Health“care”:The Rant
Tom Peters/10.30.2004
There are many problems with Healthcare. I am not aiming to provide
a comprehensive diagnosis or a comprehensive Rx. I am instead cherrypicking two, and only two, Core Issues: (1) The wretched (Damning!) quality problem; (2) and the almost
100% emphasis on after-the-fact-fixes, rather than Wellness-Prevention-
Healing-Care.
With respect, Tom Peters
Healthcare’s 1-2 Punch
1. Hospital “quality control,” at least in the U.S.A., is a bad, bad joke: Depending on whose stats you believe, hospitals kill 100,000 or so of us a year—and wound many times that number. Finally, “they” are “getting around to” dealing with the issue. Well, thanks. And what is it we’ve been buying for our Trillion or so bucks a year? The fix is eminently do-able … which makes the condition even more intolerable. (“Disgrace” is far too kind a label for the “condition.” Who’s to blame? Just about everybody, starting with the docs who consider oversight from anyone other than fellow clan members to be unacceptable.)
2. The “system”—training, docs, insurance incentives, “culture,” “patients” themselves—is hopelessly-mindlessly-insanely (as I see it) skewed toward fixing things (e.g. Me) that are broken—not preventing the problem in the first place and providing the Maintenance Tools necessary for a healthy lifestyle. Sure, bio-medicine will soon allow us to understand and deal with individual genetic pre-dispositions. (And hooray!) But take it from this 61-year old, decades of physical and psychological self-abuse can literally be reversed in relatively short order by an encompassing approach to life that can only be described as a “Passion for Wellness (and Well-being).” Patients—like me—are catching on in record numbers; but “the system” is highly resistant. (Again, the doctors are among the biggest sinners—no surprise, following years of acculturation as the “man-with-the-white-coat-who-will-now-miraculously-dispense-fix it-pills-for-you-the-unwashed.” (Come to think of it, maybe I’ll start wearing a White Coat to my doctor’s office—after all, I am the Professional-in-Charge when it comes to my Body & Soul. Right?)
Tom’s Rant
Patient Safety(Curb the Killing Fields!)
Planetree Alliance/Griffin Hospital(Put the “Care” back in Health“care”!)
Canyon Ranch(Re-imagine: Wellness-Prevention!)
Welcome to the Homer Simpson Hospital
a/k/a
The Killing Fields
XYZ Corp: Complete Vision & Values
Any Service or Product of ours is yours
for absolutely NO CHARGE if any employee says—or implies—to you
at any point …
“It’s Not My Fault.”
V. Big Cheese, Founder, CEO & Dictator
Tom’s Cold Fury at Healthcare “Professionals,” Especially Acute Care Operatives
1. You are killers: “Quality” remains a bad joke.2. Pick off bunches of Low-hanging Fruit. (E.g., Tom’s 1st Executive order as Your Next President: Providing a Handwritten Prescription is punishable by not less than 60 days of Hard Time.)
3. The “science” in “medicine” is often fanciful: Most “scientific” “treatments” are unverified. (So quit the kneejerk denigration of alternative therapies—trust me, Breathing Meditation beats Univasc; Good Nutrition beats Lipitor; Regular Exercise beats bypass surgery.)
4. You continue to obsess only on after-the-act “fixes,” the automatic resort to Chemicals and Knives, rather than P-W-H-C … Prevention-Wellness- Healing-Care.5. Your Mindful Lifelong (mine) Failure to focus on P-W-H-C will probably cost me a decade of longevity, Canyon Ranch/Lenox not withstanding. THAT PISSES ME OFF. (For one thing, I need those 10 years to spread the P-W-H-C Credo to “health‘care’” “professionals.”)
6. You are hereby ordered to stop using the term “healthcare”: You haven’t earned the right to utter the word “care”!7. $$$$$ Are Not the Issue/Excuse I: Quality is free!!! (There are MANY who are … Getting This Right … without Buckets of $$$$$.)
8. $$$$$ Are Not the Issue/Excuse II: Planetree Alliance/Griffin Hospital “Models The Way” … on P-W-H-C … Every Day. IT CAN BE DONE!9. ALL THESE PROBLEMS CAN BE FIXED! WE KNOW HOW! THERE ARE NO EXCUSES … EXCEPT LACK OF GUTS & WILL! “It’s Attitude, Baby!”10. All “members of staff”—regardless of “professional discipline”—are Healing Arts Practitioners. OR TURN IN YOUR EMPLOYEE BADGE. NOW.10.27.2004/La Jolla
Rule #1. Attend the “Duh Factor”! Model The Way!
