In a survey, 91% of emergency medicine physicians say they have recently experienced a drug shortage and 44% say their facilities are inadequately prepared for a surge of patients during a disaster.
The vast majority of emergency room physicians face shortages of key medications and doubt whether their organizations are "fully prepared" for a disaster, polling datashows.
The poll's findings were released today by the American College of Emergency Physicians in Washington, DC. The survey, which was conducted from April 30 to May 7, has 247 respondents.
"Hospitals and emergency medical services continue to suffer significant gaps in disaster preparedness, as well as national drug shortages for essential emergency medications. These shortages can last for months, or longer, and constitute a significant risk to patients," ACEP President Paul Kivela, MD, FACEP, said in a prepared statement.
The poll's findings are alarming. "Emergency physicians are concerned that our system cannot even meet daily demands, let alone during a medical surge for a natural or man-made disaster."
Most emergency medicine doctors are facing struggles with drug shortages, according to the ACEP poll:
91% of ER physicians reported experiencing the shortage or absence of a critical medication in the previous month
For ER physicians who reported medication shortages, 41% said they have shortages for as many as five drugs and 43% said they have shortages for as many as 10 drugs
69% of respondents said drug shortages have "increased a lot" over the previous year, and 16% said drug shortages have "increased a little"
97% of respondents said their primary emergency department has been forced to use an alternative to a medication because of drug shortages
36% of respondents said drug shortages have negatively impacted patient outcomes
88% of respondents said they have lost time with patients because drug shortages force them to search for alternative medications
The poll's findings on disaster preparedness are similarly sobering:
When asked whether their ERs were prepared for a surge of patients during a disaster, 27% of the physicians said their facility was "not completely" ready and 17% said their facility was "not at all" ready
Only 22% of respondents said their hospital has access to real-time data on regional healthcare resources, and 13% said their hospital has no access
ACEP wants Congress to examine a regionalized approach the Pandemic and All Hazards Preparedness and Advancing Innovation (PAHPAI) Act that includes:
Increased coordination among public health and safety services, emergency medical services, medical facilities, trauma centers, and other entities in a region.
Tracking resources, including inpatient bed capacity, emergency department capacity, trauma center capacity, on-call specialist coverage, and ambulance diversion status with regional communications and hospital destination decisions.
Consistent, region-wide prehospital, hospital, and inter-facility data management systems.
ACEP supports the inclusion in PAHPAI of legislation that makes military trauma teams available to civilian trauma centers.
For the past several years, drug shortages have become a growing problem across the nation in virtually all areas of care delivery.
An Ohio hospital's provider-in-triage model is generating clinical, financial, and strategic benefits, including lowering its rate of ER patients who leave without being seen.
Grandview Medical Center in Dayton, Ohio, has adopted an optimized version of the provider in triage model for its emergency department, increasing the percentage of patients seen by a doctor within 10 minutes from 38% to 71%.
"This allows a provider to get a first glance at the patient and do a preliminary history and physical. The provider can then put in orders for tests that we can get started in the front while we are waiting on beds in the back," says Nikole Funk, DO, medical director at Grandview Medical Center.
After struggling with a triage bottleneck, Grandview decided to try the provider-in-triage model last summer.
"We do have a high-volume, inner-city hospital, and we had just one triage nurse. The process was to triage one patient at a time, then send patients to the back if a bed was available," Funk says. "The triage process can take about 5 to 7 minutes; so, if you have three patients check in, you can fall 21 minutes behind."
How Grandview optimized provider in triage
Grandview now has a team approach to triage, with a physician and two nurses comprising the provider-in-triage team.
The nursing staff played a key role in launching the provider-in-triage model. "We included the nursing staff and identified a select few who could educate [their peers] and be champions of the process," Funk says.
The select cadre of nurses helped Funk in the early stage of the initiative, which started in July 2017. "I personally worked all of my shifts as the provider in triage to refine the process with selected nursing staff before we brought in the other two physicians who were going to be providers in triage."
