Is it possible that health care can become more effective,
more personalized, more attuned to real health and wellness in a manner that
truly benefits you the customer?
At the recent health and wellness conference celebrating the
20th anniversary of the University of Maryland Center for
Integrative Medicine there was a panel discussion moderated by Center director Brian
Berman, MD on the topic of health care of the future. Here are some excerpts
from the comments made by Dr. Delia Chiaramonte, Dr. Jeff Bland and myself.
The first question was what are the problems with the health
care system today? Here are some of the responses:
There is excellent research and innovation along with superb
providers in this country. But the delivery system is dysfunctional and to date
America
has tolerated this dysfunction. It’s a medical care not a health care system.
The emphasis is strongly on disease management and not disease prevention or
health promotion. American medical care is very expensive, about $8,000 per
capita and yet outcomes are not what they could or should be. For example, America
does not have the lowest infant mortality rate nor the longest life span. Other
developed countries beat us on both counts. Medical care of acute illness is
generally quite good in the United
States but chronic diseases – of which there
are more and more occurring – are not well cared for. The system is provider
oriented rather than patient oriented and the patient is not the real customer.
There is a shortage of primary care physicians and this is
getting worse every year. Only 30% of American physicians are primary care
physicians compared to about 70% in most other developed countries. Those still
in primary care practice have inadequate understanding of the causes and
prevention of chronic diseases. And too few appreciate the importance of care coordination
nor the full range of non-pharmacologic options for care.
The second question was what can patients do to get the best
possible health care? Among the responses, here are a few:
Since today the patient is largely not the customer of the
doctor, a good place to start is to change that paradigm. A high deductible
health policy means that the patient will now be paying the primary care
physician directly for care and thus this changes the professional-client
relationship to a more normal occurrence. The physician will now become more attentive,
allocate more time, offer more preventive care and will coordinate the care of
chronic illnesses.
Individuals also need to take more responsibility for their health
and wellness directly. Attention to nutrition, exercise, stress and tobacco are
key first steps. Work place wellness programs can materially assist. They can
offer a health care premium deduction in return for engaging in added
educational programs to improve lifestyles.
Social networking can have an increasingly beneficial
effect. Lifestyle changes are easier to accomplish in a peer group setting.
Usually we think of this as a physical group setting but it can also be done
through the use of social media. Groups help give a positive reinforcement for
behavior change.
Social networking through sites such as Facebook, Twitter or
You Tube or others can be used to leverage the medical care delivery system to
become more patient centered, more effective at the coordination of chronic
illness, more attuned to prevention and responsive to true integrated medicine.
Everyone should have a primary care physician, one well
schooled in the most current evidence-based care approaches yet who is attuned
to the full gamut of integrative medical approaches such as chiropractic,
nutrition, personal training, massage therapy, and acupuncture. You need to be
sure that your primary care physician will spend the time needed to deal with
health and wellness and not just disease. You may well need to pay your primary
care physician directly rather than buy insurance but the primary care
physician will then be financially able to offer you the time you really need
and deserve.
The third question was what will the health care provider of
the future be like and how will integrative medicine contribute to health care
in the future?
This question was addressed in an earlier post; go to this
link.
No comments:
Post a Comment