 

References

1. Keren R, Shah SS, Srivastava R, et al. Comparative effectiveness of intravenous vs oral antibiotics for postdischarge treatment of acute osteomyelitis in children. JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Feb:169(2):120-8.

2. Shah SS, Srivastava R, Wu S, et al. Intravenous versus oral antibiotics for postdischarge treatment of complicated pneumonia. Pediatrics. 2016 Dec;138(6). pii: e20161692.

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Quality-improvement approach aligns well with stewardship
Quality-improvement approach aligns well with stewardship

 

When Carol Glaser, MD, was in training, the philosophy around antibiotic prescribing often went something like this: “Ten days of antibiotics is good, but let’s do a few more days just to be sure,” she said.

Today, however, the new mantra is “less is more.” Dr. Glaser is an experienced pediatric infectious disease physician and the lead physician for pediatric antimicrobial stewardship at The Permanente Medical Group, Kaiser Permanente, at the Oakland (Calif.) Medical Center. While antibiotic stewardship is an issue relevant to nearly all hospitalists, for pediatric patients, the considerations can be unique and particularly serious.

Dr. Shah
For instance, “we know there is a potential impact [of antibiotics] on the microbiome, and, from a pediatric standpoint, it’s not entirely clear what the consequences are for those types of changes,” said pediatric hospitalist Samir Shah, MD, MSCE, SFHM. “With children, the potential consequences may be far more significant, and we’re just at the cusp of beginning to understand what those are. … It’s important to think about long-term consequences in the face of uncertainty.”

Dr. Shah, a pediatric infectious disease physician at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, spoke last spring at HM17, the Society of Hospital Medicine’s annual meeting. His talk drew from issues raised on pediatric hospital medicine electronic mailing lists and from audience questions. These centered on decisions regarding the use of intravenous versus oral antibiotics for pediatric patients – or what he refers to as intravenous-to-oral conversion – as well as antibiotic treatment duration.

“For many conditions in pediatrics, we used to treat with intravenous antibiotics initially – and sometimes for the entire course – and now we’re using oral antibiotics for the entire course,” Dr. Shah said. He noted that urinary tract infections were once treated with IV antibiotics in the hospital but are now routinely treated orally in an outpatient setting.

Dr. Shah cited two studies, both of which he coauthored as part of the Pediatric Research in Inpatient Settings Network, which compared intravenous versus oral antibiotics treatments given after discharge: The first, published in JAMA Pediatrics in 2014, examined treatment for osteomyelitis, while the second, which focused on complicated pneumonia, was published in Pediatrics in 2016.1,2

Both were observational, retrospective studies involving more than 2,000 children across more than 30 hospitals. The JAMA Pediatrics study found that roughly half of the patients were discharged with a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) line, and half were prescribed oral antibiotics. In some hospitals, 100% of patients were sent home with a PICC line, and in others, all children were sent home on oral antibiotics. Although treatment failure rates were the same for both groups, 15% of the patients sent home with a PICC line had to return to the emergency department because of PICC-related complications. Some were hospitalized.1

The Pediatrics study found less variation in PICC versus oral antibiotic use across hospitals for patients with complicated pneumonia, but the treatment failure rate was slightly higher for PICC patients at 3.2%, compared with 2.6% for those on oral antibiotics. This difference, however, was not statistically significant. PICC-related complications were observed in 7.1% of patients with PICC lines also were more likely to experience adverse drug reactions, compared with patients on oral antibiotics.2

“PICC lines have some advantages, particularly when children are unable or unwilling to take oral antibiotics, but they also have risks” said Dr. Shah. “If outcomes are equivalent, why would you subject patients to the risks of a catheter? And, every time they get a fever at home with a PICC line, they need urgent evaluation for the possibility of a catheter-associated bacterial infection. There is an emotional cost, as well, to taking care of catheters in the home setting.”

Additionally, economic pressures are compelling hospitals to reduce costs and resource utilization while maintaining or improving the quality of care, Dr. Shah pointed out. “Hospitalists do many things well, and quality improvement is one of those areas. That approach really aligns with antimicrobial stewardship, and there is greater incentive with episode-based payment models and financial penalties for excess readmissions. Reducing post-discharge IV antibiotic use aligns with stewardship goals and reduces the likelihood of hospital readmissions.”

The hospital medicine division at Dr. Shah’s hospital helped assemble a multidisciplinary team involving emergency physicians, pharmacists, nursing staff, hospitalists, and infectious disease physicians to encourage the use of appropriate, narrow-spectrum antibiotics and reduce the duration of antibiotic therapies. For example, skin and soft-tissue infections that were once treated for 10-14 days are now sufficiently treated in 5-7days. These efforts to improve outcomes through better adherence to evidence-based practices, including better stewardship, earned the team the SHM Teamwork in Quality Improvement Award in 2014.

“Quality improvement is really about changing the system, and hospitalists, who excel in QI, are poised to help drive antimicrobial stewardship efforts,” Dr. Shah said.