Lab work and other testing is crucial in realizing the potential for efficiency gains from the provider-in-triage model.
"We are utilizing the time it takes to get a radiological study or get lab tests done during the time that patients are waiting to see a provider," Funk says.
However, Grandview had to innovate to overcome a challenge associated with testing under the provider-in-triage model.
"Most times, it is the low-acuity patients who get tired of waiting. Even though they may have had labs drawn or radiological tests done, they were sent to a waiting room, and sometimes they leave from there," says Dawn Sweet, clinical nurse manager at the 344-bed hospital.
'Results-pending' waiting room
Grandview's solution was to create a special waiting area for patients awaiting test results.
"We keep patients in the department. We have a results-pending area now; so, our low-acuity patients have their tests completed, go to our results-pending area, and can be discharged from there," Sweet says.
Data reflect patient satisfaction with the provider-in-triage approach at Grandview:
Before provider in triage: 1.8%–2.2% left-without-being-seen rate
After provider in triage: 1.1% left-without-being-seen rate
Patients leaving against medical advice have also fallen, with that rate running at about 1%
"With other institutions that have trialed this process, the left-without-being-seen rate has gone down but the against-medical-advice rate has gone up. That has not been true for us. With our facility, both numbers went down," Sweet says.
"With our process, we have been able to retain nearly all of our patients through the full length of their care. They are not waiting as long for tests and results," she says.
Benefits of provider-in-triage model
Grandview is generating clinical, financial, and strategic benefits from adoption of provider in triage.
In an emergency department, more efficient use of time can save lives and alleviate needless suffering, Funk says. "There have been multiple instances across the country of critical patients waiting in an emergency department waiting room."
The provider-in-triage approach helps emergency departments quickly identify critically ill patients, she says. "We've had some critical diagnoses picked up on patients who otherwise would have been sitting in our waiting room."
The provider-in-triage model has generated at least two financial benefits for Grandview, which is part of the Kettering, Ohio–based Kettering Health Network.
First, the ER has decreased the number of patients leaving without being seen. "Financially, you are capturing all of those patients," Funk says.
Second, word of mouth is spreading across the community, she says. "We have had people come in and say, 'We hear that you don't have a long wait here.' That also increases your revenue."
Strategically, adoption of provider in triage has Grandview well-positioned for the closureof nearby Good Samaritan Hospital. Dayton-based Premier Health plans to close Good Samaritan by July.
"We are anticipating an annual patient volume increase between 20,000 and 25,000 with that closure. Without this new process, we would not have been able to survive. We are already seeing a 10% to 15% increase in patients," Funk says.
She says the provider-in-triage model is a good fit for ERs with high hold hours of patients; high rates of left-without-being-seen patients; and high influxes of walk-in patients.
For evaluating vascular surgery patients, a handheld device available on Amazon for $50 provides a low-cost and simpler alternative to other frailty measures.
Using a grip strength test to evaluate surgical patients for frailty is a high-value assessment, says the leader of a research team that published a study on grip strength testing this month.
"We were looking for something quick, easy, cheap, and reliable, and that is a rare combination in healthcare," says Matthew Corriere, MD, MS, an associate professor at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and a vascular surgeon at Michigan Medicine.
In vascular surgery, assessing patients for frailty is a key step, Corriere and his fellow researchers wrote. "Frailty is associated with adverse events, length of stay, and nonhome discharge after vascular surgery."
If a patient is found to be frail, it impacts medical decision-making and creates an opportunity for intervention, the researchers wrote.
"Accurate identification … might inform treatment or patient selection, enabling patients and providers to avoid (or at least to minimize) stressors and related risks. Frailty detection might also provide opportunities for prehabilitation through exercise, nutritional, and behavioral interventions to better prepare patients," according to the research paper.
Grip strength testing for frailty has multiple benefits, the researchers found. "Grip strength may have utility as a simple and inexpensive risk screening tool that is easily implemented in ambulatory clinics, avoids the need for imaging, and overcomes possible limitations of walking-based measures."
