30 Eylül 2012 Pazar

Congressman Charles Rangel recognizes WAR's commitment to providing, and advocating for, breast cancer screenings

To contact us Click HERE
(Photo Credit: Flickr/RepRangel)
On Friday, October 21st, Representative Charles Rangel issued a statement in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month and National Mammography Day urging women across the country to schedule annual mammograms.

"Women are the pillars of our community," Representative Rangel said in the statement. "Again, please make preventative efforts and schedule a mammogram to guarantee you are receiving the care you deserve."

As the Congressman representing NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia's neighborhood in upper Manhattan, Rangel cited Women At Risk as a "wonderful resource in our community" and encouraged women in his district to contact WAR for more information about the importance of breast cancer screenings.

Women At Risk applauds Representative Rangel's efforts to raise awareness during Breast Cancer Awareness Month and will continue to serve the women in his district through breast cancer research, education, and support programs throughout the year.

You're invited to the Laurie Bass Sklaver Annual Symposium

To contact us Click HERE
Please join us for:

Empower Yourself: Lifestyle and Wellness Choices for Women at High Risk for, or with, Breast Cancer



GET HEALTHY: LIFESTYLE MODIFICATIONS AND DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS FOR CANCER PREVENTION
Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD
Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Medical Oncology,
Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health & College of Physicians and Surgeons
Naturopathic Physician and Epidemiologist


SOUL (SEASONAL, ORGANIC, UNPROCESSED, & LOCAL) FOOD TO SUPPORT YOUR HEALTH
Eileen Z. Fuentes
Board Certified Wellness, Lifestyle & Integrative Cancer Coach
Breast Cancer Survivor


MAKING CHOICES: INTEGRATING COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES AND STANDARD TREATMENTS
Hope Nemiroff
Executive Director, Breast Cancer Options
Breast Cancer Survivor


PATIENT PANEL
A panel of survivors and women at high risk for breast cancer will discuss their experiences.

Moderated by Katherine Crew, MD
Co-Medical Director, Women At Risk
Florence Irving Assistant Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology, 

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

Opening Remarks by Sheldon Feldman, MD
Chief of Breast Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, 2011

Refreshments 5:30-6:00PM * Program 6:00-8:00PM

UJA-Federation of New York * 7th Floor Conference Center * 130 E. 59th St. between Park and Lexington Aves.Reservations Required: Please call (212) 305-5917 or email info@womenatrisknyc.org.

Free admission * Seating is limited

This event is generously supported by the Friends and Family of Laurie Bass Sklaver.

Support Women At Risk this Valentine's Day!

To contact us Click HERE

To help you celebrate this special day of love and affection, Women At Risk has put together the perfect gift for that special someone!

Our limited-edition Pink Package includes:

  • Women At Risk's beautiful, sterling silver "We Are Resilient" Bracelet, created by renowned designer Catherine M. Zadeh ($100 value alone)
  • Webkinz Pink Poodle
  • Avon Anew Reversalist Night Creme
  • Shiseido Perfect Rouge Parfait Lipstick
  • Philosophy Melon Daquiri Lip Shine
  • Pink OPI Nail Lacquer

This assortment of pink-themed beauty products and jewelry is the perfect gift for yourself or the one you love! Proceeds benefit Women At Risk's research, education, and support programs for women at high risk for, and with, breast cancer.

Cost: $100
(Package is valued at $180!)
*$5 shipping for standard delivery, non tax-deductible, box not included.

To order: Contact Eric Dubinsky at erd9025@nyp.org or (212) 305-4486.

You're invited to a Young Professionals Committee outing!

To contact us Click HERE

Join Women At Risk's Young Professionals Committee for a night of socializing and fundraising to fight breast cancer!

All proceeds benefit Women At Risk's Patient Navigation Program.

Where: Mad River Bar & Grille
1442 Third Avenue (at 82nd Street)

When: Thursday, March 15th
6:00-9:00PM
(Come anytime in between!)

Cost: $10 cover (All proceeds go to WAR.)

Plus: $3 domestic drinks, $5 mixed drinks, and half off select appetizers
(10% of sales benefit WAR.)

You're invited: Wine & Cheese Reception at Neiman Marcus

To contact us Click HERE

Neiman Marcus Westchester and Women At Risk invite you to a wine and cheese reception at The Zodiac Restaurant (3rd Floor, Neiman Marcus), followed by a shopping event with "In-Circle" promotions and makeover stations!

With remarks from The Alan & Susan Fuirst Women At Risk Breast Surgery Fellow, Anu Sharma Saigal, M.D., M.P.H., of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center.

Thursday, October 11th
6:00-8:00 p.m.

2 Maple Avenue
White Plains, NY 10601
(Parking tickets will be validated)

Please RSVP to Eric Dubinsky at erd9025@nyp.org or (212) 305-4486.



29 Eylül 2012 Cumartesi

Congressman Charles Rangel recognizes WAR's commitment to providing, and advocating for, breast cancer screenings

To contact us Click HERE
(Photo Credit: Flickr/RepRangel)
On Friday, October 21st, Representative Charles Rangel issued a statement in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month and National Mammography Day urging women across the country to schedule annual mammograms.

"Women are the pillars of our community," Representative Rangel said in the statement. "Again, please make preventative efforts and schedule a mammogram to guarantee you are receiving the care you deserve."

As the Congressman representing NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia's neighborhood in upper Manhattan, Rangel cited Women At Risk as a "wonderful resource in our community" and encouraged women in his district to contact WAR for more information about the importance of breast cancer screenings.

Women At Risk applauds Representative Rangel's efforts to raise awareness during Breast Cancer Awareness Month and will continue to serve the women in his district through breast cancer research, education, and support programs throughout the year.

You're invited to the Laurie Bass Sklaver Annual Symposium

To contact us Click HERE
Please join us for:

Empower Yourself: Lifestyle and Wellness Choices for Women at High Risk for, or with, Breast Cancer



GET HEALTHY: LIFESTYLE MODIFICATIONS AND DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS FOR CANCER PREVENTION
Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD
Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Medical Oncology,
Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health & College of Physicians and Surgeons
Naturopathic Physician and Epidemiologist


SOUL (SEASONAL, ORGANIC, UNPROCESSED, & LOCAL) FOOD TO SUPPORT YOUR HEALTH
Eileen Z. Fuentes
Board Certified Wellness, Lifestyle & Integrative Cancer Coach
Breast Cancer Survivor


MAKING CHOICES: INTEGRATING COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES AND STANDARD TREATMENTS
Hope Nemiroff
Executive Director, Breast Cancer Options
Breast Cancer Survivor


PATIENT PANEL
A panel of survivors and women at high risk for breast cancer will discuss their experiences.

