Posts Tagged ‘Harvard School of Public Health’

Do Corporate Healthcare Incentives Work?

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

Healthcare insurance incentives are somewhat successful, according to the National Business Group on Health, which says approximately 68 percent of its members either offer their employees discounts on premiums if they quit smoking or start eating more healthfully or begin exercise programs.  The companies have a vested interest in these programs because they keep healthcare costs down and add up to fewer sick days.

The impetus for healthcare incentives is the Safeway Amendment that is one part of President Barack Obama’s healthcare reform legislation.  The amendment lets companies reimburse employees as much as 20 percent of their insurance premiums if they take part in wellness programs.  This percentage rises to 30 percent in 2014 and to 50 percent with special governmental approval.  The amendment is so named because of the support of Safeway CEO Steve Burd, who wrote an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal in 2009 about how his company’s Healthy Measures program proved that incentives can slash healthcare costs by as much as 40 percent.

According to Harald Schmidt, a health policy expert and Harkness Fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health, “In principle, I think wellness incentives are a good idea.  But it all depends on how they are implemented.  If the focus is on just reducing the cost of healthcare rather than improving health, then you may have a problem.  The second issue is, we must make sure everybody has a reasonable chance of benefiting from incentive programs.  We really have a problem if some find it much harder than others, and especially if we hold people responsible for things that are in fact beyond their control.”

Kevin Volpp, a physician and director of the Center for Health Incentives at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, offers a slightly different perspective.  “The reality is that we have a healthcare financing system that pays to treat people once they are sick.  There’s a growing recognition that health behaviors are a major driver of premature mortality and healthcare costs.  We need to rigorously test approaches that can better align incentives for patients with other interests of the health system, such as employers and insurers, so that resources go to keep people healthy.  Wellness incentives are a piece of that and can be used in ways that provide positive feedback to patients.”

Healthcare Consumption Shows Systemic Waste

Monday, September 27th, 2010

Patients' overuse of E.R.s wastes hospital resources.More than half of America’s 354 million annual acute-care visits – for fevers, stomach aches or coughs – typically take place in a hospital emergency room rather than in a primary-care physician’s office. This statistic was revealed in a study of systemic waste published in the journal Health Affairs. According to the study’s authors, their findings underscore a valid question about the healthcare reform law – how can a system that is already overwhelmed provide care to an additional 32 million newly insured patients?

The study, led by Dr. Stephen R. Pitts, an associate professor of emergency medicine at Emory University, examined acute-care visit records from 2001 to 2004 and found that 28 percent were to the emergency room.  This was particularly true for weekend and after-hours visits.  More than 50 percent of acute-care visits by patients who lacked health insurance were to emergency rooms, which are required by federal law to threat anyone with a serious condition.  This places a heavy financial burden on hospitals, which are compelled to provide basic care in what is admittedly an expensive environment.  Often, there is little or no follow-up to determine progress or secure follow-up care.

“More and more patients regard the emergency room as an acceptable or even proper place to go when they get sick,” according to Dr. Pitts.  “And the reality is that the E.R. is frequently the only option.  Too often, patients can’t get the care they need, when they need it, from their family doctor.”  The Affordable Care and Patient Protection Act is anticipated to boost primary care by increasing reimbursements for physicians, attracting students to the field with incentives; expanding community health facilities; and encouraging accountable-care organizations and medical homes.  “If history is any guide, things might not go as planned,” Dr. Pitts wrote.  “If primary care lags behind rising demand, patients will seek care elsewhere.”

Healthcare: Saving Lives or Prolonging Suffering?

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

There is a cacophony of voices in the media talking about healthcare reform, but it’s more heat than light.  That why Atul Gawande’s most recent article in The New Yorker is so important. Boston-based Brigham and Women’s Hospital general and endocrine surgeon Gawande examines how the trend to prolonging life is one of the reasons behind soaring healthcare costs.Is healthcare saving lives or prolonging suffering?  Everyone needs to read this.

According to Dr. Gawande in Letting Go, “Twenty-five percent of all Medicare spending is for the five percent of patients who are in the final year of life, and most of that money goes for care in their last couple of months which is of little apparent benefit.  Medical spending for a breast-cancer survivor, for example, averaged an estimated $54,000 in 2003, the vast majority of it for the initial diagnostic testing, surgery, and, where necessary, radiation and chemotherapy.  For a patient with a fatal version of the disease, though, the cost curve is U-shaped, rising again toward the end – to an average of $63,000 during the last six months of life with incurable breast cancer.