At Oakland Medical Center, Dr. Glaser helped implement handshake rounds, an idea they adopted from a group in Colorado. Every day, with every patient, the antimicrobial stewardship team meets with representatives of the teams – pediatric intensive care, the wards, the NICU, and others – to review antibiotic treatment plans for the choice of antimicrobial drug, for the duration of treatment, and for specific conditions. “We work really closely with hospitalists and our strong pediatric pharmacy team every day to ask: ‘Do we have the right dose? Do we really need to use this antibiotic?’ ” Dr. Glaser said.

Last year, she also worked to incorporate antimicrobial stewardship principles into the hospital’s residency program. “I think the most important thing we’re doing is changing the culture,” she said. “For these young physicians, we’re giving them the knowledge to empower them rather than telling them what to do and giving them a better, fundamental understanding of infectious disease.”

For instance, most pediatric respiratory illnesses are caused by a virus, yet physicians will still prescribe antibiotics for a host of reasons – including the expectations of parents, the guesswork that can go into diagnosing a young patient who cannot describe what is wrong, and the fear that children will get sicker if an antibiotic is not started early.

“A lot of it is figuring out the best approach with the least amount of side effects but covering what we need to cover for a given patient,” she said.

A number of physicians from Dr. Glaser’s team presented stewardship data from their hospital at the July 2017 Pediatric Hospital Medicine meeting in Nashville, demonstrating that, overall, they are using fewer antibiotics and that fewer of those used are broad spectrum. This satisfies the “pillars of stewardship,” Dr. Glaser said. Use antibiotics only when you need them, use them only as long as you need, and then make sure you use the most narrow-spectrum antibiotic you possibly can, she said.

Oakland Medical Center has benefited from a strong commitment to antimicrobial stewardship efforts, Dr. Glaser said, noting that many programs may lack such support, a problem that can be one of the biggest hurdles antimicrobial stewardship efforts face. The support at her hospital “has been an immense help in getting our program to where it is today.”
 

References

1. Keren R, Shah SS, Srivastava R, et al. Comparative effectiveness of intravenous vs oral antibiotics for postdischarge treatment of acute osteomyelitis in children. JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Feb:169(2):120-8.

2. Shah SS, Srivastava R, Wu S, et al. Intravenous versus oral antibiotics for postdischarge treatment of complicated pneumonia. Pediatrics. 2016 Dec;138(6). pii: e20161692.

 

When Carol Glaser, MD, was in training, the philosophy around antibiotic prescribing often went something like this: “Ten days of antibiotics is good, but let’s do a few more days just to be sure,” she said.

Today, however, the new mantra is “less is more.” Dr. Glaser is an experienced pediatric infectious disease physician and the lead physician for pediatric antimicrobial stewardship at The Permanente Medical Group, Kaiser Permanente, at the Oakland (Calif.) Medical Center. While antibiotic stewardship is an issue relevant to nearly all hospitalists, for pediatric patients, the considerations can be unique and particularly serious.

Dr. Shah
For instance, “we know there is a potential impact [of antibiotics] on the microbiome, and, from a pediatric standpoint, it’s not entirely clear what the consequences are for those types of changes,” said pediatric hospitalist Samir Shah, MD, MSCE, SFHM. “With children, the potential consequences may be far more significant, and we’re just at the cusp of beginning to understand what those are. … It’s important to think about long-term consequences in the face of uncertainty.”

Dr. Shah, a pediatric infectious disease physician at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, spoke last spring at HM17, the Society of Hospital Medicine’s annual meeting. His talk drew from issues raised on pediatric hospital medicine electronic mailing lists and from audience questions. These centered on decisions regarding the use of intravenous versus oral antibiotics for pediatric patients – or what he refers to as intravenous-to-oral conversion – as well as antibiotic treatment duration.

“For many conditions in pediatrics, we used to treat with intravenous antibiotics initially – and sometimes for the entire course – and now we’re using oral antibiotics for the entire course,” Dr. Shah said. He noted that urinary tract infections were once treated with IV antibiotics in the hospital but are now routinely treated orally in an outpatient setting.

Dr. Shah cited two studies, both of which he coauthored as part of the Pediatric Research in Inpatient Settings Network, which compared intravenous versus oral antibiotics treatments given after discharge: The first, published in JAMA Pediatrics in 2014, examined treatment for osteomyelitis, while the second, which focused on complicated pneumonia, was published in Pediatrics in 2016.1,2

Both were observational, retrospective studies involving more than 2,000 children across more than 30 hospitals. The JAMA Pediatrics study found that roughly half of the patients were discharged with a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) line, and half were prescribed oral antibiotics. In some hospitals, 100% of patients were sent home with a PICC line, and in others, all children were sent home on oral antibiotics. Although treatment failure rates were the same for both groups, 15% of the patients sent home with a PICC line had to return to the emergency department because of PICC-related complications. Some were hospitalized.1

