Sunday, March 25, 2018

The brave new world of digital health care still needs doctor’s personal touch.

LAST MONTH two major publications devoted significant coverage to the growing, unstoppable trend toward telemedicine and other digital forms of measuring, recording and responding to individuals’ healthcare needs—all for the sake of convenience, accuracy and cost-cutting. The Economist (Feb. 3, 2018) headlined its news analysis with “Doctor You—a digital revolution in health care is coming—welcome it.” The Wall Street Journal (Feb. 25, 2018) published a lengthy feature on “What the Hospitals of the Future Look Like;” the subhead read: “The sprawling institutions we know are radically changing—becoming smaller, more digital, or disappearing completely. The result should be cheaper and better care.”

Optimism abounds. And, yes, there is plenty of reason for it. The Economist notes that the “fundamental problem with today’s system is that patients lack knowledge and control” regarding their medical condition and treatment options; “access to data can bestow both,” the article proclaims.

There has been a veritable explosion of wearable devices that measure blood pressure, for example; others can detect irregularities in heartbeat; other apps are in development that can—with the help of Artificial Intelligence—detect skin cancer and other potentially life-threatening conditions that, early on, do not manifest themselves in obvious, visible or dramatic ways. A digital early-warning system can prompt individuals to seek out medical care for preventive measures.

Care for the elderly is greatly improved by wearable devices that are capable, not only of measuring vital signs, but of detecting falls and sending warning signs to centralized monitoring stations. These, in turn, can dispatch emergency help or alert family members to take mom or dad to a doctor. In a similar fashion, patients of all ages, can have data pertaining to critical medical factors, such as diabetes, automatically sent to their doctors’ computers, prompting corrective instructions or, if needed, a visit to the doctor’s offices. Not surprisingly, Apple has announced plans to petition health-care organizations to allow iPhone users to download their medical records.

These innovations certainly give patients more autonomy in making medical decisions on their own behalf, while also serving as a safeguard to spot potential errors in medical records that could lead to inappropriate or unnecessary treatments. Overall, this digital revolution will save billions of dollars in unnecessary—or, no longer necessary—visits to doctor’s offices and the administration of medical tests.

As to hospitals, the Journal writes, these institutions, too, are developing monitoring systems that can sharply reduce the time patients spend in hospitals or emergency rooms by keeping a remote digital eye on the patients at home; again, the focus is on preventive care—catching conditions before they get out of hand. By some estimates, 30 percent of care traditionally provided in hospitals can be given at home.

More and more, somewhat parallel to the proliferation of no-appointment-necessary medical clinics, large hospital will make room for “microhospitals,” functioning as extended “intensive-care units, where you go for highly specialized, highly technical or serious critical care.” Patients with conditions that can safely be monitored remotely can recover at home. Doctors with various levels of specialization will operate “central hubs” to monitor both acute cases in microhospitals, regular ERs or less severe cases in patients’ homes.

Kenneth L. Davis, president and chief executive of Mount Sinai is quoted as saying: “We need a new model of care that focuses on wellness and prevention and keeps people out of hospitals.” Enormous savings and greater comfort for patients are in the offing.

As The Economist notes, “the benefits of new technologies”—such as wearable devices and downloadable personal health records—“often flow disproportionately to the rich. However, government and insurers have an incentive to provide the technology and self-care, at-home treatment options to poorer populations as well. Alphabet, the parent company of Google, has plans to wade through patient data in poorer parts of cities, where many residents are covered by Medicaid.

Hi-tech innovation at the service of the poor is also the hallmark of New York State’s revolutionary Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment (DSRIP) Program. DSRIP, a five-year program now its third year, provides superior medical care to Medicaid patients at greatly reduced savings ($12B-plus!) to the state’s taxpayers. DSRIP in on track to exceed its target of reducing unnecessary hospitalizations by 25 percent by spring 2020. The program is driven by the Value-Based Payment (VPB) or Pay-for-Performance model: doctors are being paid, not based on the number of hospital visits or tests, but on the longer-term health outcomes of their patients. (It’s promising in this regard that the government has created the Physician-Focused Payment Model Advisory Committee, with the potential of extending VBP models to Medicare.)

Electronic Health Records (EHRs) play a major role in DSRIP architecture; for the New York State Department of Health to track the health of populations, EHR data are integrated with Medicaid claims in order to paint the state of health of large communities. Just as is necessary in the commercial, privately-insured universe touted by The Economist and The Wall Street Journal, EHRs for each patient served under DSRIP must be painstakingly produced, maintained and constantly updated. This process ordinarily demands a great deal of time on the part of physicians, who are glued to their computer screens, rather than being focused on the patient before them.

In sum, the vital personal relationship between physician and patient, between doctor and the patient’s family, has little chance to be established. The personal touch, the human encounter that forms the foundation of an authentic patient-doctor relationship goes missing. That obviously is true for all forms of remote monitoring of patients’ health, no matter how accurate or efficient.

At SOMOS Community Care we have developed a solution; SOMOS is the only so-called Performing Provider System (PPS) mandated by DSRIP that consists of a network of independent physicians; the other 24 PPSs are hospital-based. To free our doctors from the demands of data entry and record keeping, we have dispatched teams of Community Health Workers (CHWs) to our practices, to record patient data themselves or train office staff to do so.

As a result, the doctor—often living and working in the very communities with whom he shares a cultural and ethnic background—is free to pay full attention to patients before him; what’s more the CHWs make home visits, as needed, ensuring that patients keep up with their medical regimen and keeping the doctor abreast of family and housing circumstances that may impact the health of patients and their families.

In this fashion, our doctors assume the role of the family doctors of old—leaders of the community in whom patients can put their trust, in whom they can confide, and by whom they are understood, by whom they are truly known. This new iteration of the family doctor takes full advantage of today’s digital revolution in health care, but without sacrificing what has always been essential for an individual’s overall well-being—quite literally, the personal, healing touch. Such cannot be transmitted in digital fashion, no matter how sophisticated the technology.



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