The big question Gawande poses is thus:  What are we getting in return?  “Patients who were put on a mechanical ventilator,” Dr. Gawande continues, “given electrical defibrillation or chest compressions, or admitted, near death, to intensive care, had a substantially worse quality of life in their last week than those who received no such interventions.  And, six months after their death, their caregivers were three times as likely to suffer major depression.”

Dr. Gawande notes that in one study, “Researchers followed 4,493 Medicare patients with either terminal cancer or congestive heart failure.  Surprisingly, they found no difference in survival time between hospice and non-hospice patients with breast cancer, prostate cancer, and colon cancer.  Curiously, hospice care seemed to extend survival for some patients; those with pancreatic cancer gained an average of three weeks, those with lung cancer gained six weeks, and those with congestive heart failure gained three months.  The lesson seems almost Zen:  you live longer only when you stop trying to live longer.”

In one case Dr. Gawande describes, “Aetna decided to let a group of policy-holders with a life expectancy of less than one year receive hospice services without forgoing other treatments.  A patient like Sara Monopoli (who was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer at the age of 34) could continue to try chemotherapy and radiation, and go to the hospital when she wished – but also have a hospice team at home focusing on what she needed for the best possible life now and for that morning when she might wake up unable to breathe.  A two-year study of this ‘concurrent care’ program found that enrolled patients were more likely to use hospice:  the figure leaped from 26 percent to 70 percent.  That was no surprise, since they weren’t forced to give up anything.  The surprising result was that they did give up things.  They visited the emergency room almost half as often as the control patients did.  Their use of hospitals and I.C.U.s dropped by more than two-thirds.  Overall costs fell by almost a quarter.”

Study Finds Need for More Operating Rooms Globally

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Poorest two billion only get four percent of OR time.  The richest two billion people in the world undergo 75 percent of all surgeries performed every year; by contrast, the poorest two billion have only four percent. This is one finding of a study published recently in the medical journal Lancet.  The study, performed by researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health, New Zealand, Canada and the World Health Organization, points out a need for additional ambulatory surgery facilities in the United States and across the globe.

The study found that many countries do not have enough surgeons to handle the simplest surgical procedures that improve lives – cataracts, tumors, auto accidents and the like.  Additionally, the researchers found instances of surgeons who lack access to usable operating rooms.  Throughout Africa, the study found that there was just a single operating room for every 100,000 people.  In the poorer Latin American nations, there were four to 10 operating rooms per 100,000.  That number rose to 15 in Western Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand.  Eastern Europe and the wealthier Asian nations reported approximately 25 ORs for every 100,000 people.

“Conservative estimates suggest that 11 percent of the world’s disability-adjusted life years are attributable to diseases that are often treated with surgery,” such as heart and cerebrovascular disease, cancer, and injuries resulting from traffic accidents, according to the authors, who were led by Luke M. Funk, MD, of the Harvard School of Public Health.

At the same time, “the findings are consistent with other studies, and, for those familiar with overseas health work, believable,” Paul S. Myles, from Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, and Guy Haller, from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, wrote in an editorial accompanying the study. “The extent of the problem is now clearer: the solution is what needs much more work.”

Women Need to Take a Hike

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Brisk walks can help prevent strokes in women.A new study suggests that women who walk for two or more hours every week or who walk at a rapid pace can significantly reduce their risk of suffering a stroke.  The results are based on a study of the exercising routines of 39,315 women health experts with an average age of 54.  The study found that women who walked at a pace of three miles per hour or faster had a 37 percent lesser risk of experiencing any kind of stroke.  Additionally, women who walked for two or more hours a week had a 30 percent less risk of suffering a stroke.

Jacob R. Sattelmair, MSc, of the Harvard School of Public Health, said, “Physical activity, including regular walking, is an important modifiable behavior for stroke prevention”.  Physical activity is essential to promoting good cardiovascular health.  Walking is just one easy way of achieving that goal.  Earlier research showed that people who are physically active typically have a smaller risk of stroke than couch potatoes.  According to Sattelmair, strokes are the third leading cause of death and the leading cause of disability in adults in the United States.

Dr. Michael Hill, a neurologist and spokesman for the Heart and Stroke Foundation in Canada, said the study’s findings are not surprising because exercise is good for the heart.  “If you walk, you do well, and if you don’t walk, you don’t do so well,” said Hill.