The Pediatrics study found less variation in PICC versus oral antibiotic use across hospitals for patients with complicated pneumonia, but the treatment failure rate was slightly higher for PICC patients at 3.2%, compared with 2.6% for those on oral antibiotics. This difference, however, was not statistically significant. PICC-related complications were observed in 7.1% of patients with PICC lines also were more likely to experience adverse drug reactions, compared with patients on oral antibiotics.2

“PICC lines have some advantages, particularly when children are unable or unwilling to take oral antibiotics, but they also have risks” said Dr. Shah. “If outcomes are equivalent, why would you subject patients to the risks of a catheter? And, every time they get a fever at home with a PICC line, they need urgent evaluation for the possibility of a catheter-associated bacterial infection. There is an emotional cost, as well, to taking care of catheters in the home setting.”

Additionally, economic pressures are compelling hospitals to reduce costs and resource utilization while maintaining or improving the quality of care, Dr. Shah pointed out. “Hospitalists do many things well, and quality improvement is one of those areas. That approach really aligns with antimicrobial stewardship, and there is greater incentive with episode-based payment models and financial penalties for excess readmissions. Reducing post-discharge IV antibiotic use aligns with stewardship goals and reduces the likelihood of hospital readmissions.”

The hospital medicine division at Dr. Shah’s hospital helped assemble a multidisciplinary team involving emergency physicians, pharmacists, nursing staff, hospitalists, and infectious disease physicians to encourage the use of appropriate, narrow-spectrum antibiotics and reduce the duration of antibiotic therapies. For example, skin and soft-tissue infections that were once treated for 10-14 days are now sufficiently treated in 5-7days. These efforts to improve outcomes through better adherence to evidence-based practices, including better stewardship, earned the team the SHM Teamwork in Quality Improvement Award in 2014.

“Quality improvement is really about changing the system, and hospitalists, who excel in QI, are poised to help drive antimicrobial stewardship efforts,” Dr. Shah said.

At Oakland Medical Center, Dr. Glaser helped implement handshake rounds, an idea they adopted from a group in Colorado. Every day, with every patient, the antimicrobial stewardship team meets with representatives of the teams – pediatric intensive care, the wards, the NICU, and others – to review antibiotic treatment plans for the choice of antimicrobial drug, for the duration of treatment, and for specific conditions. “We work really closely with hospitalists and our strong pediatric pharmacy team every day to ask: ‘Do we have the right dose? Do we really need to use this antibiotic?’ ” Dr. Glaser said.

Last year, she also worked to incorporate antimicrobial stewardship principles into the hospital’s residency program. “I think the most important thing we’re doing is changing the culture,” she said. “For these young physicians, we’re giving them the knowledge to empower them rather than telling them what to do and giving them a better, fundamental understanding of infectious disease.”

For instance, most pediatric respiratory illnesses are caused by a virus, yet physicians will still prescribe antibiotics for a host of reasons – including the expectations of parents, the guesswork that can go into diagnosing a young patient who cannot describe what is wrong, and the fear that children will get sicker if an antibiotic is not started early.

“A lot of it is figuring out the best approach with the least amount of side effects but covering what we need to cover for a given patient,” she said.

A number of physicians from Dr. Glaser’s team presented stewardship data from their hospital at the July 2017 Pediatric Hospital Medicine meeting in Nashville, demonstrating that, overall, they are using fewer antibiotics and that fewer of those used are broad spectrum. This satisfies the “pillars of stewardship,” Dr. Glaser said. Use antibiotics only when you need them, use them only as long as you need, and then make sure you use the most narrow-spectrum antibiotic you possibly can, she said.

Oakland Medical Center has benefited from a strong commitment to antimicrobial stewardship efforts, Dr. Glaser said, noting that many programs may lack such support, a problem that can be one of the biggest hurdles antimicrobial stewardship efforts face. The support at her hospital “has been an immense help in getting our program to where it is today.”
 

References

1. Keren R, Shah SS, Srivastava R, et al. Comparative effectiveness of intravenous vs oral antibiotics for postdischarge treatment of acute osteomyelitis in children. JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Feb:169(2):120-8.

2. Shah SS, Srivastava R, Wu S, et al. Intravenous versus oral antibiotics for postdischarge treatment of complicated pneumonia. Pediatrics. 2016 Dec;138(6). pii: e20161692.

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More studies show Medicaid expansion has benefited hospitals

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But state budget troubles continue to threaten hospital finances

 

In 2016, a series of studies showed the impact of Medicaid expansion on hospitals.1 The news was good: Hospitals in states that accepted Medicaid expansion through the Affordable Care Act saw dramatic reductions in their uninsured patient populations, increases in their Medicaid stays, and reductions in uncompensated care costs.1,2

In 2017, additional data continue to show that Medicaid expansion has been a boon to hospitals, including an April 2017 report published by the Urban Institute and a May 2017 analysis from The Commonwealth Fund.3,4 Both show that some of the hospitals that need it most are reaping the greatest benefits of expansion.