Testing grip strength is likely to be applicable in fields beyond vascular surgery, Corriere says. "Grip strength testing has potential in any field where you are trying to assess whether to provide a treatment, and trying to decide what the chances are of the patient having a normal life with or without that treatment."
He says other fields such as orthopedic surgery, cardiology, and general internal medicine practices—where physicians often face decisions on whether to refer patients for treatment—could benefit from grip strength testing.
'Low risk and low cost'
Grip strength testing has multiple advantages over other frailty tests, Corriere says.
The primary testing method for frailty is a walking speed test; however, many patients have walking impairments including peripheral artery disease and amputation that disqualify a walking test. Grip strength testing is appropriate for all patients as long as they do not have a hand or arm impairment such as arthritis, he says.
Grip strength testing is logistically easier to manage than other assessments for frailty.
"I had 25 patients in my clinic this week, and the longest I was budgeted to spend with any of them was 30 minutes. If I had tried doing different frailty tests on those patients, it would have been time-consuming and require space and equipment," Corriere says.
Hand dynamometers are compact and relatively inexpensive. Corriere bought the device he used in the research on Amazon for $50.
"These hand dynamometers fit in a drawer or sit on a counter. To me, this is an intervention that is low risk and low cost, while providing very useful information. It's a no-brainer, and it sounds a lot like how we define value," he says.
Financially, improving frailty detection with grip strength testing has several impacts, including better risk adjustment and risk prediction, and avoiding costs.
"When you talk about cost, inpatient rehab, nursing home stays, and increased complication rates are all expensive. The grip strength test allows you to be a lot smarter in selecting patients who are candidates for surgical treatments," he says.
Grip strength testing is better than visual assessments of frailty, Corriere says. "When you rule out frailty with grip strength, it gives you reassurance about not denying an elderly patient a procedure because of assumptions that could be incorrect."
There is little science in visual assessments, he says.
"Some 85-year-olds are robust and remarkably healthy, and they get aggravated when we don't listen to their complaints or we deny them a procedure that they need. Grip strength and frailty assessment can lead to opting into a procedure, and make the patient and provider feel more comfortable," he says.
Having a simple scientific test also helps family members understand the concept of frailty, Corriere says.
"Measuring grip strength is a demonstration of frailty to family members who are there watching it happen. It takes a concept that can be sort of abstract and make it evident to everybody in the room," he says.
Grip strength testing is attractive both clinically and practically, he says. "We were looking for something that could be deployed like another vital sign. This takes very little time, and it can be done on many people."
Researchers find an explosion of economic activity in the genetic testing market over the past decade, with not only thousands of new tests developed but also a sharp increase in spending on genetic tests.
Since the mapping of the human genome 15 years ago, the number of genetic tests has accelerated rapidly, with 75,000 tests on the market and about 10 new tests marketed every day, researchers say.
"Nearly 14,000 tests have come on the market since March 2014," the researchers wrote this month in a study published in Health Affairs.
The researchers focused on data from 2014 to 2017, including a test catalog database and a commercial payer database with 1.7 million claims for genetic tests.
The researchers say the rapid growth in development of genetic tests and spending on genetic tests is the result of multiple forces converging:
Clinical demand for better tools to predict, diagnose, treat, and monitor disease
Better knowledge of the molecular basis of disease
Patient demand
Industry investment
A regulatory environment that allows marketing of genetic tests without Food and Drug Administration approval
The rate and scale of growth in the genetic testing market is remarkable, the researchers wrote. "The clinical sequencing market is growing at compound annual growth rate of 28% and is forecasted to be $7.7 billion worldwide by 2020."
The researchers identified several constraints that could slow growth in the genetic testing market:
While it has fallen markedly over the past decade, the cost of sequencing is still relatively highly at about $1,000 for a whole genome sequencing test
Some payers are providing coverage for multigene tests, but some are not
Out-of-pocket costs for patients
Balancing the clinical utility of genetic tests with introducing them practically in a clinical setting
Fragmentation in the clinical lab industry
Uncertainty about how the clinical lab industry is evolving appears to be decreasing, the researchers wrote. "There is some evidence that the market is becoming bifurcated, with the less numerous specialized tests performed by labs within organizations, while high-volume centralized labs perform the large-scale tests."
