Showing posts with label clinical practice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clinical practice. Show all posts

Monday, February 8, 2010

NST: DG Health: Clinics with no patience

Clinics with no patience

NST, 2010/02/08
Annie Freeda Cruez

KUALA LUMPUR: A total of 457 medical establishments nationwide failed to comply with the Private Healthcare Facilities and Services Act 1998 and remained unregistered with the Health Ministry.

There were also doctors who operated clinics before getting approval from the state Health Department or the Health Ministry.

And there were those who provided complimentary care and allopathic medical care without authorisation, Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Ismail Merican said.

“Organisations, big or small, must exercise accountability in continually improving the quality of their services and safeguarding the standard of care,” he told the New Straits Times.

He cautioned that doctors performing medical procedures and operations must do so at registered facilities.


While some establishments are in the process of registration, others are renewing their licences.

Dr Ismail also raised concerns over the number of unlicensed private haemodialysis centres.

A total of 82 out of 452 centres are unlicensed.

Action will be taken to ensure that only licensed haemodialysis centres are allowed to provide treatment.

Some, he said, simply refused to comply because of the ministry giving “leeway ” in providing infrastructure, such as the dimension and size of certain areas or rooms, which were esigned for patients’ comfort and safety.

He also said there was an acute shortage of qualified and experienced professionals (affiliated nephrologists and persons in charge) and paraprofessional staff (registered nurses and medical assistants) overseeing haemodialysis treatments at private haemodialysis centres and hospitals.

Dr Ismail was also alarmed that only 20 per cent of the private dental clinics registered last year had an autoclave with a certificate of fitness from the Department of Safety.

A total of 1,442 clinics were registered in 2008 and of the number, 1,303 were inspected and only 20 per cent had an autoclave with CF.

Worse was the fact that a few clinics were still using boilers to sterilise their instruments.

“Private dental clinics need to improve on their safety and health aspects, especially in terms of infection control. We know that almost 20 per cent do not comply with current guidelines,” Dr Ismail said.

Last year, there were 1,547 private dental clinics registered with the Malaysian Medical Council.

Following inspections in 2008, clinics found lacking on infection control were advised to equip themselves.

The Malaysian Dental Association has also planned a series of talks for practitioners.

Dr Ismail said in dentistry, patient safety concerns were mainly in the areas of infection control and radiation safety.

Infection control and radiation safety are among the areas inspected under the regulations of the act.

Dr Ismail said the Dental Act 1971 was also being amended.

“Various changes have been made to this act, including conducting a qualifying examination for those without recognised qualifications to register as practising dentists in Malaysia.”

In addition, specialist registration will be made mandatory.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

1M Clinic: Advice and Comments from Senior Doctors

Further Advice and Comments from Senior Doctors

Dr Steven Chow, President, FPMPAM (MMA member):

I can empathise with you the difficulties navigating through the challenges leading our medical fraternity in today's scenario.

Clearly,Klinik 1Malaysia is just another nut and bolt of a bigger political agenda. It is a political response to the issue of medical provision disparity in the urban poor. Legally and morally, the government of the day has the mandate to do so. The current public perception is that it is wrong for the private medical profession to challenge this.

When the Klinik 1Malaysia program was first revealed on Budget Day 2009 it was a body blow to the private practitioners. On the one hand, the PHFSAct and Regulations clearly requires private clinics to be manned at all material time by a registered medical practitioner. On the other hand, these 1Malaysia clinics need only to be manned by HAs and MAs. We fully agree with you and our doctors on this point and have already written earlier to express our concern regarding this irregularity.

After the launch of the PHFSAct Regulations 2006, we met the then Minister of Health on 16.8.2006 with our set of proposed amendments to the Regulations. He was absolutely supportive and the following points were categorically stated:

1.    The said Regulations simply prescribes the basic minimum standards that private healthcare facilities must adhere to by law and that these standards were applicable to BOTH private and public healthcare facilities. This was the explicit comment of the Minister in the presence of his entire senior MOH officials.