Moderated by Katherine Crew, MD
Co-Medical Director, Women At Risk
Florence Irving Assistant Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology, 

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

Opening Remarks by Sheldon Feldman, MD
Chief of Breast Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, 2011

Refreshments 5:30-6:00PM * Program 6:00-8:00PM

UJA-Federation of New York * 7th Floor Conference Center * 130 E. 59th St. between Park and Lexington Aves.Reservations Required: Please call (212) 305-5917 or email info@womenatrisknyc.org.

Free admission * Seating is limited

This event is generously supported by the Friends and Family of Laurie Bass Sklaver.

Support Women At Risk this Valentine's Day!

To contact us Click HERE

To help you celebrate this special day of love and affection, Women At Risk has put together the perfect gift for that special someone!

Our limited-edition Pink Package includes:

  • Women At Risk's beautiful, sterling silver "We Are Resilient" Bracelet, created by renowned designer Catherine M. Zadeh ($100 value alone)
  • Webkinz Pink Poodle
  • Avon Anew Reversalist Night Creme
  • Shiseido Perfect Rouge Parfait Lipstick
  • Philosophy Melon Daquiri Lip Shine
  • Pink OPI Nail Lacquer

This assortment of pink-themed beauty products and jewelry is the perfect gift for yourself or the one you love! Proceeds benefit Women At Risk's research, education, and support programs for women at high risk for, and with, breast cancer.

Cost: $100
(Package is valued at $180!)
*$5 shipping for standard delivery, non tax-deductible, box not included.

To order: Contact Eric Dubinsky at erd9025@nyp.org or (212) 305-4486.

You're invited to a Young Professionals Committee outing!

To contact us Click HERE

Join Women At Risk's Young Professionals Committee for a night of socializing and fundraising to fight breast cancer!

All proceeds benefit Women At Risk's Patient Navigation Program.

Where: Mad River Bar & Grille
1442 Third Avenue (at 82nd Street)

When: Thursday, March 15th
6:00-9:00PM
(Come anytime in between!)

Cost: $10 cover (All proceeds go to WAR.)

Plus: $3 domestic drinks, $5 mixed drinks, and half off select appetizers
(10% of sales benefit WAR.)

You're invited: Wine & Cheese Reception at Neiman Marcus

To contact us Click HERE

Neiman Marcus Westchester and Women At Risk invite you to a wine and cheese reception at The Zodiac Restaurant (3rd Floor, Neiman Marcus), followed by a shopping event with "In-Circle" promotions and makeover stations!

With remarks from The Alan & Susan Fuirst Women At Risk Breast Surgery Fellow, Anu Sharma Saigal, M.D., M.P.H., of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center.

Thursday, October 11th
6:00-8:00 p.m.

2 Maple Avenue
White Plains, NY 10601
(Parking tickets will be validated)

Please RSVP to Eric Dubinsky at erd9025@nyp.org or (212) 305-4486.



28 Eylül 2012 Cuma

You're invited to the Laurie Bass Sklaver Annual Symposium

To contact us Click HERE
Please join us for:

Empower Yourself: Lifestyle and Wellness Choices for Women at High Risk for, or with, Breast Cancer



GET HEALTHY: LIFESTYLE MODIFICATIONS AND DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS FOR CANCER PREVENTION
Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD
Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Medical Oncology,
Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health & College of Physicians and Surgeons
Naturopathic Physician and Epidemiologist


SOUL (SEASONAL, ORGANIC, UNPROCESSED, & LOCAL) FOOD TO SUPPORT YOUR HEALTH
Eileen Z. Fuentes
Board Certified Wellness, Lifestyle & Integrative Cancer Coach
Breast Cancer Survivor


MAKING CHOICES: INTEGRATING COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES AND STANDARD TREATMENTS
Hope Nemiroff
Executive Director, Breast Cancer Options
Breast Cancer Survivor


PATIENT PANEL
A panel of survivors and women at high risk for breast cancer will discuss their experiences.

Moderated by Katherine Crew, MD
Co-Medical Director, Women At Risk
Florence Irving Assistant Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology, 

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

Opening Remarks by Sheldon Feldman, MD
Chief of Breast Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, 2011

Refreshments 5:30-6:00PM * Program 6:00-8:00PM

UJA-Federation of New York * 7th Floor Conference Center * 130 E. 59th St. between Park and Lexington Aves.Reservations Required: Please call (212) 305-5917 or email info@womenatrisknyc.org.

Free admission * Seating is limited

This event is generously supported by the Friends and Family of Laurie Bass Sklaver.

Support Women At Risk this Valentine's Day!

To contact us Click HERE

To help you celebrate this special day of love and affection, Women At Risk has put together the perfect gift for that special someone!

Our limited-edition Pink Package includes:

  • Women At Risk's beautiful, sterling silver "We Are Resilient" Bracelet, created by renowned designer Catherine M. Zadeh ($100 value alone)
  • Webkinz Pink Poodle
  • Avon Anew Reversalist Night Creme
  • Shiseido Perfect Rouge Parfait Lipstick
  • Philosophy Melon Daquiri Lip Shine
  • Pink OPI Nail Lacquer

This assortment of pink-themed beauty products and jewelry is the perfect gift for yourself or the one you love! Proceeds benefit Women At Risk's research, education, and support programs for women at high risk for, and with, breast cancer.

Cost: $100
(Package is valued at $180!)
*$5 shipping for standard delivery, non tax-deductible, box not included.

To order: Contact Eric Dubinsky at erd9025@nyp.org or (212) 305-4486.

You're invited to a Young Professionals Committee outing!

To contact us Click HERE

Join Women At Risk's Young Professionals Committee for a night of socializing and fundraising to fight breast cancer!

All proceeds benefit Women At Risk's Patient Navigation Program.

Where: Mad River Bar & Grille
1442 Third Avenue (at 82nd Street)

When: Thursday, March 15th
6:00-9:00PM
(Come anytime in between!)

Cost: $10 cover (All proceeds go to WAR.)

Plus: $3 domestic drinks, $5 mixed drinks, and half off select appetizers
(10% of sales benefit WAR.)

You're invited: Wine & Cheese Reception at Neiman Marcus

To contact us Click HERE

Neiman Marcus Westchester and Women At Risk invite you to a wine and cheese reception at The Zodiac Restaurant (3rd Floor, Neiman Marcus), followed by a shopping event with "In-Circle" promotions and makeover stations!

With remarks from The Alan & Susan Fuirst Women At Risk Breast Surgery Fellow, Anu Sharma Saigal, M.D., M.P.H., of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center.

Thursday, October 11th
6:00-8:00 p.m.

2 Maple Avenue
White Plains, NY 10601
(Parking tickets will be validated)

Please RSVP to Eric Dubinsky at erd9025@nyp.org or (212) 305-4486.



Support Breast Cancer Awareness Month this October!

To contact us Click HERE


October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month and we have partnered with a number of companies to raise money to fight breast cancer. A percentage of the proceeds from select items will be donated to Women At Risk.