Dr. Fredric Blavin
“We found that small hospitals and hospitals in non-metro areas experienced larger gains in profit margins in states that expanded Medicaid compared to their counterparts in states that did not expand Medicaid,” said Fredric Blavin, PhD, senior research associate at the Urban Institute’s Health Policy Center. His report was an update to an October 2016 study he authored in the Journal of the American Medical Association.5 Notably, he said, these gains were among hospitals that are “financially vulnerable and prone to closures.”

At the same time, Craig Garthwaite, PhD, MPP, lead author of The Commonwealth Fund report, said Medicaid expansion “wiped out roughly half of the uncompensated care faced by hospitals, with relatively little or no decline in nonexpansion states.” To date, 19 states have not expanded Medicaid.

With Medicaid facing an uncertain future, Dr. Blavin said some experts are concerned about what could happen to vulnerable hospitals if Medicaid expansion is repealed or scaled back. Indeed, President Trump and Congressional Republicans have proposed significantly altering Medicaid by either transitioning it to block grants or by capping federal funding for the entitlement.6,7

“We wanted to give people a sense of the stakes of what you’re talking about with repeal of the Affordable Care Act and go back to a system where patients are able to get emergency care at the hospital but not the complete care they get if they’re insured. We’re not going to be paying hospitals for that care, so the hospital has that coming out of their profit margin,” said Dr. Garthwaite, professor of strategy and codirector of the Health Enterprise Management Program in the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill.

The Commonwealth Fund report used data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital Cost Reports to examine 1,154 hospitals in expansion and nonexpansion states. It built on a Health Affairs study Dr. Garthwaite and his coauthors published in 2016.2 The analysis found that between 2013 and 2014, uncompensated care costs declined dramatically in expansion states and continued into 2015, falling from 3.9% to 2.3% of operating costs. Meanwhile, hospitals in nonexpansion states saw uncompensated care costs drop just 0.3-0.4 percentage points. The largest reductions were seen by hospitals providing the highest proportion of care to low-income and uninsured patients and overall savings to hospitals in expansion states amounted to $6.2 billion.

“Any contraction of the Medicaid expansion will reduce overall health insurance coverage and could have important financial implications for hospitals,” Dr. Blavin said. “We are likely to see large increases in expenses attributable to uninsured patients, declines in Medicaid revenue, and increases in uncompensated care burdens that can be a significant financial strain to hospitals.”

As part of a project supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Urban Institute in May 2011 began to track and study the impact of health reform. The report Dr. Blavin authored is part of this endeavor and utilized data from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey and the CMS Health Care Cost Reports to update the 2016 JAMA study. It compared hospitals in expansion states to those in nonexpansion states between fiscal years 2011 and 2015, excluding hospitals in states that expanded before January 2014. It examined hospital-reported data on uncompensated care, uncompensated care as a percentage of total hospital expenses, Medicaid revenue, Medicaid as a percentage of total revenue, operating margins, and excess margins.

The analysis found that Medicaid expansion resulted in a $3.2 million reduction in uncompensated care and a $5.0 million increase in mean annual Medicaid revenue per hospital. Expansion-state hospitals also saw improvements in excess and operating margins relative to nonexpansion state hospitals.

Dr. Ajay Kumar
However, Ajay Kumar, MD, FACP, SFHM, chief of medicine at Hartford (Conn.) Hospital, said his hospital has not observed these same trends. Connecticut expanded Medicaid in 2010. “We have seen some decline in uncompensated care; however, revenue has not improved,” Dr. Kumar said. “Medicaid expansion has not been economically favorable to us, not because of intent of the ACA, but due to state policies.”

In Connecticut, Medicaid reimbursement rates are among the lowest in the country.8 The state uses a provider tax to finance Medicaid but, facing a budget deficit, state leaders have dramatically reduced the amount of money returned to hospitals in recent years.9

“Our Medicaid patient volume has gone up but our margins have declined because the return on investment is so low,” added Dr. Kumar, a practicing hospitalist and member of the SHM Public Policy Committee. He is concerned about what happens if Medicaid is capped or transitioned to a block grant, since “block grants have not been favorable so far … It would further squeeze us.”

In Arizona, Steve Narang, MD, MHCM, a hospitalist and CEO of Banner–University Medical Center Phoenix (B-UMCP), already knows what it’s like when Medicaid funding expands and then contracts. In 2001, the state expanded Medicaid to 100% of the federal poverty level for childless adults but then in 2011, in the throes of recession, the state froze its match on federal dollars. Prior to the freeze, charity care and bad debt made up 9% of B-UMCP’s net revenue. After the state cut to Medicaid, the hospital’s uncompensated care doubled; charity care and bad debt spiked to 20% of net revenue. Once the freeze was lifted and the state expanded Medicaid through the ACA in 2014, bad debt and charity care plummeted to 7% of revenue and remains in the single digits, Dr. Narang said.