2.    The objective of the Law was not to criminalise the private doctors or to jail anyone of them.

However, the Minister did add a caveat, ie: "as long as he was the Minister" etc etc. Well, time and history has told a different story. I am afraid, history may repeat itself again with your forthcoming meeting.

The unfortunate thing is that GPs have previously been prosecuted and clinics closed when they were found to have HAs or MAs covering for them. The basic principle is that there cannot be a different set of laws for the private and the public sectors.The way forward is to push for specific amendments in the  PHFSA Regulations to specifically state that likewise  private clinics can also engage HAs and MAs.

The notice is already out for a meeting to discuss the draft amendments to the PHFSA Regulations on 12.1.2010. We need to focus our efforts on this meeting.The promised amendments are already 3 years late.

The rice-bowl of the GPs is unlikely to be significantly affected by these 50 clinics. The patients they cater for are likely to be those who are going to the government hospitals OPDs anyway. The PR line of the MOH is politically correct ie.  the scope of their function and capability will be different to that of a private medical clinic and they are there to serve a unmet social need. We can see that as a strategy, these clinics are likely to be situated in areas where the urban poor have limited access and also affordability to private care.

In a bigger picture, the livelihood of the GPs will be severely affected by the following:

1.    Private hospitals opening chains of feeder clinics under the guise of wellness screening centre etc etc 

Surprisingly, the MOH have approved the registration of such feeder clinics. This is already happening and will escalate with the developing scenario where the major private hospitals are already under GLCs. .The present laws and regulations are silent with regards to the business dealings of these hospitals.Their justification is that some university hospitals are also providing such services.

2.    Foreign enterprises opening private healthcare facilities in Malaysia and or buying up  GP/ primary care clinics with the inception of AFTA and the MRA with effect from 1.1.2010.If Malaysian doctors are too expensive to employ they may jolly well import them from lower-cost neighbouring countries.

3.    Loss of the dispensing facility of private clinics - this is being actively pursued by the pharmacist lobby and it does appear that it has the MOH sanction.To our knowledge, there is stated policy in the MOH and a roadmap is already in existence for its implementation in less than 5 years time..

4.    Incursion into the traditional medical practice by industry like private laboratories, health screening enterprises etc. including operating and running of clinics.

5.    Discounts, administrative charges,management fees etc etc extracted by MCOs. TTPs, insurance companies and all sorts of medical middlemen.

6.    Profession Fee schedule not in synchrony with rising operational cost 

What is extremely worrisome is the future implications and evolution of the 1MClinic model. The way things are going, there is nothing to prevent some enterprising private healthcare companies with the backing of GLCs to capitalise on the 1MClinic model and develop this into a full blown industry. It makes good business sense.

The stage is now set for a perfect storm when all these players get their act together.

Sadly, soon we will see the demise of the existing independent private GP system of this country that has faithfully provided for 60% of the outpatient care at an affordable cost. We are already hearing of comments by some in the MOH clamouring for the "nationalisation" of the independent private GP system.. Aren't we all "One Malaysian doctors",we have asked  "What is there to nationalise further? Why are we not treasuring a system that has worked wonderfully well for our rakyat? Why do we allow commercial entities to suck away the money that the people have diligently put aside for their healthcare?

The bottom-line is that healthcare cost will sky-rocket, the public will complain, the doctors will be blamed and the government will enact more regulations and there will yet be another cycle of self-perpetuating change.

Best wishes for your meeting.


Datuk Dr DM Thuraiappah (Chairman, AFPM):

We think we should address a fundamental question.
  1. The MOH should stop creating reactions from the profession on knee-jerk proposals from politicians.
  2. I have heard from a MOH official that the MOH does have a blue-print of the national health reforms. However, if there is a blue print, then MMA should be consulted.
  3. MMA should push for reform of the health care system by MOH divesting itself and bringing about the following:
    1. MOH to be a policy maker and monitor of regulations.
    2. Healthcare to be delivered by Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Care Trusts.
    3. The National Health Fund to be the payor for the delivery of health care.
MMA can then deal with the three institutions as and when necessary for different needs. Good uniform healthcare delivery in the nation should be a common goal and we should not be competing with each other.
I think we should put this forward as our contribution to the nation.