White + Warren
50% of proceeds from the “Pink Geo Woven Scarf” will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. The woven scarf is 100% mercerized wool and retails for $130. Visit www.whiteandwarren.com

Reed Krakoff
20% of proceeds from the purchase of any “Boxer” handbag, small $1,090, or large $1,290 at the Madison Avenue store will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. The handbag comes in black, red, fuchsia, crimson, zephyr, tan, grey and multi-color combinations. Available in store at 831 Madison Ave, New York City or place orders by calling 212-988-0560.

GIELLA
100% of net proceeds donated to Women At Risk. Specially-designed “Swarovski Crystal Lipstick” or “Powder Compact,” each $38. Available year-round at all GIELLA locations or order online at www.giella.com or by phone: 888-221-0469. Visit www.giella.com for store locations.

Zaro’s Bakery
50% of proceeds from the sale of their delicious “Pink and White Cookie” ($3.95) will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. Please visit www.zaro.com for a list of locations.

Sarah Swanson Skincare
20% of proceeds from the “Sugar Face” collection will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. The “Sugar Face” collection includes all-natural soaps, scrubs, and moisturizers. Order online at www.sarahswansonskincare.com.

Salon Ziba
Salon Ziba will donate $1 to Women At Risk for every client that visits either their uptown or downtown location during the month of October. Clients can also bid on gift bags with Moroccan oil items through their silent auction, all proceeds will benefit WAR. Visit www.salonziba.com for store locations.

Wendy Lynn Designs
20% of proceeds from select items will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. Pieces include: The WAR “Magic” necklace, extra-long hammered link necklace, in rhodium or antique 22-carat gold plated, $140; WAR “Dove” necklace, antique 22-carat gold plated, $130; and WAR “Eternity” necklace, eternity pendant, with elegant hammered design, antique 22-carat-gold plated, $130. To view and place an order, visit www.wendylynndesigns.com.

Carolina Designs
30% of proceeds from Carolina’s Lifestyle Collection will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. Carolina’s Lifestyle Collection draws its influences from the elegance of simplicity, the comfort of small luxuries and the subtle inner peace that wisdom brings. Visit www.carolworkinger.com.

Coogan’s
A percentage of a special drink and entrée will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. Ask your bartender or server about the options and be sure to specify that you want the WAR special. www.coogans.com

Fresh Raw Radical
10% of proceeds from any drink will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October.
The drinks offered are “Fresh Fix,” “Radical Renew,” “Raw Repair,” and “Fresh Replenish” and are made up entirely of organic fruits and vegetables. Order online at www.freshrawradical.com or pick one up at any David Barton gym location.

Kay Radcliffe
12% of proceeds from special WAR designed scarf by artist Kartherine Radcliffe to benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. 100% silk scarves are individually hand painted on luminous pink silk Habotai. Pearlescent and iridescent pink, pearl white, and pale gold dots of color, along with small pink ribbons, decorate the scarf ends. Each is signed by the artist; measures 11”x 60”; and is hand washable. $48, plus $6 Shipping and Handling via Priority Mail. To view the scarf and to order, visit www.kradcliffeart.com.

Pink Wings
20% of proceeds from sale of any retail breast cancer awareness product will benefit Women At Risk. Please specify “Women At Risk” in the order comments when checking out. Visit www.pinkwings.com.

Robin Koffler Design
20% of proceeds from any of Robin Koffler’s website items will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. Pieces are mainly 18k gold and are handmade precious & semi-precious stones. Visit www.robinkoffler.com.

Sally Kay Jewelery / Accessory Artists
20% of proceeds from the sale of the “Pink Charming Confetti Necklace” by Sally Kay Jewelery will benefit Women At Risk during the month of October. An additional 20% will be donated by Accessory Artists for making the purchase through their site. Visit www.accessoryartists.com.

Women At Risk Bracelets by Catherine M. Zadeh
100% of net proceeds will benefit Women At Risk. Purchase a “We Are Resilient” bracelet for yourself, a family member or a friend to show your support for the WAR against breast cancer. “We Are Resilient” bracelets make beautiful, meaningful gifts for any occasion! Silver, $75 and Gold, $200. To view, visit http://nyp.org/services/war/support-war.html and to order please call Eric Dubinsky at 212-305-4486 or email erd9025@nyp.org.

Laura Geller
100% of proceeds from the “BiCoastal Beauty Kit” to be donated to Women At Risk during October. The kit is a sophisticated collection for eyes and cheeks containing various blush and eye makeup items including brushes, $50. To order, please call Eric Dubinsky at 212-305-4486 or email erd9025@nyp.org.

Ganz /Webkinz Promotion
100% of proceeds from the “Pink Poodle,” $15, benefit Women At Risk. This adorable stuffed animal can be registered online for kids to adopt a pet and discover a virtual world. To view the poodle visit http://alturl.com/xv286. To order, please call Eric Dubinsky at 212-305-4486 or email erd9025@nyp.org.

27 Eylül 2012 Perşembe

Majority of the Public Wants Politicians Who Will Root Out Corporate Corruption

To contact us Click HERE
Here is a story that makes me unusually optimistic, at least about the wisdom of the people at large. Reuters reported on a new poll,  
With less than two months to go before the U.S. presidential election, a new survey found 61 percent of Americans say a candidate's commitment to rooting out corporate wrongdoing will be key in deciding who gets their vote.

Along with keen interest in knowing each candidate's plans to fix the struggling economy, voters want government to do more to fight corporate misconduct - which they say helped cause the financial crisis.

'In these difficult economic times, Americans are mad as hell about corporate wrongdoing and are going to do something about it in the November elections and beyond,' said Jordan Thomas, a partner at law firm Labaton Sucharow, which commissioned the survey and which represents corporate whistleblowers.

A telephone poll of 1,015 people conducted from August 16-19 found that 64 percent of Americans said corporate misconduct helped bring about the current economic crisis.

And 81 percent of respondents said the government has not done enough to stop corporate wrongdoing.

Furthermore,
77 percent of respondents saying they believe politicians favor corporate interests over constituent interests.

Some 63 percent of Americans believe government should make more money available to regulators and law enforcement to eliminate corporate wrongdoing.

This is really amazing in its contrast to the usual received wisdom in all its cynicism.

We on Health Care Renewal have been railing about misbehavior and outright criminal behavior by major health care organizations and their leaders for a long time.  In 2008, the global financial collapse shocked us into awareness that the problems in health care actually parallel perhaps worse problems in finance.  Yet while numerous legal settlements documented the continuing epidemic of bad behavior in health care, the relatively small penalties they entailed, generally limited to corporate fines that could be viewed as costs of doing business, and to toothless corporate integrity agreements seemed to do little to deter future bad behavior.  Again, since 2008 there were parallels in the world of finance.   As Oscar winning producer of Inside Job Charles Ferguson complained, no one went to jail for financial misbehavior either.