The researchers found not only an increase in genetic test volume but also spending. The highest levels of spending were on prenataltests, hereditary cancer tests, and a relatively new class of tests that measure multiple genes.
From 2014 to 2016, the researchers found that spending was highest on prenatal tests, ranging from 33% to 43%. Hereditary cancer tests were the second-highest spending category at about 30%. All other categories accounted for much smaller fractions of total spending.
Safety is one of the driving factors for growth of genetic prenatal tests, the researchers wrote. "These tests meet a clinical need by being an alternative to prenatal screening methods that incur a risk of miscarriage (such as amniocentesis)."
The researchers examined 13 categories of genetic tests:
For emergency room patients, a Maryland hospital's new observation unit has lowered length of stay and reduced admission of patients to inpatient care.
A new observation unit at Carroll Hospital in Westminster, Maryland, designed to treat patients for stays less than 48 hours has reduced its length of stay by more than eight hours and lowered the rate of patients transferring to inpatient care from 33.9% to 12.3%.
In 2016, the observation unit was given a wing in the 168-bed hospital. Three factors contributed to the unit's development: a well-designed set of inclusion and exclusion admissions criteria, dedicated staffing, and a tight working relationship with ancillary services.
"We didn't want to randomly select people for observation status; we wanted to have evidence-based criteria. We established the criteria based on certain diseases and certain conditions that we knew were typically short stays," says Kim Baker, PA-C, director of hospitalist and ICU services.
In August 2016, gaining the designation as a closed unit helped ensure that patients were appropriately placed in the observation unit. "Once we closed the unit and put the inclusion and exclusion criteria in place, we decreased our inpatient conversion rate from about 33% before we closed the unit to around 12%," Baker says.
Admissions decisions for the observation unit are made by the attending emergency room physician, a hospitalist from the observation unit, and a case management staffer.
"It should be a closed unit because you can control your metrics better. It's more than outcomes metrics. With the inclusion and exclusion criteria, you have dedicated people in the observation unit who understand exactly what is going on in the unit and understand how it needs to be run," she says.
Although hospitalists rotate through the observation unit, most of the staff are dedicated nurses and physician assistants. The nursing staff has been an essential component in the development of the observation unit, Baker says.
"We needed to have dedicated observation nurses. We needed nurses who understood the process of moving patients through quickly, getting testing done quickly, and discharging quickly. It's a totally different mindset than inpatient status," she says.
The 22-bed unit operates seven days per week, with full staffing from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. There is hospitalist and nursing coverage overnight rounding every 4 hours. Average full staffing includes:
1.5 clinicians
Two case managers
Patient-to-nurse ratio of 6:1 or 5:1
Developing strong relationships with ancillary services—particularly laboratory testing—has been a key factor in the efficient operation of the observation unit, Baker says.
"Short of the emergency department or an emergency test, our unit gets testing priority over everything else in the hospital. The goal is that testing and reporting gets done quickly, so we can either order more testing or be ready to discharge the patient," she says.
Shortening stay
Moving quickly and sound decision-making are primary factors that shorten a patient's length of stay in the observation unit, Baker says.
"The way we keep length of stay down is by seeing the patient quickly, ordering appropriate and prioritized testing, and making decisions with swiftness based on testing or whether the patient needs treatment," she says.
Timeliness is essential for the clinicians working in the observation unit, she says. "You have to monitor your time: rounding frequently, engaging the nurses to be more proactive, and making sure you are communicating well with the ancillary staff and case managers."
Another key to lowering length of stay is judicious use of specialist consults. "That keeps your length of stay down because the consultants are not always in the hospital during the day. Even if they are trying to prioritize your patients, they often can't because they are usually seeing their outpatient-practice patients," she says.
