1 conversation exposed 2 health care imperatives

A single conversation this past weekend with a cousin, who is a president at a Boston area college, revealed two imperatives about health care — that we need both universal coverage and a universal payment system.

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Consider this: The cost to provide health services to students at small colleges like this pushes up against the $1 million mark annually. That cost is not for total coverage — it's for "gap care," clinic style, that essentially triages the students and provides minimal care before the student's own insurance kicks in.

What happens is the college is solving its problem (how to provide health services for its students) by contracting with a health system (in this case a large not-for-profit with its own hospitals and doctors) that sets up an on-campus clinic and directs students to its own ambulatory clinic for after-hours care.

The health system wins because it is funneling a new population of patients into its system — to the hospital, of course, but increasingly to its own physicians.

The college pays a fee to the health system to administer the service. The health system's providers then deliver the care, which often is billed to the students' own health insurance (remember, every student is required to have health insurance or buy it from the college).

It's a system built on fragmentation.

Instead, if our system had universal coverage for everyone — and a single universal payment system where providers were paid fairly and adequately — we could likely solve both the access and cost dilemmas. 

We remain far away from a single payor system in the U.S., instead encouraging health systems to jockey for business by setting up competing Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) that cover discreet populations, such as seniors on Medicare or low-income people on Medicaid. Perhaps all the students at a particular college are another possible ACO population!

Indeed, ACOs are a great step forward. They hold the promise of a true continuum of care where quality, experience and cost can be "controlled."

But, using our example of these students, which ACO are they part of? The one that might exist with their health insurance (in most cases their parents' health insurance) or the system they get placed in by the college's arrangement with the health system?

Either way, it's fragmented care. What we really need is truly integrated care — care that is accessible anywhere, uses technology and data to inform clinical decisions and is actually affordable. 

That's a hope and a dream worth pursuing. 

 

Photo Friday: Philly's Fearless Superhero

Health insurance for your lifestyle.

That's the message in a campaign from Independence Blue Cross, called "Live Fearless." 

Billboards in the campaign each depict a lifestyle moment showing people living life to the fullest.

I especially liked this "Fearless Superhero," watching down over Philadelphians at the corner of Market and 22nd streets.

Shot at the corner of Market and 22nd Streets in Philadelphia, September 3, 2013.

Shot at the corner of Market and 22nd Streets in Philadelphia, September 3, 2013.

You can delightfully read RSS again (thanks @reederapp!)

Reading RSS on iOS is a joy again.

Thanks to Reeder 2, which is out today and is a universal app for iPhone and iPad.

The app provides access to the most popular RSS feed and sync services (I use Feedly, but Reeder 2 supports Feedbin, Feed Wrangler and Fever). It also allows you to open URLs in either Safari or Chrome.

Applaud developer Silvio Rizzi for creating a simple, intuitive, yet feature-rich app that will look stunning in iOS 7 (which arrives on Thursday, September 18) and on your new iPhone 5s or 5c.

Reeder 2 is $4.99 in the iOS App Store.

 

Remember. Always.

Take today to remember 9/11. 

And make plans, soon, to visit the 9/11 Memorial in New York City.

We have, during construction, and have made a point to return. It will move you.

America's PrepareAthon! is your chance to be ready

September is National Preparedness Month.

To celebrate, a number of federal government agencies have teamed up to bring us America's PrepareAthon!, a promotion to get us all to make a plan when disaster strikes.

"Getting ready before disaster strikes" includes making an emergency plan, keeping a stock of flashlights and batteries, having bottled drinking water available, having a battery-operated radio to get news and information and creating a disaster supplies kit.

Part of that is having a well stocked first aid kit — and having all your medical information at hand. Consider using a mobile app to keep track of that information, such as the Southcoast MyHealth app I created to track your medications, allergies and contact info for your doctors and pharmacies.

America's PrepareAthon! is brought to us by the Corporation for National Community Service, Ready.gov and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).