The U.S. healthcare system operates like  an ATM machine that takes days to release cash. It functions like a home  construction project whose carpenters and plumbers use different blueprints.  And it does business like a store that prices items depending on who is making  the purchase.
It fails to contain wasteful spending, estimated at about $765 billion in 2009  alone, largely from unnecessary and inefficiently delivered services, excess  administrative costs and overpricing, and in fraud and missed prevention  opportunities. 
Those are some of the findings from a 382-page report the Institute  of Medicine released Thursday calling  for a major overhaul to remove inefficiencies and other barriers to quality  care.
The report, "Best Care at Lower  Cost: The Path to Continuously Learning Health Care in America," was  prepared by a 17-person committee chaired by Mark Smith, President and CEO of  the California HealthCare Foundation.
"We tried to address a big-deal problem in a way that is very  comprehensive, because we feel much of what has been said to this point has  been in bits and fragments," says Gary Kaplan, MD, a member of the  authoring committee as well as Chairman and CEO of Virginia Mason Health System  in Seattle. Providers, payers, patients, funders, the government—everyone—has to see quality, outcomes, technology, fraud and waste in a holistic  fashion.
Kaplan adds that the committee hopes "that the first thing to come from  this is awareness. Too many providers are saying to themselves, 'We're alive  and well; we know change is coming, but we're banking that change will be  glacial, so we don't have to do much right now. We're profitable.' "
A case in point is the transition to electronic health records and the  attainment of meaningful use attestation. While some providers may see these  moves largely as big expenditures, for which they may recoup some federal  incentive payments, they may overlook the enormous potential of using EHRs to  gather real-time data on inappropriate, unnecessary or incorrect use of  expensive hospital resources.
"We can know for the last 100 patients who had X procedure, we have this  percent of complication. We know that in real time, not through 18-month-old  data. This is not an abstraction, and can provide us with early warning signs  and places where we may intervene."
The report issues 10 recommendations to improve quality of care, and use  healthcare resources better. They are:
1. Improve the capacity to  capture clinical, care delivery process, and financial data for better care,  system improvement and the generation of new knowledge.
To this end, the report says hospitals and clinicians should "employ  digital systems that capture patient care experiences reliably" and  implement practices and standards for better data interoperability. The federal  National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, software developers,  and standards organizations should make sure that their systems support better  care, system improvement and new knowledge.
2. Streamline and revise research  regulations to improve care, promote the capture of clinical data, and generate  knowledge.
The report suggests that the Secretary for Health and Human Services, should  examine the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act and  institutional review board policies for any perceived or actual restrictions on  the use of clinical data to gain knowledge that advances science and care  improvement. Consumer groups, professional societies, researchers and  grantmakers should help develop strategies to improve understanding of the  benefits and importance of accelerating use of clinical data to improve care  and health outcomes.
3. Accelerate integration of the best clinical knowledge into care decisions.
The authors explained that they want research, advocacy, specialty and care  delivery organizations to use evidence-based and "harmonized"  clinical practice guidelines.
"Public and private payers should promote the adoption of decision support  tools, knowledge management systems, and evidence-based clinical practice  guidelines by structuring payment and contracting policies to reward effective,  evidence-based care that improves patient health," they said.
4. Involve patients and families in decisions regarding healthcare  tailored to fit their preferences.
Patients and their families should expect to fully participate in their own care,  and clinicians should use informed share decision-making tools. Federal  agencies, including the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, should  promote and measure patient-centered care through payment models, contracting  policies and public reporting programs.
5. Promote community-clinical  partnerships and services aimed at managing and improving health at the  community level.
Public and private payers should incorporate population health improvement  efforts into payment and contracting policies, and measure accountability.
6. Improve coordination and  communication within and across organizations.
Health economists, researchers, professional specialty societies should develop  and test metrics to monitor care transitions to make sure they improve patient  outcomes.
7. Continuously improve health care  operations to reduce waste, streamline care delivery and focus on activities  that improve patient health.
CMS, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the Patient-Centered  Outcomes Research Institute, quality improvement organizations and improvement  leaders should develop a learning consortium that improves effectiveness and  efficiency of care. Additionally, organizations should find methods to remove  unnecessary burdens on clinicians and staff.
8. Structure payment to reward  continuous learning and improvement in the provision of best care at lower  cost.
Public and private payers should move to outcome and value-oriented models of  payment that draw on payment incentives.
9. Increase transparency on  healthcare system performance
Public and private payers should promote transparency in quality, value and  outcomes to aid care decisions.
10. Expand commitment to the goals  of a "continuously learning" healthcare system.
Healthcare organizations should "develop organizational cultures that  support and encourage continuous improvement, the use of best practices,  transparency, open communication, staff empowerment, coordination, teamwork,  and mutual respect and align rewards accordingly," the authors wrote.
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