DO NOT … SERVE BOUNTIFUL BASKETFULS OF FATTY-SUGARY CRAP
& BUCKETSFUL OF HIGH-OCTANE COFFEE AT BREAKS DURING “HEALTH”“CARE” MEETINGS.
Think: Fruit! Think: Tea! Think: Duh!
TP to Healthcare CIOs: “You are not ‘CIOs.’ You are … ‘Executive Members of
an … Integrated Healing
Services Team’ (‘Healing Arts Team’?)
…with a specialization in IS/IT.”
Dear Mr. & Mrs. Smith,
XYZ hospital regrets to inform you ……. …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….Sincerely,A. S. Jackson, AdministratorT. D. Jones, M.D.L.S. Donald, CFOW.N. Arnold, CIO
You want “implementation tips.”
I want … Ownership, Accountability &
Attitude!
Excerpt from Tom Peters’ Presentation to Healthcare CIOs:
“Quality”:
COULD IT TRULY BE
THIS AWFUL?
“Quality of care is the problem, not
managed care.”Institute of Medicine
CDC 1998: 90,000 killed
and 2,000,000 injured from nosocomial
[hospital-caused] drug errors & infections
HealthGrades/Denver: 195,000 hospital deaths per year in the U.S., 2000-2002 =
390 full jumbos/747s in the drink per year. Comments: “This should give you pause when you go to the hospital.” —Dr. Kenneth Kizer, National Quality
Forum. “There is little evidence that patient safety has improved in the
last five years.” —Dr. Samantha Collier
Source: Boston Globe/07.27.04
“This should give you pause when you go to
the hospital.”
“There is little evidence that patient safety
has improved in the last five years.”
22mm3838ss
1,000,000 “serious
medication errors per year” … “illegible handwriting, misplaced decimal points, and missed drug
interactions and allergies.”
Source: Wall Street Journal / Institute of Medicine
Various studies: 1 in 3, 1 in 5, 1 in 7, 1 in 20 patients “harmed by
treatment”
Demanding Medical Excellence: Doctors and Accountability in the Information Age, Michael Millenson
RAND (1998): 50%, appropriate preventive care. 60%,
recommended treatment, per medical studies, for chronic
conditions. 20%, chronic care treatment that is wrong.
30% acute care treatment that is wrong.
“As unsettling as the prevalence of inappropriate care is the enormous amount of what can only be called
ignorant care. A surprising 85% of everyday medical treatments have never been scientifically
validated. … For instance, when family practitioners in Washington were queried about
treating a simple urinary tract infection, 82 physicians came up with an extraordinary 137 strategies.”
Demanding Medical Excellence: Doctors and Accountability in the Information Age, Michael Millenson
“A healthcare delivery system characterized by idiosyncratic
and often ill-informed judgments must be restructured
according to evidence-based medical practice.”Demanding Medical Excellence: Doctors and Accountability in
the Information Age, Michael Millenson
“In a disturbing 1991 study, 110 nurses of varying experience levels took a written test of their ability to
calculate medication doses. Eight out of 10 made calculation mistakes at
least 10% of the time, while four out of 10 made mistakes 30 % of the
time.”Demanding Medical Excellence: Doctors and Accountability
in the Information Age, Michael Millenson
YE GADS! New England Journal of Medicine/ Harvard Medical Practice Study: 4% error rate (1 of 4 negligence). “Subsequent investigations around the
country have confirmed the ubiquity of error.” “In one small study of how clinicians perform when patients
have a sudden cardiac arrest, 27 of 30 clinicians made an error in using the defibrillator.” Mistakes in
administering drugs (1995 study) “average once every hospital admission.” “Lucian Leape, medicine’s
leading expert on error, points out that many other industries—whether the task is manufacturing
semiconductors or serving customers at the Ritz Carlton—simply wouldn’t countenance error rates like
those in hospitals.”—Complications, Atul Gawande
“In health care,
geography is destiny.”
