Even With "ObamaCare" Upheld, Much Hard Work Remains To Protect Patients and Make Care Affordable.
Even With "ObamaCare" Upheld, Much Hard Work Remains To Protect Patients and Make Care Affordable.
Even With "ObamaCare" Upheld, Much Hard Work Remains To Protect Patients and Make Care Affordable.
with ObamaCare Upheld, Much Hard Work Remains to Protect Patients and Make Care Affordable. By Mark Graban, www.MarkGraban.com Even with this weeks Supreme Court ruling that upheld most provisions of the 2010 law, hospitals and health systems around the country will have to continue, if not accelerate, their improvement efforts that started well before the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. These practical changes, driven by proven systems engineering and management principles, often referred to as Lean thinking, will continue making care safer and less expensive, regardless of what happens in our nations capital. For example, Denver Health, the citys public safety net hospital, has used the Lean methodology, based on the famed Toyota Production System, to reduce costs by more than $135 million since 2006. By getting staff members involved in process improvement projects, quality has improved, as Denver Health ranks first in patient survival rates among academic medical centers. Outside of hospitals, Group Health Cooperative, a Washington-based health insurer and care provider, will continue its patient centered medical home (PCMH) efforts that are reducing costs while improving the quality of care. Better coordination and communication, along with increased preventive care, has led to a 29% reduction in emergency room visits and 6% fewer hospitalizations for these patients. Group Health reports that the quality of care is higher, patients have better experiences, and fewer clinicians are burned out. With Group Healths efficiency improvements, the average patient visit is actually longer with PCMH, going from 20 to 30 minutes. Using Lean methods to reduce waste in the clinicians day means they can dedicate more time to patient care instead of searching for missing information, equipment, and supplies. ThedaCare, a five-hospital health system in Wisconsin, has radically redesigned many of its emergency care and inpatient processes, for the benefit of patients and payers. For patients with chest pain, the door to balloon time (from arrival at the emergency room to the clearing of a heart blockage) fell from 90 minutes to just 37 minutes, meaning less heart damage and faster, less-expensive recoveries. For patients who are admitted, satisfaction increased from 68% to 90% with ThedaCares new collaborative care hospital methodology, where physicians, nurses, and pharmacists work as a team with a single integrated plan for a patients care. The health system has achieved impressive improvements for cardiac bypass surgery patients reducing post-operative mortality and length of stay, which leads to about 30% lower costs.
ThedaCare
has
also
reduced
the
average
neonatal
intensive
care
unit
stay
from
30
day
to
just
16,
through
better
pre-natal
care
and
the
more
careful
scheduling
of
cesarean
births.
These
improvements
clearly
benefit
mothers
and
babies
and
costs
for
the
healthcare
system,
broadly
defined,
are
reduced
greatly.
However,
due
to
the
current
structure
of
our
healthcare
payment
system,
the
savings
generated
by
the
hard
work
of
ThedaCares
employees
and
leaders
are
captured
by
the
payers
-
both
private
and
public.
Organizations
like
Group
Health
are
somewhat
unique
in
that
they
benefit
financially
by
keeping
patients
healthy
and
out
of
the
hospital.
They
are
both
the
payer
and
provider
of
care,
so
savings
in
one
part
of
the
organization
benefits
the
other.
Leading
healthcare
providers,
like
ThedaCare,
often
find
their
revenue
is
lower
as
the
result
of
shorter
hospital
stays
and
improved
patient
care.
Even
non- profits,
like
all
three
organizations
cited
here,
need
to
have
a
positive
financial
return
to
be
able
to
invest
in
their
futures.
Hospitals
and
health
systems
are
highly
motivated
by
their
mission
and
their
patients
needs.
Future
reform
efforts
need
to
go
beyond
ensuring
coverage.
They
must
focus
on
ensuring
health
systems
can
be
rewarded
financially,
or
at
least
not
be
harmed,
for
doing
the
right
thing
including
keeping
patients
healthy
and
reducing
errors
and
infections.
ABOUT MARK GRABAN Mark Graban is the author of the Shingo Award-winning book Lean Hospitals: Improving Quality, Patient Safety, and Employee Engagement and the new book Healthcare Kaizen: Engaging Front-Line Staff in Sustainable Continuous Improvements. He is also the founder of LeanBlog.org and Chief Improvement Officer of KaiNexus, a software startup. With a background in engineering and manufacturing, Graban has worked exclusively in healthcare since 2005 where he applies "lean" and Toyota Production System principles to improve quality of care and patient safety, to improve the customer/patient experience, to help the development of medical professionals and employees, and to help build strong organizations for the long term. For more information, please visit www.MarkGraban.com.