In health care, the anechoic effect dampened public discussion of bad leadership, including criminally bad leadership as a major cause of health care dysfunction.  While we have been calling for more serious efforts to deter bad behavior at least since 2008 (look here), our position seemed very lonely.  It took until last week for arguably the most prestigious US medical journal to run an article suggesting that leaders of health care corporations that commit fraud ought to go to jail (look here).

Yet it may be that the general public has been paying attention to this issue even if policy makers and political leaders have not.  The brief Rueters article did not make it clear whether these poll results only apply to wrongdoing by financial corporations and their leaders, or to all corporations and their leaders. Even if it were the former, the results were certainly striking, suggesting a majority of Americans now identify corporate corruption, and its influence on politics as a major, maybe the major problem for this country. That might lead to some interesting election outcomes, especially since very few US politicians seem to have taken any sort of stand against corporate corruption, at least to my knowledge.

If there is so much public awareness of the problem of bad corporate leadership, corporate misdeeds, and corporate corruption of politics, I can only hope that it will translate into awareness of these problems as they affect health care. As I wrote in 2009, not long after Pfizer's mere $2.3 billion settlement,...   "Until the people responsible for the bad behavior experience negative consequences from that behavior, they will continue to perform, direct, and condone bad behavior. We will not achieve real health care reform in the US until we effectively deter unethical, self-serving behavior by leaders of health care organizations."  We can start realistically anticipating real health care reform once we get some politicians in office who are committed to "rooting out corporate wrongdoing." 

In addition to nurses, doctors now air their alarm: Contra Costa County health doctors air complaints about county's new $45 million computer system

To contact us Click HERE
At my Aug. 2012 post "Contra Costa's $45 million computer health care system endangering lives, nurses say", I described how an experimental EHR being forced on clinicians in Contra Costa county, California, was endangering patients who had not consented to its use, and how nurses were reported to be raising hell about it.  I also noted:

... The[se] scenarios [of EHR-created mayhem] are also usually accompanied by amoral misdirection from these personnel away from patient risks...

Herein is the problem:  the attitude that a clinic full of non-consenting patients is an appropriate testbed for alpha and beta clinical software that puts them at risk is medically unethical, based on the guidelines developed from medical abuses of the past.  There is nothing to argue or debate about this. 

Now the affected physicians have their say.

These physicians are apparently represented by a union; therefore they likely fear retaliation less than non-union physicians, and thus can be candid:

Contra Costa County health doctors air complaints about county's new $45 million computer system
By Matthias Gafni
Contra Costa Times
Posted:   09/18/2012, Updated:  09/19/2012

MARTINEZ -- One of every 10 emergency room patients at the county's public hospitals in September left without ever being seen by a doctor or nurse because of long waits -- a number rising since implementation of Contra Costa's $45 million computer system July 1.

One patient waited 40 hours to get a bed.

Dr. Brenda Reilly delivered the troubling news Tuesday afternoon to county supervisors. She was one of three dozen doctors in the supervisors' chamber complaining about EPIC, new computer software aimed at integrating all of the county's health departments to create a federally mandated electronic medical record for patients.

The response, as seen later, were characterized by the typical amoral excuses, mistaken beliefs in technological determinism, (a/k/a quasi-religious computer fanaticism) and misdirection I described above.

To allow for the major computer program installation and conversion, administrators cut doctors' patient loads in half, in turn cutting the number of available appointments in half.

In a letter to the supervisors, Dr. Ori Tzvieli -- medical staff president whose union has been negotiating a new contract with the county -- along with 14 doctor co-signers pleaded for administrators to continue scaling back physician workloads because doctors are over-stressed. Six doctors have left this year, said Dr. Keith White, a 22-year pediatrician.

I point out that such stress from interacting woth a mission hostile EHR (really, a clinician workflow-control system), and the needed state of hypervigilance to avoid IT-related mistakes that harm patients, lead to burnout and ultimately, a lower quality of patient care. 

Patient workloads were reduced by 50%, which is bad enough (and indicative of gross project mismanagement, as I wrote about in another example in my Sept. 2012 post "Lake County (IL) Health Department: The extremes to which faith-based informatics beliefs can drive healthcare facilities - Depression era soup lines at the clinic?").

Yet the 50% reduction, according to the principal end users, was still not enough.  Usability and fitness of the software is surely in question.

"We were not ready for EPIC and EPIC was not ready for us," White told supervisors. "As a result, the providers are struggling to provide safe and effective care for 100,000 citizens of the county, many of whom are very ill. We often feel that we are failing. We are very tired ... many doctors have left and all are considering leaving."

It is impossible for people, especially medical professionals, to be "ready" for a system that "is not ready for them", i.e., "bad IT" as defined at my teaching site intro at this link:

Good IT is defined as IT that provides a good user experience, enhances cognitive function, puts essential information as effortlessly as possible into the physician’s hands, and facilitates better practice of medicine and better outcomes.

Bad IT is defined as IT that is ill-suited to purpose, hard to use, unreliable, loses data or provides incorrect data, causes cognitive overload, slows rather than facilitates users, lacks appropriate alerts, creates the need for hypervigilance (i.e., towards avoiding IT-related mishaps) that increases stress, is lacking in security, or otherwise demonstrates suboptimal design and/or implementation. 
 
The two phrases "We were not ready for EPIC" and "EPIC was not ready for us" do not belong together in the same sentence.

A claim that physicians (and nurses) are "struggling" to provide safe let alone effective care for 100,000 should RAISE ALARM BELLS, not produce a paternalistic, patronizing response from medical and governmental officials as it did, seen below.

Both doctors and administrators agreed Tuesday that creating an integrated electronic health record is important, but a series of white coats stepped to the podium in what they jokingly termed "Doccupy" to share their nightmarish last few months.

I disagree with the assessment that "creating an integrated electronic health record is important", in that the technology and know-how to do so without endangering the very patients the technology is supposed to protect does not yet seem to exist in the commercial sector.

In that sense, regulating EHR technology and subjecting it to controlled clinical trials and refinement (as with any other medical device or drug, and many other types of healthcare-related IT such as MDDS - medical device data systems) with consenting subjects is what's important.

On MDDS, from the FDA link above:


Medical Device Data Systems (MDDS) are hardware or software products that transfer, store, convert formats, and display medical device data. An MDDS does not modify the data or modify the display of the data, and it does not by itself control the functions or parameters of any other medical device. MDDS are not intended to be used for active patient monitoring. Examples of MDDS include:
  • software that stores patient data such as blood pressure readings for review at a later time;
  • software that converts digital data generated by a pulse oximeter into a format that can be printed; and
  • software that displays a previously stored electrocardiogram for a particular patient.
The quality and continued reliable performance of MDDS are essential for the safety and effectiveness of health care delivery. Inadequate quality and design, unreliable performance, or incorrect functioning of MDDS can have a critical impact on public health.

That health IT used on live patients receives special regulatory accommodation in the form of non-regulation, when clearly the quality and continued reliable performance of EHR systems are essential for the safety and effectiveness of health care delivery, is inexcusable in 2012.  