“You hear a lot, especially in debates, about Medicaid being bad coverage … From a hospital perspective, if you’re taking care of a patient who is uninsured versus a patient with Medicaid coverage, that hospital is likely better off financially treating the patient with Medicaid coverage,” said Dr. Blavin.

Dr. Steve Narang
For Dr. Narang, who practiced as a pediatric hospitalist for more than a decade before becoming a hospital leader, the issue goes beyond the economics of his hospital.

“From a basic commitment to our fellow human beings, are we doing the right thing as a country?” he asked, noting that states and the federal government must address the economic realities of health care while also providing safety nets for patients. “We have to do both. But I have faith that the state and federal government will find a model and we will continue to focus on what we can control.”
 

 

 

References

1. Tyrrell K. Benefits of Medicaid Expansion for Hospitalists. The Hospitalist. 2016 March;2016(3). http://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/121832/benefits-medicaid-expansion-hospitalists. Accessed May 25, 2017.

2. Dranove D., Garthwaite C., Ody C. Uncompensated Care Decreased at Hospitals in Medicaid Expansion States but Not at Hospitals in Nonexpansion States. Health Affairs, Aug. 2016 35(8):1471-9. http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/35/8/1471.abstract. Accessed May 25, 2017.

3. Blavin F. How Has the ACA Changed Finances for Different Types of Hospitals? Updated Insights from 2015 Cost Report Data. Urban Institute. Published April 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/89446/2001215-how-has-the-aca-changed-finances-for-different-types-of-hospitals.pdf.

4. Dranove D., Garthwaite C., Ody C. The Impact of the ACA’s Medicaid Expansion on Hospitals’ Uncompensated Care Burden and the Potential Effects of Repeal. Published May 3, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2017/may/aca-medicaid-expansion-hospital-uncompensated-care.

5. Blavin F. Association Between the 2014 Medicaid Expansion and US Hospital Finances. http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2565750. JAMA 2016;316(14):1475-1483. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.14765

6. President Trump’s 2018 Budget Proposal Reduces Federal Funding for Coverage of Children in Medicaid and CHIP. Kaiser Family Foundation. Published March 23, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://kff.org/medicaid/fact-sheet/presidents-2018-budget-proposal-reduces-federal-funding-for-coverage-of-children-in-medicaid-and-chip/

7. Paradise J. Restructuring Medicaid in the American Health Care Act: Five Key Considerations. Kaiser Family Foundation. Published March 15, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/restructuring-medicaid-in-the-american-health-care-act-five-key-considerations/

8. Medicaid Hospital Payment: A comparison across states and to Medicare. MACPAC Issue Brief. Published April 2017.

9. Levin Becker A. Hospitals blast Malloy’s proposal to subject them to property taxes. Published Feb. 8, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. https://ctmirror.org/2017/02/08/hospitals-blast-malloys-proposal-to-subject-them-to-property-taxes/

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But state budget troubles continue to threaten hospital finances
But state budget troubles continue to threaten hospital finances

 

In 2016, a series of studies showed the impact of Medicaid expansion on hospitals.1 The news was good: Hospitals in states that accepted Medicaid expansion through the Affordable Care Act saw dramatic reductions in their uninsured patient populations, increases in their Medicaid stays, and reductions in uncompensated care costs.1,2

In 2017, additional data continue to show that Medicaid expansion has been a boon to hospitals, including an April 2017 report published by the Urban Institute and a May 2017 analysis from The Commonwealth Fund.3,4 Both show that some of the hospitals that need it most are reaping the greatest benefits of expansion.

Dr. Fredric Blavin
“We found that small hospitals and hospitals in non-metro areas experienced larger gains in profit margins in states that expanded Medicaid compared to their counterparts in states that did not expand Medicaid,” said Fredric Blavin, PhD, senior research associate at the Urban Institute’s Health Policy Center. His report was an update to an October 2016 study he authored in the Journal of the American Medical Association.5 Notably, he said, these gains were among hospitals that are “financially vulnerable and prone to closures.”

At the same time, Craig Garthwaite, PhD, MPP, lead author of The Commonwealth Fund report, said Medicaid expansion “wiped out roughly half of the uncompensated care faced by hospitals, with relatively little or no decline in nonexpansion states.” To date, 19 states have not expanded Medicaid.

With Medicaid facing an uncertain future, Dr. Blavin said some experts are concerned about what could happen to vulnerable hospitals if Medicaid expansion is repealed or scaled back. Indeed, President Trump and Congressional Republicans have proposed significantly altering Medicaid by either transitioning it to block grants or by capping federal funding for the entitlement.6,7

“We wanted to give people a sense of the stakes of what you’re talking about with repeal of the Affordable Care Act and go back to a system where patients are able to get emergency care at the hospital but not the complete care they get if they’re insured. We’re not going to be paying hospitals for that care, so the hospital has that coming out of their profit margin,” said Dr. Garthwaite, professor of strategy and codirector of the Health Enterprise Management Program in the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill.

