Five years ago, Stefan Larsson
was on a sabbatical, and he returned to the medical
university where he studied. he saw real patients and he
wore the white coat for the first time in 17
years, in fact since he became a
management consultant.
There was two things that surprised him during the month he spent.
The first one was that the
common theme of the discussions he had were
hospital budgets and cost-cutting, and the second thing, which
really bothered him, actually, was that several of
the colleagues he met, former friends from medical
school, who he knew to be some of the
smartest, most motivated, engaged and
passionate people he'd ever met, many of them had turned cynical,
disengaged, or had distanced themselves
from hospital management. So with this focus on
cost-cutting, he asked himself, are we
forgetting the patient?
Many countries that you
represent and where Stefan Larsson come
from struggle with the cost of
healthcare. It's a big part of the
national budgets. And many different reforms aim
at holding back this growth. In some countries, we have
long waiting times for patients for surgery.
In other countries, new drugs
are not being reimbursed, and therefore don't reach
patients. In several countries, doctors
and nurses are the targets, to some
extent, for the governments. After all, the costly
decisions in health care are taken by doctors and
nurses. You choose an expensive lab
test, you choose to operate on an
old and frail patient. So, by limiting the degrees of
freedom of physicians, this is a way to hold costs
down. And ultimately, some
physicians will say today that they don't have the full
liberty to make the choices they think
are right for their patients. So no wonder that some of my
old colleagues are frustrated.
At BCG, they looked at this,
and they asked themselves,
this can't be the right way of
managing healthcare. And so they took a step back
and they said, "What is it that we are
trying to achieve?" Ultimately, in the healthcare
system, they're aiming at improving
health for the patients, and they need to do so at a
limited, or affordable, cost.
they call this value-based
healthcare. On the screen behind him, you
see what they mean by value: outcomes that matter to
patients relative to the money they
spend. This was described beautifully
in a book in 2006 by Michael Porter and
Elizabeth Teisberg.
When they started doing their
research at BCG, they decided not to look so
much at the costs, but to look at the quality
instead, and in the research, one of
the things that fascinated them was the
variation they saw. You compare hospitals in a
country, you'll find some that are
extremely good, but you'll find a large number
that are vastly much worse. The differences were dramatic.
Erik, Stefan Larsson
father-in-law, he suffers from prostate
cancer, and he probably needs surgery.
Now living in Europe, he can
choose to go to Germany that has a well-reputed
healthcare system. If he goes there and goes to
the average hospital, he will have the risk of
becoming incontinent by about 50 percent,
so he would have to start
wearing diapers again. You flip a coin. Fifty percent
risk. That's quite a lot. If he instead would go to
Hamburg, and to a clinic called the
Martini-Klinik, the risk would be only one in
20. Either you a flip a coin,
or you have a one in 20 risk.
That's a huge difference, a
seven-fold difference. When we look at many hospitals
for many different diseases, we see these huge differences.
But you and I don't know. We
don't have the data. And often, the data actually
doesn't exist. Nobody knows. So going the hospital is a
lottery.
Now, it doesn't have to be
that way. There is hope. In the late '70s, there were a
group of Swedish orthopedic surgeons
who met at their annual
meeting, and they were discussing the
different procedures they used to operate hip
surgery. To the left of this slide, you
see a variety of metal pieces, artificial
hips that you would use for somebody who needs a new
hip. They all realized they had
their individual way of operating. They all argued that, "My
technique is the best," but none of them actually
knew, and they admitted that. So they said, "We
probably need to measure quality so we know and can learn from
what's best." So they in fact spent two
years debating, "So what is quality in
hip surgery?" "Oh, we should measure
this." "No, we should measure that." And they finally agreed.
And once they had agreed, they
started measuring, and started sharing the data.
Very quickly, they found that
if you put cement in the bone of the patient
before you put the metal shaft
in, it actually lasted a lot
longer, and most patients would never
have to be re-operated on in their
lifetime. They published the data,
and it actually transformed
clinical practice in the country. Everybody saw this makes a lot
of sense. Since then, they publish every
year. Once a year, they publish the
league table: who's best, who's at the
bottom? And they visit each other to
try to learn, so a continuous cycle of
improvement. For many years, Swedish hip
surgeons had the best results in the
world, at least for those who
actually were measuring, and many were not.
Now Stefan Larsson found this
principle really exciting. So the physicians get
together, they agree on what quality is,
they start measuring, they
share the data, they find who's best, and they
learn from it. Continuous improvement.
