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Hospitalists are uniquely positioned to be agents of change in the health care system, helping to care for very sick patients as well as identifying cost-efficient ways to keep them well, Marc Harrison, MD, said in his keynote presentation Monday at HM19.
“You’re in exactly the right place in exactly the right specialty to make an enormous difference for our country, which desperately needs an upgrade in terms of how we approach keeping people well and then taking care of people when they’re sick in a superefficient as well as independent fashion,” said Dr. Harrison, president and CEO of Intermountain Healthcare, based in Salt Lake City.
Hospital medicine, hospitalists, and the health care system in general are at an inflection point, and leading change in a positive fashion is the “single core competency” attendees need as health care transitions toward value-based care. This means moving away from a volume-based care model and asking hard questions about whether providers are doing the right things for patients, said Dr. Harrison at the Annual Conference of the Society of Hospital Medicine.
“It’s going to require humility, risk taking, and a desire to truly serve others if we’re going to change the paradigm for health care delivery,” he added.
About one-third of health care that providers deliver is redundant, which costs the United States approximately $1 trillion per year, Dr. Harrison noted. “There’s plenty of money in American health care; it’s just being misspent.”
Health care is “expensive, not consumer centric, and provides uneven quality,” which has spurred businesses like Google and Amazon to try to change the model. Other trends in the health care industry are an increased focus on mergers and acquisitions, negative growth outlook for hospitals, rural hospitals facing closure, and consumers increasingly demanding transparency in health care in such places as their hospital bills.
“We need to be on our front foot” to adapt to these changes, said Dr. Harrison, which means changing how money is spent in U.S. health care. There is currently a disparity: 10% of a person’s health care comes from hospitals and clinics, while 90% of money spent in U.S. health care is on that 10%. Spending should instead be inverted, focused on population-based health initiatives such as addressing social issues surrounding housing, transportation, and food security.
A crisis is coming for providers and health systems that continue to focus on volume-based care models instead of making hard changes to value-based care, said Dr. Harrison. Population-based health initiatives that should be implemented include lowering the cost of care by shifting to outpatient care models and lowering insurance premiums.
“It doesn’t matter how technically good you are if people can’t afford what you’re doing,” he said.
Population-based health initiatives also should be modernized to care upstream, fixing the cause of health problems rather than treating the symptoms. The goal, said Dr. Harrison, is a system with end-to-end seamless care, in which providers understand patients’ goals, are intentional about keeping their patients well, and can “ensure seamless handoff” to other caregivers.
Dr. Harrison said the future of hospital medicine is providing acute care in this way, and attendees are uniquely suited to take care of patients not only in the hospital but also at home, as well as providing consultations with colleagues in care environments without hospitalist programs.
“You’re in the absolute perfect place to keep patients in the least-restrictive, least-expensive environment where they can receive superb care,” he said.
Hospitalists are uniquely positioned to be agents of change in the health care system, helping to care for very sick patients as well as identifying cost-efficient ways to keep them well, Marc Harrison, MD, said in his keynote presentation Monday at HM19.
“You’re in exactly the right place in exactly the right specialty to make an enormous difference for our country, which desperately needs an upgrade in terms of how we approach keeping people well and then taking care of people when they’re sick in a superefficient as well as independent fashion,” said Dr. Harrison, president and CEO of Intermountain Healthcare, based in Salt Lake City.
Hospital medicine, hospitalists, and the health care system in general are at an inflection point, and leading change in a positive fashion is the “single core competency” attendees need as health care transitions toward value-based care. This means moving away from a volume-based care model and asking hard questions about whether providers are doing the right things for patients, said Dr. Harrison at the Annual Conference of the Society of Hospital Medicine.
“It’s going to require humility, risk taking, and a desire to truly serve others if we’re going to change the paradigm for health care delivery,” he added.
About one-third of health care that providers deliver is redundant, which costs the United States approximately $1 trillion per year, Dr. Harrison noted. “There’s plenty of money in American health care; it’s just being misspent.”
Health care is “expensive, not consumer centric, and provides uneven quality,” which has spurred businesses like Google and Amazon to try to change the model. Other trends in the health care industry are an increased focus on mergers and acquisitions, negative growth outlook for hospitals, rural hospitals facing closure, and consumers increasingly demanding transparency in health care in such places as their hospital bills.