The Commonwealth Fund report used data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital Cost Reports to examine 1,154 hospitals in expansion and nonexpansion states. It built on a Health Affairs study Dr. Garthwaite and his coauthors published in 2016.2 The analysis found that between 2013 and 2014, uncompensated care costs declined dramatically in expansion states and continued into 2015, falling from 3.9% to 2.3% of operating costs. Meanwhile, hospitals in nonexpansion states saw uncompensated care costs drop just 0.3-0.4 percentage points. The largest reductions were seen by hospitals providing the highest proportion of care to low-income and uninsured patients and overall savings to hospitals in expansion states amounted to $6.2 billion.

“Any contraction of the Medicaid expansion will reduce overall health insurance coverage and could have important financial implications for hospitals,” Dr. Blavin said. “We are likely to see large increases in expenses attributable to uninsured patients, declines in Medicaid revenue, and increases in uncompensated care burdens that can be a significant financial strain to hospitals.”

As part of a project supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Urban Institute in May 2011 began to track and study the impact of health reform. The report Dr. Blavin authored is part of this endeavor and utilized data from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey and the CMS Health Care Cost Reports to update the 2016 JAMA study. It compared hospitals in expansion states to those in nonexpansion states between fiscal years 2011 and 2015, excluding hospitals in states that expanded before January 2014. It examined hospital-reported data on uncompensated care, uncompensated care as a percentage of total hospital expenses, Medicaid revenue, Medicaid as a percentage of total revenue, operating margins, and excess margins.

The analysis found that Medicaid expansion resulted in a $3.2 million reduction in uncompensated care and a $5.0 million increase in mean annual Medicaid revenue per hospital. Expansion-state hospitals also saw improvements in excess and operating margins relative to nonexpansion state hospitals.

Dr. Ajay Kumar
However, Ajay Kumar, MD, FACP, SFHM, chief of medicine at Hartford (Conn.) Hospital, said his hospital has not observed these same trends. Connecticut expanded Medicaid in 2010. “We have seen some decline in uncompensated care; however, revenue has not improved,” Dr. Kumar said. “Medicaid expansion has not been economically favorable to us, not because of intent of the ACA, but due to state policies.”

In Connecticut, Medicaid reimbursement rates are among the lowest in the country.8 The state uses a provider tax to finance Medicaid but, facing a budget deficit, state leaders have dramatically reduced the amount of money returned to hospitals in recent years.9

“Our Medicaid patient volume has gone up but our margins have declined because the return on investment is so low,” added Dr. Kumar, a practicing hospitalist and member of the SHM Public Policy Committee. He is concerned about what happens if Medicaid is capped or transitioned to a block grant, since “block grants have not been favorable so far … It would further squeeze us.”

In Arizona, Steve Narang, MD, MHCM, a hospitalist and CEO of Banner–University Medical Center Phoenix (B-UMCP), already knows what it’s like when Medicaid funding expands and then contracts. In 2001, the state expanded Medicaid to 100% of the federal poverty level for childless adults but then in 2011, in the throes of recession, the state froze its match on federal dollars. Prior to the freeze, charity care and bad debt made up 9% of B-UMCP’s net revenue. After the state cut to Medicaid, the hospital’s uncompensated care doubled; charity care and bad debt spiked to 20% of net revenue. Once the freeze was lifted and the state expanded Medicaid through the ACA in 2014, bad debt and charity care plummeted to 7% of revenue and remains in the single digits, Dr. Narang said.

“You hear a lot, especially in debates, about Medicaid being bad coverage … From a hospital perspective, if you’re taking care of a patient who is uninsured versus a patient with Medicaid coverage, that hospital is likely better off financially treating the patient with Medicaid coverage,” said Dr. Blavin.

Dr. Steve Narang
For Dr. Narang, who practiced as a pediatric hospitalist for more than a decade before becoming a hospital leader, the issue goes beyond the economics of his hospital.

“From a basic commitment to our fellow human beings, are we doing the right thing as a country?” he asked, noting that states and the federal government must address the economic realities of health care while also providing safety nets for patients. “We have to do both. But I have faith that the state and federal government will find a model and we will continue to focus on what we can control.”
 

 

 

References

1. Tyrrell K. Benefits of Medicaid Expansion for Hospitalists. The Hospitalist. 2016 March;2016(3). http://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/121832/benefits-medicaid-expansion-hospitalists. Accessed May 25, 2017.

2. Dranove D., Garthwaite C., Ody C. Uncompensated Care Decreased at Hospitals in Medicaid Expansion States but Not at Hospitals in Nonexpansion States. Health Affairs, Aug. 2016 35(8):1471-9. http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/35/8/1471.abstract. Accessed May 25, 2017.

3. Blavin F. How Has the ACA Changed Finances for Different Types of Hospitals? Updated Insights from 2015 Cost Report Data. Urban Institute. Published April 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/89446/2001215-how-has-the-aca-changed-finances-for-different-types-of-hospitals.pdf.