Dato' Dr Joseph Eravelly (Past President Academy Medicine, Malaysia): 


I have been following the many comments from leading office bearers of the MMA past and present. I am glad that the general tone is one of common sense, moderation, and not a rush to rash action.

Dr. Mohan Das’ comments are rational and needs to be studied carefully.  So also is the paper sent by Dr. Steven Chow.  

I am afraid the President should not wait to be guided by the views of the majority. The majority view may sometimes become emotional and almost mob-like. Instead as a leader he must lead.  Any crisis is an opportunity to think strategically and come up with solutions that earn the respect of your members.

After reading the many comments I thought I will add my two cents worth to everything that has been expressed. 

I believe there are two issues to be addressed here. The first is not just an incident which has generated all this heat. That incident is but a part of the larger and emerging risks of private medicine especially for GPs. Steven Chow has described these risks in some detail but does not offer solutions. 

The second issue is what the MMA can do for its members.  It requires thinking rationally and planning ahead instead of reacting to every crisis as it occurs.

Let me take the first issue. It is a fact that every doctor that goes into private practice (specialist or GP) has one primary overriding objective. That is to earn a better income for himself and his family.  He moves into the free market. He must but usually does not, understand the principle of SWOT. His limitations are imposed by the way he practices as well as by competition and the price elasticity of supply and demand.  His patients are really customers who must perceive value in paying his charges. Nowadays that customer is getting smarter and realizes that there are choices.

Businesses plan according to perceived behavior of customers.  They also use marketing tools to influence customer behavior.  Sure costs go up but clever marketing can persuade people to bear higher costs.

The business environment that the doctor works in will, and does, change. The pace of this change will quicken. Now freely available are BP sets, glucometers, and self-requested complete lab tests. Soon abdominal ultrasounds, brain scans, and even CT angiograms on-demand may become available. Consumers will also increasingly buy medicines directly from pharmacies without prescriptions or get a prescription for a small fee without consulting a doctor.  There are other dangers that have been lucidly pointed out by Steven Chow.  
Why consumers have changed is because of economics – price, convenience and speed. There is also an increasing belief that there is little value in consulting GPs. This is perhaps also reinforced by the GP himself behaving like he is selling medicines.   This is why I think it is better to give up dispensing and charge for prescriptions. 

But change in business models associated with altered consumer behavior is also affecting other businesses.  Mobile phone companies, PC makers, automobile companies, airlines, and even retailers suffer in the face of this change. They spend millions trying to anticipate and adapt not only to new technology but changing regulations by the regulator. Some die and fade from the scene.   Why then should a medical business playing in the same market complain and ask for protection. 

All these businesses play by the rules of the free market. That market is remorseless and unforgiving but generally fair and favors efficiency.   In the case of medicine especially governments will intervene if there is a sense of market failure by which I mean a failure to allocate resources efficiently according to needs.  Think Obama and his healthcare plan in the USA. 

The trigger event for today’s discourse is the implementation of 1Malaysia Clinics. As Tan Sri Ismail has said, that should not affect GPs and I agree. What is being planned in Malaysia is also occurring in different ways in the world. Let me explain.

In the US for example, for many years now nurses have been trained as anesthesiologists, and give G.A. even for brain and heart surgery operations.  At the Mayo Clinic they are using nurse practitioners to stand in for doctors on night calls with the power to prescribe and to call for tests. Technicians do bone marrow biopsies almost as if on an assembly line. Nurses and technicians insert and manage ventricular assist balloon pumps and pass pressure lines and Swan-Ganz catheters when required. These providers are trained and certified. The point to note is that it is possible to use non-doctors to do relatively sophisticated medical procedures.   It is a fact of life we must anticipate and accept. 