“We need to be on our front foot” to adapt to these changes, said Dr. Harrison, which means changing how money is spent in U.S. health care. There is currently a disparity: 10% of a person’s health care comes from hospitals and clinics, while 90% of money spent in U.S. health care is on that 10%. Spending should instead be inverted, focused on population-based health initiatives such as addressing social issues surrounding housing, transportation, and food security.
A crisis is coming for providers and health systems that continue to focus on volume-based care models instead of making hard changes to value-based care, said Dr. Harrison. Population-based health initiatives that should be implemented include lowering the cost of care by shifting to outpatient care models and lowering insurance premiums.
“It doesn’t matter how technically good you are if people can’t afford what you’re doing,” he said.
Population-based health initiatives also should be modernized to care upstream, fixing the cause of health problems rather than treating the symptoms. The goal, said Dr. Harrison, is a system with end-to-end seamless care, in which providers understand patients’ goals, are intentional about keeping their patients well, and can “ensure seamless handoff” to other caregivers.
Dr. Harrison said the future of hospital medicine is providing acute care in this way, and attendees are uniquely suited to take care of patients not only in the hospital but also at home, as well as providing consultations with colleagues in care environments without hospitalist programs.
“You’re in the absolute perfect place to keep patients in the least-restrictive, least-expensive environment where they can receive superb care,” he said.
Hospitalists are uniquely positioned to be agents of change in the health care system, helping to care for very sick patients as well as identifying cost-efficient ways to keep them well, Marc Harrison, MD, said in his keynote presentation Monday at HM19.
“You’re in exactly the right place in exactly the right specialty to make an enormous difference for our country, which desperately needs an upgrade in terms of how we approach keeping people well and then taking care of people when they’re sick in a superefficient as well as independent fashion,” said Dr. Harrison, president and CEO of Intermountain Healthcare, based in Salt Lake City.
Hospital medicine, hospitalists, and the health care system in general are at an inflection point, and leading change in a positive fashion is the “single core competency” attendees need as health care transitions toward value-based care. This means moving away from a volume-based care model and asking hard questions about whether providers are doing the right things for patients, said Dr. Harrison at the Annual Conference of the Society of Hospital Medicine.
“It’s going to require humility, risk taking, and a desire to truly serve others if we’re going to change the paradigm for health care delivery,” he added.
About one-third of health care that providers deliver is redundant, which costs the United States approximately $1 trillion per year, Dr. Harrison noted. “There’s plenty of money in American health care; it’s just being misspent.”
Health care is “expensive, not consumer centric, and provides uneven quality,” which has spurred businesses like Google and Amazon to try to change the model. Other trends in the health care industry are an increased focus on mergers and acquisitions, negative growth outlook for hospitals, rural hospitals facing closure, and consumers increasingly demanding transparency in health care in such places as their hospital bills.
“We need to be on our front foot” to adapt to these changes, said Dr. Harrison, which means changing how money is spent in U.S. health care. There is currently a disparity: 10% of a person’s health care comes from hospitals and clinics, while 90% of money spent in U.S. health care is on that 10%. Spending should instead be inverted, focused on population-based health initiatives such as addressing social issues surrounding housing, transportation, and food security.
A crisis is coming for providers and health systems that continue to focus on volume-based care models instead of making hard changes to value-based care, said Dr. Harrison. Population-based health initiatives that should be implemented include lowering the cost of care by shifting to outpatient care models and lowering insurance premiums.
“It doesn’t matter how technically good you are if people can’t afford what you’re doing,” he said.
Population-based health initiatives also should be modernized to care upstream, fixing the cause of health problems rather than treating the symptoms. The goal, said Dr. Harrison, is a system with end-to-end seamless care, in which providers understand patients’ goals, are intentional about keeping their patients well, and can “ensure seamless handoff” to other caregivers.
Dr. Harrison said the future of hospital medicine is providing acute care in this way, and attendees are uniquely suited to take care of patients not only in the hospital but also at home, as well as providing consultations with colleagues in care environments without hospitalist programs.
“You’re in the absolute perfect place to keep patients in the least-restrictive, least-expensive environment where they can receive superb care,” he said.