Limiting consultations and lab testing is done without compromising quality, Baker says. "We make sure we are practicing based on best practices. We are not over-testing and we are not under-testing just because we are worried about length of stay."
From August 2016 to February 2018, length of stay in the observation unit has fallen from 29.0 hours to 20.7 hours.
Cost control
The observation unit is generating a positive return on investment, including helping the LifeBridge Health hospital avoid readmissions penalties, Baker says. "Making sure the patients are being treated appropriately and not coming back to the hospital has huge return on investment," she says.
Personnel has been the highest cost in operating the observation unit, but staffing with a relatively high number of physician assistants and nurse practitioners has helped curb spending, she says. "To keep costs down, physician assistants and nurse practitioners are fabulous."
Researchers find that hospitals are most likely to be responsible for readmissions within a week of discharge, but outpatient clinics and homecare givers are most likely responsible for later readmissions.
Hospital readmissions are not monolithic, and Medicare should change its readmissions penalty program time frame from 30 days to seven days, researchers say.
The researchers, whose study was published this week in the Annals of Internal Medicine, say Medicare's Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) often penalizes hospitals for patient outcomes that are out of their control.
"We found that readmissions within the first 7 days after hospital discharge were more likely to be preventable than those within a late period of 8 to 30 days," the researchers wrote. "Early readmissions were more likely to be amenable to interventions within the hospital and to be caused by factors for which the hospital is directly accountable, such as problems with physician decision making."
Outpatient facilities and home caregivers were more likely to be accountable for readmissions from eight to 30 days, the researchers wrote.
"Late readmissions were more likely to be amenable to interventions outside the hospital and to be caused by factors over which the hospital has less direct control, such as appropriate monitoring and managing of symptoms after discharge by the primary care team."
The study, which covered 10 academic medical centers from April 2012 through March 2013, included 822 adult patients:
301 patients (36.6%) were readmitted within seven days after discharge
521 (63.4%) were readmitted eight to 30 days after discharge
36.2% of early readmissions vs. 23.0% of late readmissions were deemed preventable
The researchers found that faulty physician decision making was the number one cause of early readmissions, associated with 28.9% of the cases.
Three primary variants of errant decision making were identified:
Difficulty monitoring and managing symptoms was the number one cause of late readmissions, associated with 33.2% of cases. The researchers identified three primary variants of monitoring and managing difficulties:
Lack of disease monitoring in 12.7% of cases
Overly long wait times for follow-up appointments, 10.0%
Inability to make follow-up appointments, 10.9%
The researchers say their data indicate several reasons why the HRRP timeframe should be switched from 30 days to seven days.
First, they found a significant difference in the preventability of early and late readmissions in the 30-day timeframe after discharge. "Early readmissions were associated with double the odds of preventability compared with late readmissions," the researchers wrote.
Second, a pair of physician adjudicators who reviewed the readmissions cases found hospitals were the best site to intervene and prevent early readmissions. The physician educators found outpatient clinics and home were the best settings to prevent late readmissions.
Third, the researchers found that erroneous physician decision making and premature discharge were leading causes of early readmissions.
"Taken together, these findings suggest that readmissions in the week after discharge are more preventable and more likely to be caused by factors over which the hospital has direct control than those later in the 30-day window," the researchers wrote.
Beyond narrowing HRRP's 30-day readmissions window to seven days, the researchers also offer five recommendations to promote readmissions prevention:
Hospitals should try to decrease cognitive errors that impact diagnosis and treatment
The impact of hospital efforts to increase throughput on premature discharge should be examined
Outpatient facilities should boost multidisciplinary care management for post-discharge monitoring of patients after discharge
Access to primary care clinicians should be expanded
Accountability for readmissions 30 days after discharge should be shared between outpatient and inpatient facilities
"Shared accountability over the 30 days, possibly with weighted penalties by readmission timing, would engage outpatient practices in readmission reduction efforts and reduce unfair financial penalties on hospitals."