(Of course, stunningly, FDA won't touch the latter, although admitting they are medical devices that should fall under the FD&C Act, because EHRs are a "political hot potato."  See this post for the relevant citations.)

... "This has been excruciatingly painful to do what is needed for those people who need it most," said Dr. Rachel Steinhart, an emergency room doctor who worked a graveyard shift ending Tuesday morning, hours before the board meeting. She said she still had to document paperwork for 16 of her patients. "It's going to implode. It can't go on like this."

Patients are surely going to be injured or killed in this setting.  There is likely a "hold harmless" clause with the vendor, so, doctors, I'm sorry to say, despite your complaints, you will very likely be held legally liable.

The head of the county's health care system sympathizes, and hopes to work with medical staff to ease the transition for what is a monumental moment in medical history.

"We're in an era of massive change right now, not only in our system, but in the system nationwide," said Dr. William Walker, Contra Costa's health services director. "Coming with the rapidity is its throwing people off balance."

Dr. Walker has just painted a big red "name me as a defendant for gross negligence and breach of fiduciary responsibilities to patients and clinicians" target on his back for glossing over known health IT risks and what appear to be rather profound complaints coming from his constituents.  Instead, he supplies platitudes, not action to remediate or withdraw the bad IT.

Name me as a defendant for gross negligence and breach of fiduciary responsibilities to patients and clinicians


The response is stunning:

To ease the burden, Walker hopes to have teams of medical care providers formed to ease the doctors' paperwork burden, enabling them to return to treating patients.

It takes teams of physicians to properly see a patient due to the interference of EHRs?  That is remarkable.

The ccLink program has its benefits, some doctors said. Dr. Chris Farnitano, an ambulatory care medical director, described how he retrieved a patient's biopsy results from a different hospital on the spot, whereas in the past it would have taken weeks.

However, other doctors called ccLink clunky and time-consuming, designed more for bureaucrats than physicians. Even with doctors cutting their patient load in half -- meaning half as many appointments are available for patients -- doctors complained that they spend more time on their computers than treating patients.

This is misdirection by the Medical Director.  It's unarguable that the risks far outweigh the benefits.  Further, retrieving a biopsy or other result result instantaneously could easily be done from an innocuous, non-disruptive document imaging system (e.g., Documentum).  The latter would also be many millions of dollars less expensive than an EHR.

"It's a truncation of patient care. The individual patient doesn't get the care they used to get," said David MacDonald, a 22-year family medicine doctor.

Again, Dr. MacDonald, the liability for adverse outcomes is on you.

You are now, in effectm an indentured servant of an IT company, providing free alpha and beta testing at your expense and peril, using the patients as an even lower level of indentured servant/guinea pig.

There's also significant patient-endangering collateral damage from this mayhem:

The lack of appointments has overburdened emergency rooms, which already exceeded emergency room wait benchmarks in a facility built to see 80 patients a day, but often sees more than 200 patients a day. Since ccLink started, the average patient spends four hours in the ER, up an hour from before the computer system transition, which was already over national benchmarks, said Reilly.

The scenario could not be worse.  The ED's are themselves burdened by EHR's.

The supervisors asked for continued updates, and for patience.

"Continuous improvement means you need continuous change," said supervisor Federal Glover. "Eventually, it's going to become second nature as it was with cell phones. We'll wonder how we ever did without it."

Supervisor Glover has also painted a "defendant" target on his back.  This is the misdirection I was speaking of earlier, consisting of platitudes, logical fallacy and falsehoods:

  • "Continuous improvement" is not what's going on here; 
  • Such improvement does not mean creating chaos as a precondition; 
  • Whether this software will become "second nature" is anyone's guess.  That is a hysterical and logically fallacious statement (e.g., an appeal to belief) of an almost quasi-religious fanaticism regarding computing.  This technology could ultimately be scrapped in favor of, say, simpler document imaging systems due to increasing clinician complaints, inherent usability issues in fast-paced medical settings, litigation, costs, harms etc.;
  • What of the patients placed at risk, and/or injured/killed as a result of this experimentation?  What of them, and their medical and human rights?

In effect, a response like this is medically unethical.  The correct response would be a halt in the rollout until problems are substantially remediated in a controlled, risk free setting - not the clinic.

If that is not possible, the system needs to indeed be scrapped or replaced.

Continuation of patient endangerment is inexcusable medically, ethically and legally.

-- SS

At Risk in the Computerized Hospital: The HITECH Act as Social Policy Malpractice, and Passivity of Medical Professionals

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I am revisiting the issue of HITECH in light of recent reports on health IT drawbacks and/or failure to achieve long-claimed advantages.

The HITECH Act, a multi-billion dollar EHR incentive/penalty measure inserted into the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act legislation (ARRA or 'economic recovery' act), is proving to be an example of what should be called "Social Policy Malpractice."

The HITECH Act was largely a consequence of intense industry lobbying on behalf of the IT industry (as in the Washington Post at "The Machinery Behind Health-Care Reform: How an Industry Lobby Scored a Swift, Unexpected Victory by Channeling Billions to Electronic Records", May 16, 2009).

It is in fact not based on science or reliable evidence, and has led to increased patient endangerment and a worsening national debt picture.

The recent revelations of reports from diverse sources including but not by any means limited to the following indicate that HITECH and its expenditures of billions of dollars on experimental, unregulated, unproven technology representssocial policy malpractice:
 
  • ABC News (Your Medical Records May Not Be Private: ABC News Investigation" - privacy of electronic health data is very poor, in ways that paper would and could never have permitted);
  • The Center for Public Integrity"Growth of electronic medical records eases path to inflated bills", on how EHRs lead to increased, not decreased healthcare costs;
  • Experts at Penn and Harvard -"A Major Glitch for Digitized Health-Care Records" - savings from EHRs are illusory;
  • Budget reports - in view of the deficit spending reported by OMB and others that is causing national debt to spiral out of control, jeopardizing the economic well being of the United States, and with upcoding as a side-effect and no cost savings, HITECH is an unaffordable extravagance. 
  • Recent revelations of outright EHR-induced mass chaos largely due to outspoken clinicians who've had enough - "Contra Costa County health doctors air complaints about county's new $45 million computer system", "Lake County (IL) Health Department - Depression era soup lines at the clinic";
  • Abuses of NPRM Public Comment periods on followup health IT incentive regulations via industry ghostwriting (stealth lobbying), reducing EHR effectiveness while further enriching the industry - "Health IT Vendor EPIC Caught Red-Handed: Ghostwriting And Using Customers as Stealth Lobbyists - Did ONC Ignore This?";

Of course, I'd already cited these reports in past posts but they bear repeating:

      • The IOM report on HIT safety ("There's risk, but we don't even know the magnitude because there are major systemic impediments to diffusion of that information"),http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/11/iom-report-on-health-it-safety-nix-fda.html;
      • FDA (known injuries and deaths are likely the "tip of the iceberg" because of the impediments, and EHRs are medical devices that should fall under the FD&C Act, butFDA has largely refrained from enforcing our regulatory requirements with respect to HIT devices because they're a political hot potato- Jeff Shuren MD JD, CDRH), http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/04/fda-decides-regulating-implantable.html;
      • NIST (health IT usability is poor, major remediation is needed) -http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/10/nist-on-ehr-mission-hostile-user.html

      I'd called for a moratorium on ambitious EHR plans for similar reasons as far back as 2008, at posts here and here.  The path that ethical medical centers and clinicians should take is todelay computerization in 2012 and push for slowdown or retraction of HITECH and its penalties for non-adopters. 