Now, that's not the only
exciting part. That's exciting in itself.
But if you bring back the cost
side of the equation, and look at that, it turns out, those who have
focused on quality, they actually also have the
lowest costs, although that's not been the
purpose in the first place. So if you look at the hip
surgery story again, there was a study done a
couple years ago where they compared the U.S.
and Sweden. They looked at how many
patients have needed to be re-operated on seven
years after the first surgery. In the United States, the
number was three times higher than in Sweden.
So many unnecessary surgeries,
and so much unnecessary
suffering for all the patients who were
operated on in that seven year period.
Now, you can imagine how much
savings there would be for society.
They did a study where they
looked at OECD data. OECD does, every so often,
look at quality of care
where they can find the data
across the member countries. The United States has, for
many diseases, actually a quality which is
below the average in OECD. Now, if the American
healthcare system would focus a lot more on
measuring quality, and raise quality just to the
level of average OECD, it would save the American people
500 billion U.S. dollars a
year. That's 20 percent of the
budget, of the healthcare budget of
the country.
Now you may say that these
numbers are fantastic, and it's all
logical, but is it possible?
This would be a paradigm shift
in healthcare, and I would argue that not
only can it be done, but it has to be done.
The agents of change are the
doctors and nurses in the healthcare system.
In Stefan Larsson practice as
a consultant, he meet probably a hundred or
more than a hundred doctors and nurses and other
hospital or healthcare staff every
year. The one thing they have in
common is they really care about what
they achieve in terms of quality for their
patients. Physicians are, very competitive. They were always best in
class.And if somebody can show them
that the result they perform for their
patients is no better than what others
do, they will do whatever it takes
to improve. But most of them don't know.
But physicians have another
characteristic. They actually thrive from peer
recognition. If a cardiologist calls
another cardiologist in a competing hospital
and discusses why that other
hospital has so much better results,
they will share. They will share the
information on how to improve. So it is, by measuring and
creating transparency, you get a cycle of continuous
improvement.
Now, you may say this is a
nice idea, but this isn't only an idea.
This is happening in reality.
We're creating a global
community, and a large global community,
where we'll be able to measure
and compare what we achieve. Together with two academic
institutions, Michael Porter at Harvard
Business School, and the Karolinska Institute
in Sweden, BCG has formed something we
call ICHOM. You may think that's a sneeze,
but it's not a sneeze, it's an
acronym. It stands for the
International Consortium for Health Outcome
Measurement. they're bringing together
leading physicians and patients to discuss,
disease by disease, what is really quality,
what should they measure, and to make those standards
global. They've worked -- four working
groups have worked during the past year:
cataracts, back pain,
coronary artery disease, which
is, for instance, heart attack, and prostate cancer.
The four groups will publish
their data in November of this year.
That's the first time they'll
be comparing apples to apples, not only
within a country, but between countries.
Next year, we're planning to
do eight diseases, the year after, 16.
In three years' time, we plan
to have covered 40 percent of the disease
burden. Compare apples to apples.
Who's better? Why is that?
Five months ago, Stefan Larsson led a workshop
at the largest university hospital in Northern Europe.
They have a new CEO, and she
has a vision: I want to manage my big
institution much more on quality, outcomes that
matter to patients. This particular day, they sat
in a workshop together with physicians,
nurses and other staff, discussing leukemia in
children. The group discussed,
how do we measure quality
today? Can we measure it better than
we do? We discussed, how do we treat
these kids, what are important
improvements? And we discussed what are the
costs for these patients, can we do treatment more
efficiently? There was an enormous energy
in the room. There were so many ideas, so
much enthusiasm. At the end of the meeting,
the chairman of the department,
he stood up. He looked over the group and
he said -- first he raised his hand, I
forgot that -- he raised his hand, clenched
his fist, and then he said to the group,
"Thank you. Thank you. Today, we're finally
discussing what this hospital does the
right way."
By measuring value in
healthcare, that is not only costs
but outcomes that matter to
patients, we will make staff in
hospitals and elsewhere in the
healthcare system not a problem but an important
part of the solution. I believe measuring value in
healthcare will bring about a revolution,
and I'm convinced that the
founder of modern medicine, the Greek
Hippocrates, who always put the patient at
the center, he would smile in his grave.

Sterling! (Y)
ReplyDeleteWell written
ReplyDeleteGood Workkk!
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