Source: Dartmouth Medical School 1996 report
Geography Is Destiny
“Often all one must do to acquire a disease is to enter a country where a disease is recognized—leaving the
country will either cure the malady or turn it into something else. … Blood pressure
considered treatably high in the United States might be considered normal in England; and the low blood
pressure treated with 85 drugs as well as hydrotherapy and spa treatments in Germany would entitle its sufferer to lower life insurance rates in the
United States.” – Lynn Payer, Medicine & Culture
Geography Is Destiny
E.g.: Ft. Myers 4X Manhattan—back surgery. Newark 2X New Haven—
prostatectomy. Rapid City SD 34X Elyria OH—breast-conserving surgery. VT, ME, IA: 3X differences in hysterectomy by age 70; 8X tonsillectomy; 4X prostatectomy
(10X Baton Rouge vs. Binghampton). Breast cancer screening: 4X NE, FL, MI
vs. SE, SW. (Source: various)
PARADOX: Many, many formal case reviews …
failure to systematically/ systemically/ statistically
look at and act on evidence.C.f., Complications, Atul Gawande
Deep Blue Redux*: 2,240 EKGs … 1,120 heart attacks.
Hans Ohlin (50 yr old chief of coronary care, Univ of
Lund/SW) : 620. Lars Edenbrandt’s
software: 738.
*Only this time it matters!
“Most physicians believe that diagnosis can’t be reduced to a set of generalizations—to a ‘cookbook.’ … How often does my intuition lead me astray? The radical implication of
the Swedish study is that the individualized, intuitive approach that lies at the center of modern medicine is flawed—it causes more mistakes
than it prevents.” —Atul Gawande, Complications
“Practice variation is not caused by ‘bad’ or ‘ignorant’ doctors. Rather, it is a natural
consequence of a system that systematically tracks neither its processes nor its outcomes,
preferring to presume that good facilities, good intentions and good training lead automatically
to good results. Providers remain more comfortable with the habits of a guild, where
each craftsman trusts his fellows, than with the demands of the information age.”
Michael Millenson, Demanding Medical Excellence
Genius Required?
Leapfrog Group:
CPOE/Computerized Physician Order Entry*ICU staffing by trained intensivists**EHR/Evidence-based Hospital Referral***
*Duh I: Welcome to the computer age.**Duh II: How about using experts?***Duh III: If you do stuff a lotta times, you tend to get/be better. Source: HealthLeaders
The Benefits of … FOCUSED EXCELLENCE
Shouldice/Hernia Repair: 30-45 min, 1% recurrence.
Avg: 90 min, 10%-15% recurrence.
Source: Complications, Atul Gawande
Doing It Right!Planetree: A Radical
Model for New Healthcare/Healing/Wellness Excellence
“It was the goal of the Planetree Unit to help patients not only get well faster but also to stay well longer.” —Putting
Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Determinants of Health
Access to care: 10%Genetics: 20%
Environment: 20%
Health Behaviors: 50%Source: Institute for the Future
The 9 Planetree Practices
1. The Importance of Human Interaction2. Informing and Empowering Diverse Populations: Consumer Health Libraries and Patient Information3. Healing Partnerships: The Importance of Including Friends and Family4. Nutrition: The Nurturing Aspect of Food5. Spirituality: Inner Resources for Healing6. Human Touch: The Essentials of Communicating Caring Through Massage7. Healing Arts: Nutrition for the Soul8. Integrating Complementary and Alternative Practices into Conventional Care9. Healing Environments: Architecture and Design Conducive to Health
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
1. The Importance of Human Interaction
“There is a misconception that supportive interactions require more staff or more time and are therefore more costly.
Although labor costs are a substantial part of any hospital budget, the interactions themselves add nothing to the budget.