      Yet instead, what is usually seen is excuses and cheerleading by healthcare organization leaders, and passive physician and nurse acceptance of deficient information technology.  
      This stunning passivity and acceptance by physicians and nursesof a deeply flawed technology of unknown risk seems largely due to physician learned helplessness and the Stockholm Syndrome.  See the posts on "physician learned helplessness" athttp://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2007/10/physicians-learned-helplessness.html (commenting on observations in MedScape written by a lawyer), as well as on the "Stckholm Syndrome"  athttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome. 

      Per a psychiatrist/informatics specialist Dr. Scott Monteith who has commented on this blog, the compliance of clinicians may also be a manifestation of the inherent human psychopathology reflected in the Milgram Experiment (and elsewhere):
      The Milgram experiment on obedience to authority figures was a series of notable social psychology experiments conducted by Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram, which measured the willingness of study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts that conflicted with their personal conscience. Milgram first described his research in 1963 in an article published in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, and later discussed his findings in greater depth in his 1974 book, Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View.


      As to the consequences of physician "acceptance" of this technology in 2012 in its present condition, physicians are:

      • Acting, in effect, 'in loco parentis' for their patients, not in the latter's best interests, who are not even afforded opportunity for informed consent.  This is in violation of long-accepted norms of human subjects experimentation and research such as the Belmont Report, Nuremberg Code and HHS human subject protection regulations at 45 CFR part 46 themselves;
      • Giving free provision of their expertise and labor at improvisation and workarounds, in effect providing free alpha and beta testing to an entirely unregulated IT sector;
      • Engaging in passive acceptance of the entire liability and their hospital executives' breach of fiduciary responsibility to protect them from same due to Hold Harmless clauses, and breach of Joint Commission safety standards through signing "gag" clauses on defects and harms (see http://www.ischool.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/cases/?loc=cases&sloc=koppel_kreda).

      National health IT leaders have proven to be hyperenthusiasts about health IT benefits as well:
      ... This from Robert Kolodner, former head of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) at HHS:

      Dr. Robert Kolodner, a physician who headed the federal push for electronic medical records in 2007, acknowledged that billing abuse took a backseat to steps likely to entice the medical community to embrace the new technology.

      Kolodner said officials were certain the savings achieved by computerizing medicine would be so great that billing abuse, “while needing to be monitored, was not something that should be put as the primary issue at that time.”

      In other words, sideline (ignore) health IT-based billing abuse (and safety risks to the live patients subjected to this experimental technology without informed consent) because "we believe" the savings will be greater based on "our faith in the technology."
       Such individuals contributed materially to the social policy malpractice represented by the HITECH ACT.
      Considering all of the above, I call once again for a moratorium on further economic incentives for EHR adoption, and investment in the very measures recommended by the National Research Council in its Jan. 2009 report "Computational Technology for Effective Health Care: Immediate Steps and Strategic Directions" that:
      In the long term, success will depend upon accelerating interdisciplinary research in biomedical informatics, computer science, social science, and health care engineering.

      This research must be conducted, of course, with full human subjects protections in place.
      -- SS

      Just the Latest Legal Settlement for HCA

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      Last month, we posted about investigative reports that suggesting that for-profit hospital chain HCAwas pushed by its private equity owners to put short-term revenue ahead of good patient care.  A legal settlement announced this week corroborates these concerns. 

      As reported by television station WRCB in Chattanooga, TN,
      HCA Inc., one of the nation's largest private hospital chains, has agreed to pay $16.5 million to settle alleged violations of the Ethics in Patient Referrals Act (also known as the Stark law), the False Claims Act, and other federal and state laws and regulations in connection with the operation of its subsidiary, Parkridge Medical Center, Inc., in Chattanooga.
      In addition, Parkridge Medical Center has entered into a comprehensive five-year Corporate Integrity Agreement with the Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS-OIG) to ensure its continued compliance with federal health care benefit program requirements.
      As alleged in the settlement agreement, during 2007, HCA, through its subsidiaries Parkridge and HCA Physician Services (HCAPS), entered into a series of financial transactions with a physician group, Diagnostic Associates of Chattanooga, through which it provided financial benefits intended to induce the physician members of Diagnostic to refer patients to HCA facilities.
      The financial benefits included lease of office space from Diagnostic at a rental rate well in excess of fair market value to meet the mortgage obligations of the Diagnostic members and release of Diagnostic members from a separate lease obligation. These financial arrangements violated the Ethics in Patient Referrals Act and the Anti-Kickback Statute – laws designed to protect patients as well as the integrity of government-funded health care benefit programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, and TennCare.
      The issue here were allegations that HCA and its subsidiaries were paying physicians extra so that they would refer patients to an HCA hospital. Obviously, physicians are supposed to put each patient's interests ahead of extraneous considerations, and hence should make referral decisions based on the patients needs, and the likely benefits and harms of the referral, not the amounts the physicians might make from such payments.

      Referrals for particular services can be very lucrative for hospitals.  So this settlement seems to provide more evidence that to get profitable referrals, HCA was willing to subvert physicians' values by paying physicians to induce to make what might have been the wrong decisions for individual patients.  Of course, in this situation some physicians were hardly blameless, since they were also willing to set aside their values to receive the payments that generated those referrals.

      This fits with the thesis we advanced last month.  While hospitals are supposed to have a mission to put care of the sick ahead of all else, it appears that for-profit hospitals, and especially those owned by private equity are more likely to put short-term revenue ahead of patient care.

      As an aside, while this settlement provides useful information, do not think of it as a solution to the immediate problem. 

      As we have frequently asserted, it is doubtful that the relatively small payment and the relatively unlikely to be enforced corporate integrity agreement imposed in this settlement will change the company's behavior, in the absence of any negative consequences for the people who authorized, directed or implemented the bad behavior.  HCA once made a $1.7 billion fraud settlement, at the time the biggest such settlement ever made (see this post).  However, the company's CEO at the time, Rick Scott, left the firm with a golden parachute and no negative consequences, and is now Governor of Florida.  If that previous huge settlement did not deter the more recent bad behavior in the absence of any penalties for company executives, why should we expect that the current comparatively tiny settlement also in the absence of such penalties will have any effect?