An alliance between two health systems in the Philadelphia area is expected to generate several opportunities for joint clinical programs and population health initiatives.
Trinity Health and University of Pennsylvania Health System have forged an alliance that is designed to form clinical joint ventures and boost population health.
"We view this as a long-term commitment and relationship for our respective institutions. It's not something we are going to do for a year and back away from it," says James Woodward, president and CEO of St. Mary Medical Center, a 371-bed Trinity Health hospital in Langhorne, Pennsylvania.
The Trinity hospitals in the mid-Atlantic division, including Mercy Health System of Southeastern Pennsylvania, and the University of Pennsylvania medical center are well-suited partners, he says. "There is a substantial benefit to having a complementary relationship. We obtain services from a tertiary and quaternary partner that provides services we do not have, or helps us round out some services."
The health systems signed an agreement to form the alliance, outlining the governance structure, which reflects the importance of joint clinical programming:
One senior executive each from Trinity and Penn serve as co-leaders of the alliance.
A 12-member governance council has equal representation from Trinity and Penn, with broad responsibilities such as ensuring the alliance agreement is being met and honored.
Clinical care committees will help identify joint venture opportunities and oversee clinical programming collaborations. The membership of clinical care committees will include physicians, nurses, and administrative staff.
Clinical care committees will play a key hands-on role in the alliance, Woodward says. "They will work together to do an assessment of needs, how they are going to work together, what services will be provided, and how we would collaborate together at the community level with an academic medical center."
Clinical joint ventures
Oncology is one of the alliance's prime targets for joint clinical programs, and St. Mary is starting a joint program for gynecologic oncology with Penn-owned Princeton Health in New Jersey.
St. Mary lacks the patient volume to support a gynecologic oncology service, which requires at least two clinicians, Woodward says.
"Princeton is in exactly the same boat. Together with Penn, we are working with Princeton to recruit two GYN oncologists—one for Princeton and one for St. Mary who would be based at our respective institutions. They would be able to cross-cover each other," he says.
St. Mary has targeted several other joint clinical programs for the alliance:
St. Mary and Penn are planning to increase ambulatory services, including St. Mary moving some employed physicians and community-based services off its main campus. "The opportunities are to work collaboratively—potentially with joint programming for ambulatory services in various areas of Bucks County," Woodward says.
St. Mary is hoping to add behavioral health and substance abuse treatment services through the alliance, including inpatient treatment and intensive day treatment.
St. Mary plans to add physician support to its thoracic oncology team. "This would work both in our cardiovascular service line and in our oncology service line," he says.
A joint heart failure program is on the drawing board as well.
Population health prep work
The alliance has not announced plans for joint population health initiatives, but discussions have begun, Woodward says.
"With a bigger footprint, we are exploring together how we can leverage the population health tools that exist within Trinity Health and apply them in a combined academic and community-based program that benefits our communities from a value perspective," he says.
Population health initiatives that have been discussed so far include optimizing diabetes care and adopting population health best practices from Trinity and Penn accountable care organizations.
Metrics to assess the alliance's performance are also a work in progress, he says. Most of the quality metrics will be selected and developed at the clinical care committee level.
"Each of the clinical care committees will be developing a mini strategic plan for what they hope to accomplish," Woodward says.
In addition to clinical program metrics, the alliance will track broader metrics for finance and population health, Woodward says. "Our metrics will include financial metrics to examine whether the relationship is what we hoped it would be financially for both sides."
Healthcare value will be a component in the alliance's measure of population health performance, he says. "Can we clearly demonstrate that we have been able to improve quality and access of care, while also reducing the overall cost of care?"
A Los Angeles–based health plan seeks to improve the leadership skills of community clinic physicians to enhance quality of care and patient outcomes.
L.A. Health Plan, a publicly operated health plan that serves 2 million low-income patients in Los Angeles County, is providing leadership training for physicians to boost the quality of care at community clinics.
