Thursday, March 30, 2017

Taxonomy of Burden

In a couple of weeks, we will discuss alternative ways to treat patients.  As I was following e-patient Dave's website, I found this graphic, called the Taxonomy of Burden (click on it to get a better view, and download it, share it.  It's “Creative Commons Share-Alike with Attribution” – anyone is welcome to reuse it, as long as the credit is carried with it),  Then I read further...

You can download the pdf here.

Dave learned about the graphic you see here, which was published last year as part of a paper in the journal BMC Medicine
I love it. At the very center is one item: the word “burden.” Coming out from it are three dots:
  • Healthcare tasks: the things you’re told to do.
  • Consequences of healthcare tasks imposed on patients. (See above!)
  • Factors that worsen the burden of treatment: communication problems, getting to and from the doctor’s office, etc etc.
Then, extending from each, are additional realities: under Tasks are paperwork, understanding the illness, follow-up, rearranging life etc etc; under Consequences are impact on work, financial impact, etc etc; under Factors that worsen are the many many things that just plain get in the way of doing the right thing.
Why do I love this graphic? That whole thing could be printed out as an outline list, many pages long, but that has no “all at once” impact: you browse a list item by item, but this visualizes it all at once, making you realize: “Holy crap! Look at all this!”
I felt the same way.  It's worth looking at it in some detail.  It provides a sobering view of all the reasons why healthcare is so darn complex.  But you knew that!

The diagram is from this article in BMC Medicine: bit.ly/TaxonomyOfBurden, by Viet-Thi Tran , Caroline Barnes, Victor Montori, Bruno Falissard and Philippe Ravaud.
I then looked up Victor Montori because he thanked Dave for the post, and learned about The Patient Revolution, which fit the book we will read later, When Doctors Don't Listen.  The first 2 of their 8 pillars are about the patient telling their story.    This is an important part of The Patient Revolution.  You can find videos there, too.   More on that later.

Check out Dave's Resources link.  The Communities link is especially interesting, but so is his blog.  As you can see, I enjoyed reading it.  Thought you might find it useful, too.  ðŸ˜Š


Sunday, March 26, 2017

Dr. Victoria Sweet, March 29


Here is the info on the talk by Dr. Victoria Sweet, author of God’s Hotel: A Doctor, a Hospital, and a Pilgrimage to the Heart of Medicine.    She is talking right after our class, and with a dessert reception.  It's at the Marriott University Park at Main Gate, so it's pretty close by.  (The link above is to her website).

Here is a brief article in the Huffington Post about her book.    Her ted talk is found on her homepage.
Comment below if you would like to attend.  I'll add you to the rsvp as a guest.

Friday, March 17, 2017

New Approach to Addiction

I just found this brief article on Cigna's CEO changing approach to treatment of addiction. In 2014 alone, opioids killed 30,000 Americans becoming the number 1 cause of accidental death just surpassing car crashes. The importance of treating opioid misuse is identifying that behavioral health must be treated differently than physical health, and an alcoholic anonymous style treatment isn't the best solution. It goes back to what we learned about the importance of preventative health care, and avoiding opioid misuse in the first place. I recommend the reading! It's super quick but interesting.




Monday, March 6, 2017

John Oliver on Obamacare, Parts 1 & 2

Part 2: Here is a follow-up on this video after the new Healthcare bill (aka Trumpcare??) was proposed (again, language warning):


 

Part 1:  Some of you may have seen this, but as only John Oliver can do, here is probably the best overview of what the Republicans are thinking about when they say "repeal and replace" Obamacare. (Warning: language, etc.)


Thursday, March 2, 2017

Moving Patient Data Is Messy, But Blockchain Is Here to Help

I interrupt the healthcare debate with a brief discussion of blockchain, which in some convulated way is related to the debate, but also to discussion of data sharing.  The article in Wired, starts by saying the new Secretary of Health and Human Services, Tom Price, came out against electronic health records, the digital histories patients make every time they see their doctor or go to the hospital. “We’ve turned physicians into data entry clerks,” he said, arguing that the burdensome recording systems need an overhaul.

As  you should know by now, for decades (even before the ACA, but certainly after), many hospitals are still struggling with  EHRs to address standardization and high quality health care. But while federal laws and incentive programs have made health care data more accessible, the vast majority of hospital systems still can’t easily (or safely) share their data.

Enter blockchains. While blockchain is probably best known for powering bitcoin, it’s really a generic tool to keep secure data in a distributed, encrypted ledger—and control who has access to that ledger.  This one shared ledger is spread across a network of synchronized, replicated databases visible to anyone with access. Which gives it unprecedented security benefits. Hacking one block in the chain is impossible without simultaneously hacking every other block in the chain’s chronology.

“Now is probably the right time in our history to take a fresh approach to data sharing in health care,” says John Halamka, chief information officer at Boston-based Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.  “The EHRs may be very different and come from lots of different places,” Halamka says, “but the ledger itself is standardized.”   Halamka gives a simple example: prescriptions. Say that one medical record shows a patient takes aspirin. In another it says they’re taking Tylenol. Maybe another says they’re on Motrin and Lipitor. The problem today is that each EHR is only a snapshot; it doesn’t necessarily tell the doctor what the patient is taking right now. But with blockchain, each prescription is like a deposit, and when doctor discontinues a medication, they take a withdrawal. 

So, looking at a blockchain, a doctor wouldn’t have to comb through all the deposits and withdrawals—they would just see the balance.  The software timestamps each validated block and adds it to a chain of older blocks, in chronological order. The sequence shows every transaction made in the history of that ledger (a chain of blocks - blockchain).  And crucially for patient privacy and security, hospitals and pharmacies don’t have to send data back and forth to see it. They just all have to point to the same common ledger.

Feel free to add what you know about blockchains in other industries or businesses, or other details.