      As we have now said many, many times, we will not deter unethical behavior by health care organizations until the people who authorize, direct or implement bad behavior fear some meaningfully negative consequences. Real health care reform needs to make health care leaders accountable, and especially accountable for the bad behavior that helped make them rich.

      Furthermore, as I wrote last month, we need to challenge the notion that direct health care should ever be provided, or that medicine ought to be practiced by for-profit corporations. Before market fundamentalism became so prominent, many stated prohibited the corporate practice of medicine, and the American Medical Association forbade the commercialization of medicine. It is time to heed that wisdom. I submit that we will not be able to have good quality, accessible health care at an affordable price until we restore physicians as independent, ethical health care professionals, and until we restore small, independent, community responsible, non-profit hospitals as the locus for inpatient care.

      Hype, Spin and Health Care: the Case of an Apparently Failed Hospital Purchase by Steward Health Care

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      Health care is drowning in a sea of hype and spin.  We have frequently posted about deceptive marketing used to sell drugs, devices, and health care services.  We have also posted about deceptive public relations and lobbying used to sell policy positions and strategies favorable to health care organizations, and usually most favorable to their leaders.

      Nevertheless, there rarely is much public skepticism about or criticism of such marketing and public relations messages when they appear.  Rather, often the media and other public voices, including those of politicians with power over the relevant public policy issues, seem to accept the messages at face value.

      The Case of Steward Health Care and Landmark Medical Center

      The Buy-Out Falls Apart

      Therefore, it is instructive to look at examples of how such messages in retrospect appear to be fallacious, to use a polite term.  A local example that just popped into view was documented in two short news items by Felice Freyer in our own Providence Journal.  (Web access to a longer version story that appeared in the print version of the journal is here.)  The first item included,
      The deal to sell Landmark Medical Center to Steward Health Care System may be falling apart.In a court filing this week, Jonathan N. Savage, the special master in charge of the hospital, made reference to the possibility that Steward would withdraw. The Boston hospital group faces a Sept. 30 deadline to complete the sale.
      The Message Promoted by Steward Health Care 

      We have blogged about the rapid expansion of Steward Health Care, despite the name, a for-profit company owned by private equity/ leveraged buyout firm Cerberus Capital Management. Steward has hyped its supposedly world class "new health care" model in its advertising (look here). In promoting its bid for Landmark, Steward's well-paid CEO (look here), displayed his vision for promoting the medical center through "economies of scale," "right-siting," and emphasizing ties with the community: "it's not a community hospital system. It's really a health care system," as reported by Felice Freyer in April, 2012 (Freyer F. Landmark Medical Center. A Leap into the unknown. Providence Journal, April 22, 2012.)

       In a dispute over payment rates with Rhode Island Blue Cross Blue Shield, Steward ran full-page newspaper advertisements claiming that insurance companies leaders issued an order to "terminate Landmark Medical Center," because they did not care if "residents would lose their only hospital, ... employees ... would lose their jobs, or the elderly ... would have to travel for care." (Look here.) That implied, of course, that Steward, which did not mention that it is a for-profit corporation owned by a private equity firm in the ads, cared deeply about the health care of residents of Woonsocket.

      Some Skepticism, but More Acceptance

      The article by Felice Freyer above did feature journalistic skepticism and include interviews with some local physicians who questioned whether Steward could possibly fulfill all its promises to simultaneously increase the quality of care and reduce costs.

      However, the article showed that there was lots of positivity about Steward's track record in neighboring Massachusetts. Predictably, the President of Steward owned Quincy Medical Center boasted, "Not one person has been laid off. We have not reduced any service lines. Our focus is on enhancing." However, some people who were apparently independent of Steward also had favorable views.  A Massachusetts consumer advocate said "as far as we know, it's going fine." A Brandeis University Professor said, "it's impressive how successful they've been."

      The Politicians' Buy In

      Elsewhere, there were plenty of statements of support for Steward by local politicians.  The Mayor of Woonsocket supported Landmark (and implicitly Steward) it its dispute with RI BCBS, as reported by the Providence Journal, saying that the proposed buyout by Steward "is far too critical for our city, and I must take every step possible to ensure that the interests of the city and those who rely upon Landmark (Medical Center) for healthcare are being protected [by taking Steward's side in the dispute.]" Also, as reported by the Woonsocket Call, RI Congressman David Cicilline said, "I look forward to working with Landmark's new administration [that is, Steward] to ensure that it continues to deliver affordable, quality health care and well-paying jobs for hardworking Rhode Islanders." To fulfill Steward's wishes, The Rhode Island state legislature rushed to make its laws about for-profit conversion of non-profit hospitals more lenient (see the Providence Business News).

      The Attorney General Later Says it was All About the "Bottom Line"

      However, now Steward has apparently pulled out of the deal with nary a public mention of the reason why, much less demonstration of its concern for the poor people of Woonsocket. As reported in a second small item in the Providence Journal,
      Steward Health Care System, which is apparently backing out of its deal to buy Landmark Medical Center, 'has left the hospital, its patients and its employees in a worse position,'
      Attorney General Peter F. Kilmartin said in a statement today.'It has become very clear that Steward's only interest was the bottom line, not, as the Company claimed, the patients, the employees or the Woonsocket community,' Kilmartin said.
      Summary

      This is just one local kerfuffle about a small hospital system. However, looking at it in granular detail says a lot about how big health care organizations, like the one that here attempted to buy the local hospital system, push misleading messages to secure their private interests. These misleading messages often promote these organizations' commitments to the traditional health care mission, often in the modern argot of quality, access, and affordability), when their leaders may really care more about short term revenue. This case also shows how at least some local policy makers may be drawn in by such messages, and how the few skeptics get lost in the shuffle.

      An important feature of the modern, commercialized, laissez faire health care system in the US is the role of opinion manipulation through modern, sophisticated marketing and public relations in promoting the short-term financial interests of health care organizations and their leaders at the expense of patient's and the public's health. This role seems rarely to be discussed, particularly in health care research and policy circles. It may be that some members of the public, health care professionals, and health policy makers are naturally skeptical of marketing and public relations hype, spin, and deception. However, we have seen too many examples of health care leaders promoted as "visionaries" who are anything but.

      Health care professionals, patients, policy makers, and the public at large ought to be extremely skeptical of the self-serving messages packaged by marketing and public relations. Academics ought to be dissecting these messages more often. Skeptics need to make their voices heard.

      Meanwhile, look out for the next "visionary," or the next "new health care" promotion. They may not turn out to be what is advertised.

      26 Eylül 2012 Çarşamba

      New York Times Agrees: Medicare Bills Rise as Records Turn Electronic

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      At my Sept. 19, 2012 post "Cracking the Codes" I wrote about an investigation entitled "Growth of electronic medical records eases path to inflated bills" by Fred Schulte at the Center for Public Integrity.  I observed:

      The new article focuses on the role of electronic medical records systems and associated software in promoting upcoding - billing at higher rates - through features such as documentation cloning, templates, facility of making it look like work not done was actually performed, and deliberate algorithmic prompting of users to "do more" to "get more."