Compared to all these things that paramedics are being better trained to do, the work of the GP in his clinic looks like a walk in the park. To oppose the 1Malaysia proposal by the government will be tantamount to saying that better educated, better trained doctors cannot compete with nurses and medical assistants in the free market.  This argument sounds absurd.  Hence opposition to this activity should stop.

I come to my next point.  What can the MMA do for its members?  I fear that the MMA has become gridlocked in a huge bureaucracy. Most of this mess is created by doctors themselves, not the leaders.  There is nothing that the MMA seems to do for the betterment of its members.  No wonder your membership declines. 

Yet MMA is a very important organization that must be protected and enhanced.  It calls for a paradigm shift in thinking.  I have raised a few points on this line of thinking in a letter to you in August 2009. There is no point repeating everything else that I said before. The most important point worth repeating is that the MMA has Market Power.   We must understand this and learn how to use it in the free market.  

My Comments (DQ):


Thanks for all the feedback and comments. As I have said so earlier, approaches to leadership differs from one to another. 

One can opt to be autocratic, consultative, or leading by consensual direction, based on personal conviction and majoritarianism. The latter is what I practise. I do not believe I have the sole right to simply push ahead with my own opinions alone, although I may have a broader perspective than most.


Most of the points raised have actually ben raised by me in my President's pages and past editorials. But they are certainly worth repeating for those not in the know.


Regarding Steven's points of GP challenges, most if not all were enumerated in my September MMA News President's page, where I addressed the many issues which we are helping to resolve. Yes we will be fully committed to be present at the Amendment exercise for the Private Health Care Facilities and Services Act which will be held next Tuesday, where I will lead our MMA team.


I agree with Joe Eravelly that the 1M clinics will make only a very small dent, if at all, on the urban GP's financial concern, which is what I had stated at the earliest statements. 

However, this nonconsultative manner in which such policy change of task-shifting had been announced and implemented, is disturbing, and may become a very critical slippery slope from which all other government-MOH-doctor relations might in future be defined. 

If projects or policies are deemed for the so-called 'public good' or worse, for political mileage, then any authority can and will go ahead, regardless. 

I believe doctors as a group should not stand by as toothless tigers. We have to make a stand to be counted, that is my position as defined in my election manifesto, and I will pursue this if supported by my members, without fear or favour. 

Just because something is a done deal and/or foregone conclusion, if it is wrong or unacceptable, does not make it an irreparable right. It should still be opposed and hopefully rectified or modified to an acceptable compromise. This way, we move forwards with our cross-purposes being assuaged in some small ways, evolving into what we call a win-win situation. 

We must not allow our status to be continually eroded so that we can be dismissively bypassed without being consulted. Indeed we must learn to imagine the bigger picture; imagine a master plan when the entire National Health structure becomes revamped overnight, then what? 

It is a frightening scenario. But thankfully, thus far we the MMA, have been consulted on the preliminary aspects of the possible revamp embedded in the 10th Malaysia Plan.

In this day and age and especially after March 8, 2008, the Malaysian people have found a new and exciting liberated voice of empowerment--to question, to dialogue, to be counted and to help input their concerns and voices, so that a burgeoning sense of people power can be instilled into a laggard behemoth of more-of-the-same government. 

But be rest assured, we will not simply scream and shout, we will work earnestly but energetically together as best we can, but we must be counted as partners, not as mere puppets...


Although, many physicians especially specialists appear to see the 'bigger picture's and are somewhat  dismissive of the 'molehill' plight of the GPs;  my grapevine from the ground has been thunderingly loud, agitated and disturbed! I hear you all, and that is why I feel compelled to empathise with the GPs more. 

Personally, I am not in the least impacted by this issue, as of now. But I foresee a possible erosion of our strength and professional interests, if politicians and bureaucrats continue to simply enact policy changes and laws or even administrative dictates at will, without proper consultation with as many stakeholders as possible. 

A letter to the editor in The Star today, addresses a similar concern, while pointing out the shortcomings of our MA/nurses-led clinics even at our klinik kesihatans, already  so entrenched and in existence in the country. 