Hill noted that the study relied on “self-described” exercise and that is likely why conclusive data regarding vigorous exercise cannot be determined.  “If you look at people who take care of themselves and exercise, they also tend to eat well, and they tend to have a good work/life balance.”

H1N1 Flu Pandemic a Case of Overreaction?

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Even though federal health agencies are launching a major campaign to make certain that more Americans get flu shots, a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention acknowledges that the H1N1 swine flu pandemic is not as bad as originally feared.Was the H1N1 flu panic really necessary

“It’s probably going to be the mildest pandemic on record – compared to the three that happened in the 20th century,” according to Marc Lipsitch, a professor of epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health and co-author of an article in the journal Public Library of Science.

Although the flu season is far from over – and a third wave of H1N1 could still occur – only eight percent of Americans have been infected so far.  By contrast, the Spanish Influenza of 1918 – 1920 infected approximately 28 percent of all Americans.  According to Lipsitch, if the H1N1 virus doesn’t alter, it’s fair to expect that between 10 and 20 percent of Americans will become infected. “That’s toward the upper end of a typical flu season,” he said.

If 15 percent of the population is stricken with H1N1, hospitalizations could range from approximately 70,000 to 600,000.  Lipsitch expects hospitalizations will fall in the middle of that range, which is what happens in a typical flu season.  The H1N1 death rate has been less than during a normal flu season.  The difference is that most of the deaths have been children, teenagers and adults under the age of 50.  In a typical year, flu tends to kill people over age 65.  The reason is that younger people are getting H1N1 flu, while older people are not.

Massachusetts Physicians Give a Thumbs Up to Mandatory Healthcare Insurance

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Massachusetts Physicians Give a Thumbs Up to Mandatory Healthcare InsuranceAs Massachusetts begins its fourth year under a law that requires almost every citizen to have healthcare insurance – only three percent are not insured, the lowest rate in the nation – let’s look at how mandatory coverage is working in the Bay State.  Although critics claim it costs too much and creates too many newly insured patients, the fact remains that a majority of the state’s physicians think the program is succeeding and strongly support it.

A case in point is primary-care physician Dr. Phil Treffletti, whose practice is in Chelsea, MA, a working-class town just north of Boston.  Addressing the critics who claim that accessibility to physicians is an issue, new patients wait an average of just three weeks for an appointment with Dr. Treffletti.  “It’s certainly nicer for me to be able to be available to more patients in my community.  I can’t say that we’ve been swamped or overwhelmed,” Treffletti said.

A poll conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health and published in the New England Journal of Medicine backs up Dr. Treffletti’s opinion.  The poll showed that 70 percent of the state’s physicians favor the law and overwhelmingly want it continued.  Earlier polls have found that while the state’s residents like the mandatory insurance law, Massachusetts physicians are even more supportive.

According to Dr. Robert Blendon, Harvard Professor of Health Policy and Political Analysis who conducted the poll, “They were just quite impressed, both in their own practice and statewide, that the uninsured problem has essentially disappeared from their lives.”

“Positive Deviants” Will Revitalize the Healthcare System

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

The solution to America’s healthcare crisis might just lie in deviant thinking.  This is the message of Dr. Atul Gawande, this year’s commencement speaker at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine.  Gawande is a general and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, an associate director of their Center for Surgery and Public Health, an associate professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and at Harvard Medical School.

050102_Gawande_Atul_3.jpgHis concept of positive deviants identifies those communities and physicians who discover innovative ways to reduce costs and improve care  to deliver better outcomes.

Gawande cites a nutritionist who spent his career attempting to reduce hunger in Vietnamese villages.  This man asked villagers to identify which families had the best-nourished children to determine a “positive deviance” from the norm.  The answer was that those children’s mothers did not act in accordance with accepted village wisdom had the best outcomes.  Rather, they fed their children even when they had diarrhea; fed them several small meals daily rather than one or two large ones; and fed their children foods that others considered low class but were nutritious such as sweet potato greens.

In the American healthcare system, the positive deviants resist the tendency to view patients primarily as revenue streams – but as human beings.  Rather, these physicians deliver high-value healthcare without focusing too strongly on their practices’ bottom lines; they neither over-treat nor under-treat their patients with extraneous but profitable tests and procedures.

To quote Gawande, “Look for those in your community who are making healthcare better, safer and less costly.  Pay attention to them.  Learn how they do it.  And join with them.”