4. Dranove D., Garthwaite C., Ody C. The Impact of the ACA’s Medicaid Expansion on Hospitals’ Uncompensated Care Burden and the Potential Effects of Repeal. Published May 3, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2017/may/aca-medicaid-expansion-hospital-uncompensated-care.

5. Blavin F. Association Between the 2014 Medicaid Expansion and US Hospital Finances. http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2565750. JAMA 2016;316(14):1475-1483. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.14765

6. President Trump’s 2018 Budget Proposal Reduces Federal Funding for Coverage of Children in Medicaid and CHIP. Kaiser Family Foundation. Published March 23, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://kff.org/medicaid/fact-sheet/presidents-2018-budget-proposal-reduces-federal-funding-for-coverage-of-children-in-medicaid-and-chip/

7. Paradise J. Restructuring Medicaid in the American Health Care Act: Five Key Considerations. Kaiser Family Foundation. Published March 15, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/restructuring-medicaid-in-the-american-health-care-act-five-key-considerations/

8. Medicaid Hospital Payment: A comparison across states and to Medicare. MACPAC Issue Brief. Published April 2017.

9. Levin Becker A. Hospitals blast Malloy’s proposal to subject them to property taxes. Published Feb. 8, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. https://ctmirror.org/2017/02/08/hospitals-blast-malloys-proposal-to-subject-them-to-property-taxes/

 

In 2016, a series of studies showed the impact of Medicaid expansion on hospitals.1 The news was good: Hospitals in states that accepted Medicaid expansion through the Affordable Care Act saw dramatic reductions in their uninsured patient populations, increases in their Medicaid stays, and reductions in uncompensated care costs.1,2

In 2017, additional data continue to show that Medicaid expansion has been a boon to hospitals, including an April 2017 report published by the Urban Institute and a May 2017 analysis from The Commonwealth Fund.3,4 Both show that some of the hospitals that need it most are reaping the greatest benefits of expansion.

Dr. Fredric Blavin
“We found that small hospitals and hospitals in non-metro areas experienced larger gains in profit margins in states that expanded Medicaid compared to their counterparts in states that did not expand Medicaid,” said Fredric Blavin, PhD, senior research associate at the Urban Institute’s Health Policy Center. His report was an update to an October 2016 study he authored in the Journal of the American Medical Association.5 Notably, he said, these gains were among hospitals that are “financially vulnerable and prone to closures.”

At the same time, Craig Garthwaite, PhD, MPP, lead author of The Commonwealth Fund report, said Medicaid expansion “wiped out roughly half of the uncompensated care faced by hospitals, with relatively little or no decline in nonexpansion states.” To date, 19 states have not expanded Medicaid.

With Medicaid facing an uncertain future, Dr. Blavin said some experts are concerned about what could happen to vulnerable hospitals if Medicaid expansion is repealed or scaled back. Indeed, President Trump and Congressional Republicans have proposed significantly altering Medicaid by either transitioning it to block grants or by capping federal funding for the entitlement.6,7

“We wanted to give people a sense of the stakes of what you’re talking about with repeal of the Affordable Care Act and go back to a system where patients are able to get emergency care at the hospital but not the complete care they get if they’re insured. We’re not going to be paying hospitals for that care, so the hospital has that coming out of their profit margin,” said Dr. Garthwaite, professor of strategy and codirector of the Health Enterprise Management Program in the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill.

The Commonwealth Fund report used data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital Cost Reports to examine 1,154 hospitals in expansion and nonexpansion states. It built on a Health Affairs study Dr. Garthwaite and his coauthors published in 2016.2 The analysis found that between 2013 and 2014, uncompensated care costs declined dramatically in expansion states and continued into 2015, falling from 3.9% to 2.3% of operating costs. Meanwhile, hospitals in nonexpansion states saw uncompensated care costs drop just 0.3-0.4 percentage points. The largest reductions were seen by hospitals providing the highest proportion of care to low-income and uninsured patients and overall savings to hospitals in expansion states amounted to $6.2 billion.

“Any contraction of the Medicaid expansion will reduce overall health insurance coverage and could have important financial implications for hospitals,” Dr. Blavin said. “We are likely to see large increases in expenses attributable to uninsured patients, declines in Medicaid revenue, and increases in uncompensated care burdens that can be a significant financial strain to hospitals.”

As part of a project supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Urban Institute in May 2011 began to track and study the impact of health reform. The report Dr. Blavin authored is part of this endeavor and utilized data from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey and the CMS Health Care Cost Reports to update the 2016 JAMA study. It compared hospitals in expansion states to those in nonexpansion states between fiscal years 2011 and 2015, excluding hospitals in states that expanded before January 2014. It examined hospital-reported data on uncompensated care, uncompensated care as a percentage of total hospital expenses, Medicaid revenue, Medicaid as a percentage of total revenue, operating margins, and excess margins.

