There was a terrific edition of Radio Boston on medical apologies on WBUR, NPR's Boston…
Two items that entered my consciousness this morning: group medical appointments as a manifestation of the medical home and order-your-own labs as a manifestation of Health 2.0.
At 700-plus-doctor Atrius Health here in the Boston area, CEO Gene Lindsey still sees patients, but only in 90-minute group appointments. Other large group practices across the country have already implemented this practice, and it's growing at Atrius (which includes Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates and a number of other groups). Patients opt in and benefit from longer contact with the physician and discussion of issues that may be of general concern to all of them (Lindsey is a cardiologist; he can fit many more "canned" speeches to his patients into a 90-minute visit, and his patients seem to appreciate it).
This innovation addresses a couple of issues simultaneously: PCP shortage, under-reimbursement of cognitive services and patient dissatisfaction with too-short office visits.
Scott Shreve is not your typical patient, but as the linked post in his blog argues, patient-directed lab ordering makes better use of the office visit: you can discuss results with your doc, rather than discussing which tests to have ordered. Scott further argues that consumer-directed health care, as exemplified by this service, is ineluctable, just as we cannot turn back the clock on consumer-directed financial services (e.g., on-line trades) which cut out the financial advisory intermediary. Given the recent dip in our collective net worth, the unmediated access to stuff that matters (retirement funds, health care data) cannot yet be counted an unqualified success. However, Scott's point that we can't fight it, and that it may offer some benefits, is well taken.
The order-your-own labs innovation, like the group physician visit innovation, is a neat solution to a bundle of problems. These are the sorts of leaps that are necessary to get us out of the current downward spiral that will otherwise leave us all without adequate access to appropriate levels of medical care.
(Tip of the hat to Bob Coffield for the Scott Shreve post. That's a link to Bob's twitter post, not blog post. For those of you not yet following me on twitter, please do so right here: @HealthBlawg.)
David Harlow
The Harlow Group LLC
Health Care Law and Consulting
Healthcare NOW Radio Podcast Network · Harlow on Healthcare
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