Showing posts with label initiative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label initiative. Show all posts

Have Good News to Tell About Your Care Coordination Initiative Share It At the Care Continuum Alliance Annual Meeting!

Monday, March 24, 2014

The Disease Management Care Blog feels your pain

You help lead a unique and innovative care coordination initiative.  Your program has some preliminary data that strongly suggests quality has increased while costs have remained neutral or gone down.  Patients are satisfied.  Docs are happy.  You even have a patient anecdote or two.

But somethings missing.

While your institutions marketing department has been supportive, you believe that the customers you want to serve are tired of glossy brochures, breathless press releases and chatty sales reps.  Your customer meetings are fun, but you cant tell if the positive feedback is the result of real insight or that second glass of wine. 

On the other hand, the prospect of publishing your findings in some scientific journal is too dreary to contemplate. 

You know some more meaningful is at stake.  You want to share your good news and get some feedback.

Heres your solution: the Care Continuum Alliance Annual ConferenceHundreds of individuals just like you - individuals who give a damn about patients, are excited about making a difference and want to make a living doing it - will be available to give feedback.  Who knows, some of them may talk partnerships.  Others will resent your competition, confirming that you are on the right track.

The CCA Call for Proposals can be found here.  You have until March 6 to submit.



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U S Government Launches a Population Health Improvement Initiative Called Million Hearts

Thursday, February 27, 2014

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has launched a "Million Hearts" campaign that is designed to prevent a million heart attacks and strokes in the next 5 years.  You can read about it in the New England Journal here or in Circulation here.  There is also more detail here at the HHS gov web site.

The campaign is crafted to address the "ABCS" a.k.a. aspirin, blood pressure control, cholesterol control and smoking in the U.S. population. The Feds propose to 1) consolidate just how ABCS will be specifically measured in any population, 2) remind and help manufacturers as well as users of EHRs that they can be tasked to addressing ABCS, 3) initiate a "pharmacist-led campaign.... (to) facilitate counseling about hypertension control," 4) launch an anti-tobacco marketing and community-based campaign, 5) push for food labeling in restaurants and 6) increase the measurement of sodium and fat consumption.  Details are in this table.

"Bravo!" says the DMCB.  When it reads about Million Hearts, its clear that the Feds are identifying population-based strategies, basing their interventions on demonstrated needs, increasing awareness of health risks, using patient-friendly education, helping consumers make the right choices and figuring out how to assess outcomes on an ongoing basis with a feedback loop.

If you agree on the DMCBs assessment of what the Feds are up to, you also agree that theyve they have launched a huge population health improvement (PHI) initiative.  The DMCB isnt making that up: if you compare the Care Continuum Alliance description of PHI here with the fundamentals of Million Hearts, youll see that the overlap is almost 100%.

Whats different is that the Feds are also using Million Hearts to 1) further justify the Affordable Care Act and the EHR meaningful use initiative, 2) leverage some potent government entities like AHRQ, CDC, CMS and the FDA, 3) distribute hundreds of millions in community grant money, 4) create a coalition that includes The Y, AHA, Walgreens, some professional pharmacy associations and AHIP, and 5) say some nice stuff about Mrs. Obamas childhood obesity program.  

All that makes perfect sense from a governmental as well as political process, but its still PHI.

"A hearty welcome to the fold!" says the DMCB.  HHS has finally decided to give millions of Americans access to PHI that combats atherosclerotic heart disease.  Better late than never, but based on what we know about the science of PHI in multiple other settings and assuming the government can pull this off, the DMCB is confident that a million lives being saved is within reach.  
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