The analysis found that Medicaid expansion resulted in a $3.2 million reduction in uncompensated care and a $5.0 million increase in mean annual Medicaid revenue per hospital. Expansion-state hospitals also saw improvements in excess and operating margins relative to nonexpansion state hospitals.

Dr. Ajay Kumar
However, Ajay Kumar, MD, FACP, SFHM, chief of medicine at Hartford (Conn.) Hospital, said his hospital has not observed these same trends. Connecticut expanded Medicaid in 2010. “We have seen some decline in uncompensated care; however, revenue has not improved,” Dr. Kumar said. “Medicaid expansion has not been economically favorable to us, not because of intent of the ACA, but due to state policies.”

In Connecticut, Medicaid reimbursement rates are among the lowest in the country.8 The state uses a provider tax to finance Medicaid but, facing a budget deficit, state leaders have dramatically reduced the amount of money returned to hospitals in recent years.9

“Our Medicaid patient volume has gone up but our margins have declined because the return on investment is so low,” added Dr. Kumar, a practicing hospitalist and member of the SHM Public Policy Committee. He is concerned about what happens if Medicaid is capped or transitioned to a block grant, since “block grants have not been favorable so far … It would further squeeze us.”

In Arizona, Steve Narang, MD, MHCM, a hospitalist and CEO of Banner–University Medical Center Phoenix (B-UMCP), already knows what it’s like when Medicaid funding expands and then contracts. In 2001, the state expanded Medicaid to 100% of the federal poverty level for childless adults but then in 2011, in the throes of recession, the state froze its match on federal dollars. Prior to the freeze, charity care and bad debt made up 9% of B-UMCP’s net revenue. After the state cut to Medicaid, the hospital’s uncompensated care doubled; charity care and bad debt spiked to 20% of net revenue. Once the freeze was lifted and the state expanded Medicaid through the ACA in 2014, bad debt and charity care plummeted to 7% of revenue and remains in the single digits, Dr. Narang said.

“You hear a lot, especially in debates, about Medicaid being bad coverage … From a hospital perspective, if you’re taking care of a patient who is uninsured versus a patient with Medicaid coverage, that hospital is likely better off financially treating the patient with Medicaid coverage,” said Dr. Blavin.

Dr. Steve Narang
For Dr. Narang, who practiced as a pediatric hospitalist for more than a decade before becoming a hospital leader, the issue goes beyond the economics of his hospital.

“From a basic commitment to our fellow human beings, are we doing the right thing as a country?” he asked, noting that states and the federal government must address the economic realities of health care while also providing safety nets for patients. “We have to do both. But I have faith that the state and federal government will find a model and we will continue to focus on what we can control.”
 

 

 

References

1. Tyrrell K. Benefits of Medicaid Expansion for Hospitalists. The Hospitalist. 2016 March;2016(3). http://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/121832/benefits-medicaid-expansion-hospitalists. Accessed May 25, 2017.

2. Dranove D., Garthwaite C., Ody C. Uncompensated Care Decreased at Hospitals in Medicaid Expansion States but Not at Hospitals in Nonexpansion States. Health Affairs, Aug. 2016 35(8):1471-9. http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/35/8/1471.abstract. Accessed May 25, 2017.

3. Blavin F. How Has the ACA Changed Finances for Different Types of Hospitals? Updated Insights from 2015 Cost Report Data. Urban Institute. Published April 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/89446/2001215-how-has-the-aca-changed-finances-for-different-types-of-hospitals.pdf.

4. Dranove D., Garthwaite C., Ody C. The Impact of the ACA’s Medicaid Expansion on Hospitals’ Uncompensated Care Burden and the Potential Effects of Repeal. Published May 3, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2017/may/aca-medicaid-expansion-hospital-uncompensated-care.

5. Blavin F. Association Between the 2014 Medicaid Expansion and US Hospital Finances. http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2565750. JAMA 2016;316(14):1475-1483. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.14765

6. President Trump’s 2018 Budget Proposal Reduces Federal Funding for Coverage of Children in Medicaid and CHIP. Kaiser Family Foundation. Published March 23, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://kff.org/medicaid/fact-sheet/presidents-2018-budget-proposal-reduces-federal-funding-for-coverage-of-children-in-medicaid-and-chip/

7. Paradise J. Restructuring Medicaid in the American Health Care Act: Five Key Considerations. Kaiser Family Foundation. Published March 15, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. http://kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/restructuring-medicaid-in-the-american-health-care-act-five-key-considerations/

8. Medicaid Hospital Payment: A comparison across states and to Medicare. MACPAC Issue Brief. Published April 2017.

9. Levin Becker A. Hospitals blast Malloy’s proposal to subject them to property taxes. Published Feb. 8, 2017. Accessed May 25, 2017. https://ctmirror.org/2017/02/08/hospitals-blast-malloys-proposal-to-subject-them-to-property-taxes/

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