Kindness is free. Listening to
patients or answering their questions costs nothing. It can be argued that negative interactions—alienating patients, being
non-responsive to their needs or limiting their sense of control—can be very costly. … Angry, frustrated or frightened patients may be combative, withdrawn and less cooperative—requiring
far more time than it would have taken to interact with them initially in a positive way.” —Putting Patients First, Susan
Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Press Ganey Assoc/1999: 139,380 former patients from 225 hospitals
0 of top 15 factors determining Patient Satisfaction referred to patient’s health outcome
PS directly related to Staff Interaction
PS directly correlated with ES (Employee Satisfaction)
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Mgrs re staff: wages, security, promotion opportunities
Staff re staff: interesting work (M:5 of 10), appreciation (5 of 10), sense of being “in” about
what’s going on (10 of 10)
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
“Planetree is about human beings caring
for other human beings.” —Putting Patients First, Susan
Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel (“Ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen”—4S credo)
2. Informing and Empowering Diverse
Populations: Consumer Health Libraries and
Patient Information
Planetree Health Resources Center/1981Planetree Classification System
Consumer Health LibrariansVolunteers
Classes, lectures (CR)Health Fairs
Griffin’s Mobile Health Resource CenterOpen Chart Policy
Patient Progress NotesCare Coordination Conferences (Est. goals, timetable,
etc.)
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
3. Healing Partnerships: The
Importance of Including Friends
and Family
“When hospital staff members are asked to list the attributes of the ‘perfect patient and family,’ their
response is usually a passive patient with no family.” —Putting Patients First,
Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
The Patient-Family Experience
“Patients are stripped of control, their clothes are taken away, they have little say over their schedule, and they are deliberately separated
from their family and friends. Healthcare professionals control all of the information
about their patients’ bodies and access to the people who can answer questions and connect
them with helpful resources. Families are treated more as intruders than loved ones.”
—Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
“Family members, close friends and ‘significant others’ can have a far
greater impact on patients’ experience of illness, and on their
long-term health and happiness, than any healthcare professional.” —Through
the Patient’s Eyes
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
“A 7-year follow-up of women diagnosed with breast cancer
showed that those who confided in at least one person in the 3
months after surgery had a 7-year
survival rate of 72.4%, as compared to 56.3% for those who
didn’t have a confidant.”Institute for the Future
Care Partner Programs (IDs, discount meals, etc)
Unrestricted visits (“Most Planetree hospitals have eliminated visiting restrictions altogether”) (ER at one hospital “has a policy of never
separating the patient from the family, and there is no limitation on how many family members may be present,.”)
Collaborative Care ConferencesClinical Guidelines Discussions
Family SpacesPet Visits (POP: Patients’ Own Pets)
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
4. Nutrition: The Nurturing Aspect
of Food
Meals are central events
vs
“There, you’re fed.”*
*Irony: Focus on “nutrition” has reduced focus on “food” and “service”
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Aroma therapy (e.g., “smell of baking cookies”)
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
5. Spirituality: Inner Resources for Healing
Spirituality: Meaning and Connectedness in Life
1. Connected to supportive and caring group2. Sense of mastery and control3. Make meaning out of disease/find meaning in suffering
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Griffin: redesign chapel (waterfall, quiet music, open prayer book)
Other: music, flowers, portable labyrinth
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
6. Human Touch: The Essentials of Communicating
Caring Through Massage
“Massage is a powerful way to communicate caring.” —Putting Patients
First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
7. Healing Arts: Nutrition for the Soul
Planetree: “Environment conducive to healing”
Color!Light!
Brilliance!Form!Art!
Music!
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Griffin: Music in the parking lot; professional musicians in the lobby
(7/week, 3-4hrs/day) ; 5 pianos; volunteers (120-140 hrs arts & entertainment
per month).
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
8. Integrating Complementary and
Alternative Practices into Conventional Care
Griffin IMC/Integrative Medicine Center
MassageAcupuncture
MeditationChiropractic
Nutritional supplementsAroma therapy
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
9. Healing Environments: Architecture and
Design Conducive to Health
“Planetree Look”
Woods and natural materialsIndirect lighting
Homelike settings
Goals: Welcome patients, friends and family … Value humans over technology .. Enable patients to participate in their care … Provide flexibility to
personalize the care of each patient … Encourage caregivers to be responsive to patients … Foster a
connection to nature and beauty
Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Access to nurses station:
“Happen to”vs.
“Happen with”Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel
Conclusion: Caring/Growth “Experience”
Care!Control!Connect! Engage!Grow!
De-stress!
“An estimated 60 to 90 percent of doctor visits involve stress-related
complaints.” —Newsweek/09.27.2004
CR
07.03: 60/264/180/145-85/14010.04: 61/195/092/097-60/058
Univasc (<1/2)BextraLipitorToprol
Propranolol