"The Physician Leadership Program participants are clinical leaders selected from the community clinics serving our members. We believe that investing in strong leadership in our community clinics is important to achieving the best service and outcomes for our members," says Richard Seidman, MD, MPH, who serves as CMO at L.A. Care Health Plan.
Return on investment
The total cost of providing and administering the Physician Leadership Program class is set at $149,500, and L.A. Care considers the expense to be money well spent. "Our goal is to improve [health] conditions throughout the county of Los Angeles," Seidman says.
L.A. Care is anticipating return on investment for the leadership course on several fronts.
"In theory, the clinical leadership in any of the clinic organizations in our network could generate return on investment through more effective leadership. With more effective leadership, it is more likely that a clinic can generate higher quality outcomes and reduce avoidable utilization, such as emergency room utilization, inpatient admissions, and readmissions," Seidman says.
Last year, L.A. Care organized its first Physician Leadership Program class, with 21 participants. The six-month program features five in-person seminars and five webinars. The curriculum covers topics such as:
Leadership style and serving underserved communities
Leading effective teams
Managing healthcare services and finances
Improving health center services
Change management
Physician leadership in quality and safety
Optimal leadership practices: achieving commitment, enhancing accountability, and mastering assertive communication
Understanding healthcare disparities
Best practices for hiring and firing staff
L.A. Care's second Physician Leadership Program class started earlier this month, with 20 participants.
'Not just theoretical'
The Physician Leadership Program has already made a positive impact at the local and countywide level, Seidman says.
At the local level, every participant in the leadership program develops and implements a quality improvement project for their community clinic.
"It's very practical—the program is not just theoretical leadership training. For the improvement project, they get coaching and support," he says. "To the extent that these quality improvement projects are successful, our members are getting better care and, hopefully, better outcomes."
At the countywide level, a pair of participants in the first leadership program class have been appointed cochairs of an influential clinical committee—the Clinical Advisory Group. The committee is a group of community clinic medical directors and medical officers who also are members of the Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County.
"They are leading a key clinical group that serves Los Angeles County. That's real impact because they are taking their leadership training and putting it to use to help design and implement better programs for our members," Seidman says.
Strong and weak leadership
One of the most important skills that physicians learn in the leadership program is viewing patients as whole persons from specific communities and environments, Seidman says.
"Considering social determinants of health really requires clinicians to move past the medical model and what they learned in medical school. They also need to consider poverty, housing security, food security, whether a patient is employed or not, and whether they are living in a toxic environment such as housing with mold."
In contrast, weak physician leadership bears multiple costs, he says.
"Weak leadership results in the needs of patients being poorly represented and poorly served. Without strong clinical leadership, other organizational priorities float to the top."
In addition to compromising quality of care, weak physician leadership erodes morale, Seidman says.
"It can lead to poor morale among the clinical staff. … If you don't have a strong physician leader representing the staff's needs, then morale is likely to suffer. As morale declines, it is likely there will be increased rates of poor quality patient care and physician burnout," he says.
A new set of guidelines and recommendations helps healthcare organizations establish policies and programs that promote physician well-being.
A charter published in the Journal of the American Medical Association promotes best practices and interventions designed to reduce physician burnout.
The charter was crafted to provide direction to health systems, hospitals, and physician practices seeking to increase the well-being of physicians, says Jonathan Ripp, MD, MPH, senior associate dean for well-being and resilience at Mount Sinai's Icahn School of Medicine in New York.
"We're trying to provide a framework for policymakers, so they can put practices in place that align with physician well-being. We are seeing large systems adopting these types of practices and policies," he says.
Physician burnout should be a top priority for leaders and staff on moral and practical grounds, Ripp says.
"As a result of the work that physicians and other providers do, they have higher levels of depression and suicide. For this reason alone, physician well-being is important."
"But it's not just that. We now know that physician well-being has several ramifications for health systems: there's lower patient satisfaction, higher medical errors, increased physician turnover, decreased productivity, and increased malpractice," he says.