      Now just a few days later, the New York Times reports similar, independently-reached concerns:

      Medicare Bills Rise as Records Turn Electronic

      By REED ABELSON, JULIE CRESWELL and GRIFFIN J. PALMER

      New York Times

      September 21, 2012

      When the federal government began providing billions of dollars in incentives to push hospitals and physicians to use electronic medical and billing records, the goal was not only to improve efficiency and patient safety, but also to reduce health care costs.

      But, in reality, the move to electronic health records may be contributing to billions of dollars in higher costs for Medicare, private insurers and patients by making it easier for hospitals and physicians to bill more for their services, whether or not they provide additional care.

      Hospitals received $1 billion more in Medicare reimbursements in 2010 than they did five years earlier, at least in part by changing the billing codes they assign to patients in emergency rooms, according to a New York Times analysis of Medicare data from the American Hospital Directory. Regulators say physicians have changed the way they bill for office visits similarly, increasing their payments by billions of dollars as well.

      I am commenting on a few points that the NYT piece amplifies, and some interesting quotes from individuals:

      Over all, hospitals that received government incentives to adopt electronic records showed a 47 percent rise in Medicare payments at higher levels from 2006 to 2010, the latest year for which data are available, compared with a 32 percent rise in hospitals that have not received any government incentives, according to the analysis by The Times.

      Correlation is not proof of causation, but considering the issues I raised in my Feb, 2011 post "Does EHR-Incited Upcoding (Also Known as "Fraud") Need Investigation by CMS", and considering that physicians know EHRs facilitate grading of their performance as organizational "taxpayers" (i..e, bringing in revenue), and the feature of EHR's illustrated at that post on "encouraging" users to "do more to get more", I think further federal inquiry is justifiable.

      Critics say the abuses are widespread. “It’s like doping and bicycling,” said Dr. Donald W. Simborg, who was the chairman of federal panels examining the potential for fraud with electronic systems. “Everybody knows it’s going on.”

      The same applies for health IT safety risks, I add.  Healthcare has a number of "anechoic" issues ongoing in addition to the ones already covered at this blog site.

      When Methodist Medical Center of Illinois in Peoria rolled out an electronic records system in 2006, Dr. Alan Gravett, a former emergency room physician, quickly expressed alarm.

      He said the new system prompted doctors to click a box that indicated a thorough review of patients’ symptoms had taken place, even though the exams were rarely performed, while another function let doctors pull exam findings “from thin air” and include them in patients’ records.

      In a whistle-blower lawsuit filed in 2007, Dr. Gravett contended that these techniques drove up Medicare reimbursement levels substantially. According to the lawsuit, Dr. Gravett was eventually fired for ordering too many tests. He says he was retaliated against for complaining about the new system. The Justice Department is weighing whether to join an amended suit in Federal District Court in Central Illinois.

      Retaliation against health IT whistle blowers is another "anechoicism."  See for instance this essay about a physician/informaticist who complained that a new ICU system would kill people.  

      ... Many doctors and hospitals were actually underbilling before they began keeping electronic records, said Dr. David J. Brailer, an early federal proponent of digitizing records and an official in the George W. Bush administration. [As the first Chair of ONC - ed.]

      Where is data to support that contention?

      Lacking such data, the rationale for such a statement, on its face, seems to be that increased billing with EHR's shows there must have been underbilling without EHR's - a logical fallacy  (a particularly bizarre type of circular argument).

      But Dr. Brailer, who invests in health care companies, acknowledged that the use of electronic records “makes it faster and easier to be fraudulent.” 

      Then, one might ask, why is the Federal Government hell-bent on pushing the technology before these issues are dealt with?

      A spokesman for the Health and Human Services Department, however, said electronic health records “can improve the quality of care [not "will", as stated by ONC - ed.], save lives and save money.” Medicare, he added in an e-mailed statement, “has strong protections in place to prevent fraud and abuse of this technology that we’re improving all the time.”

      Those statements are speculative, the money savings in doubt (e.g., see the Sept. 17 WSJ Op Ed "A Major Glitch for Digitized Health-Care Records" by Ross Koppel and Stephen Sumerai),  and the "strong protections" obviously not so strong, or not used and/or enforced, or all of the above.

      Some contractors handling Medicare claims have already alerted doctors to their concerns about billing practices. One contractor, National Government Services, recently warned doctors that it would refuse to pay them if they submitted “cloned documentation,” while another, TrailBlazer Health Enterprises, found that 45 out of 100 claims from Texas and Oklahoma emergency-department doctors were paid in error. “Patterns of overcoding E.D. services were found with template-generated records,” it said.

      I have seen cloned progress notes and other documentation with my own two eyes, unfortunately in charts where grievous patient harms occurred in part as a result of other clinicians being misled by cloned notes of normalcy.

      The Office of Inspector General is studying the link between electronic records and billing.

      Maybe OIG can also investigate links between electronic records and adverse medical events.

      One sophisticated patient witnessed the overbilling firsthand. In early 2010, Robert Burleigh, a health care consultant, came to the emergency room of a Virginia hospital with a kidney stone. When he received the bill from the emergency room doctor, his medical record, produced electronically, reflected a complete physical exam that never happened, allowing the visit to be billed at the highest level, Mr. Burleigh said.

      The doctor indicated that he had examined Mr. Burleigh’s lower extremities, but Mr. Burleigh said that he was wrapped in a blanket and that the doctor never even saw his legs.

      It's a good thing his legs were not a problem.

      “No one would admit it,” Mr. Burleigh said, “but the most logical explanation was he went to a menu and clicked standard exam,” and the software filled in an examination of all of his systems. After he complained, the doctor’s group reduced his bill.

      Which then can cause or contribute to others further down the continuum of care failing to perform their own exams, on the basis of believing the falsely documented exam, thus missing abnormalities. 

      As software vendors race to sell their systems to physician groups and hospitals, many are straightforward in extolling the benefits of those systems in helping doctors increase their revenue. In an online demonstration, one vendor, Praxis EMR, promises that it “plays the level-of-service game on your behalf and beats them at their own game using their own rules.”

      I'm again stunned at the levels of arrogance of the health IT sellers; what were they thinking?  These "promises" could expose them to, say, RICO issues.

      But others place much of the blame on the federal government for not providing more guidance. Dr. Simborg, for one, said he helped draft regulations in 2007 that would have prevented much of the abuse that now appears to be occurring. But because the government was eager to encourage doctors and hospitals to enter the electronic era [e.g., via HITECH - ed.], he said, those proposals have largely been ignored.

      “What’s happening is just the problem we feared,” he said.

      This brings to life my observation that HITECH Act was ill-timed and represents social policy malpractice.

      It appears OIG has their work cut out for them.

      -- SS