Physician turnover is financially draining, Ripp says. "If you take any intervention that decreases physician burnout, you are more likely to retain physicians at their practices. Probably one of the highest costs in healthcare is physician turnover. … Oftentimes when a physician leaves a practice, there is a several-month period when no one is in place and there is a shortfall of revenue."
To be effective, efforts to improve physician well-being must include the well-being of coworkers, he says. "We recognize that addressing physician well-being is not just about the physicians, it's about medical students, trainees, and all the members of the healthcare system."
Best practices and recommendations
The effort to draft the charter started in 2016. A medical and research group, the Collaborative for Healing and Renewal in Medicine, spearheaded the initiative. Ripp serves as co-chair of the group.
The charter was published March 29, in an article titled "Charter on Physician Well-being." The document has the support of several national associations, including the American Medical Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges.
The charter's best practices and recommendations are organized in three sections: societal commitments, organizational commitments, and interpersonal and individual commitments. Some examples of the recommendations are as follows:
Healthcare organizations need to make a societal commitment to advocate for policies and rules that foster well-being. Influencing national policies can improve the well-being of physicians such as easing administrative burdens and improving mental health care for clinicians.
Organizational commitment includes an engaged leadership team. Methods that leaders can try to boost physician well-being include having well-being initiatives in strategic planning, using organizational awareness efforts to identify well-being challenges, and adopting well-being metrics into assessments of organizational performance.
Part of interpersonal and individual commitment is rooted in the emotionally demanding role of physicians such as enduring adverse events and patient deaths. Actions organizations can take to ease emotional pressure include adding coping skills to training and continuing education, as well as offering confidential debriefings during the workday.
Researchers call on hospitals to embrace 'culture of health' as well as reforms and care redesign to help address income-related healthcare disparity.
Poverty is associated with higher rates of inpatient stays for pediatric patients, and hospital reforms can help address the problem, according to an article published this week in Health Affairs.
The study focuses on Hamilton County, Ohio, which includes Cincinnati and has a population of about 190,000 children. For the period 2011 to 2016, the researchers collected data from all pediatric hospitalizations at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, then paired each pediatric patient with a Census tract.
"Poorer communities disproportionately bore the burden of pediatric hospital days," the researchers wrote. "If children from all of the county’s census tracts spent the same amount of time in the hospital each year as those from the most affluent tracts, approximately 22 child-years of hospitalization time would be prevented [annually]."
Bed-day is a key metric in the study and is calculated by dividing the number of days that children from a community are hospitalized by the total number of children living in the community.
Bed-day data shows that pediatric patients from Hamilton County's low-income areas are disproportionately more likely to be hospitalized:
Low poverty: 87.7 per 1,000 children per year
Low medium poverty: 113.3 per 1,000
Medium poverty: 130.7 per 1,000
High medium poverty: 144.1 per 1,000
High poverty: 171.4 per 1,000
Addressing Income-Related Disparity
The researchers identified several poverty "hot spots" near the medical center, and the 628-bed facility has launched several initiatives to better serve the disadvantaged neighborhoods.
In Avondale, which borders the medical center on three sides, bed-day rates are more than double the county average. The medical center has targeted Avondale for population health improvement efforts as well as tighter community partnerships with schools, primary care practices, and pharmacies.
The researchers call for a "culture of health" at hospitals as foundational to addressing income-related disparity.
"This may require an expanded focus on inpatient-to-outpatient transitions and community-connected work that gets to shared root causes affecting disparities across conditions and subspecialties. Such an approach may be more fruitful than attempting to tackle disparities condition by condition."
The researchers say that reforms and redesign of care models is needed to serve low-income neighborhoods:
Enhanced discharge services such as filling prescriptions and arranging follow-up appointments with transportation
Addressing social determinants with partners such as social workers and community health workers
Strengthening communication between inpatient and outpatient settings
"In Cincinnati, we have invested in relationships between providers of inpatient and outpatient care; nonprofit organizations; public schools; the local health department; social service agencies; faith-based entities; businesses; and, importantly, parents and families," the researchers wrote.