I believe we do have legitimate concerns, which must be resolved to the best possible compromise, with promises for greater consultation in the future. I think we are not asking too much, after all we are in this together, strange bed-fellows and all...



Tuesday, December 22, 2009

MMA vs. MMC: Don't muddle their roles


David KL Quek, malaysiakini, 22 Dec 2009, 11.08am

comment I sense great disquiet and anguish that many doctors appear so helpless in the wake of several issues which appear to have emasculated the medical profession and make the practice that much more onerous and perhaps a tad nit-picky.

I will not touch on the political slants and the many possibly hearsay implications of one writer's perspective regarding the director-general (DG) or ministers of health, past and present. That is his right.

However, it must be clarified that the Malaysian Medical Association (MMA) is not synonymous with the Malaysian Medical Council (MMC). The MMA does not form part of the MMC and does not have any influence on it, or vice-versa.

medical doctorsThe MMA was formed nearly 50 years ago to represent the interests of the medical practitioners. Our motto reads Jasa Utama which translates into 'Service First'. This necessarily implies that our interests must rest with our service to our patients first and foremost.

Conversely, the MMC is the regulatory body formed by an Act of Parliament, which governs the spectrum of medical practice, including formal registration of all medical professionals, as well as meting out disciplinary action against errant doctors, after due processes of inquiry, fully enshrined in the Medical Act 1971.

Every country (and some states in the US) has such a governing disciplinary board or council, because professional matters can become contentious and sometimes tinged with poor and unethical practices, which we call 'professional misconduct'.

Of course, no doctor would like to be hauled up for inquiry into professional conduct, because this process can be very unnerving and stressful. Their jobs and right to practice are literally on the line.

In every profession, there will always be those who come perilously close to the edge of propriety in their dealings with patients. This is especially so in the usually quite asymmetric patient-doctor relationship, where faith and trust in the doctor clearly is more one-sided than the other way round.

The MMA also operates on an independent code of ethics. It deals with complaints about errant doctors from the public and occasionally from our own doctor members. We do not actively search for possible wrongdoing by doctors. But we owe it to our patients to help answer some of their grievances, which may have an ethical basis or misunderstanding.

The ethics committee conducts investigations, which include asking the doctor involved to help answer the charges - there is always a right of reply, where even the right to engage legal counsel is allowed. The complaints are then resolved amicably, or are referred to the MMC if no agreement is reached.

Previously the MMA has taken the role of complainant against errant doctors at MMC hearings, but these days we have tried to persuade the complainant to directly represent him or herself for greater clarity and purpose.

Referral to the MMC for further action or possibly a full inquiry is based purely on what we consider to be possible breach of professional conduct, but not medical negligence. Professional misconduct has more to do with the medical profession's expectations as physicians under our Code of Ethics. It has no legal basis, although the connotations are as ponderous.

medical doctors in malaysia 120106Every doctor understands his or her ethical boundaries, which are clearly spelt out in several documents either by the MMA or the MMC (Code of Professional Conduct). No doctor can claim this is an archaic practice and thus choose not to abide by these, otherwise, he or she has no right to continue being a part of the profession which has survived since the time of Hippocrates.

You may not like these ethical constricts, but you will have to toe the line, to protect both our august profession and more importantly, the patient and the public at large.

MMC decisions


The fact that I have been elected as a MMC member since 2004 is not exactly a secret. I was elected as one of 11 MMC members by all Malaysian registered doctors, and not just by MMA members - although only about 15-20 percent actually exercise this right through a nationwide postal ballot.

Some of the elected members have been re-elected for many terms because these doctors are stalwarts of the profession. They are respected by almost every doctor as holding the profession in its highest regard and to the best standards. One senior clinician and past president of the MMA has been an elected MMC member successively (every three years) for more than 25 years.

The DG of Health is president of the MMC under the Medical Act, while the other members are appointed from the universities or the Health Ministry.

As councillors, we generally have the interests of medical doctors and professionalism at heart, but our foremost role is to protect the rights and interests of patients. We cannot be and are not just blindly partial toward protecting our 'own kind' so to speak - that is not our remit.

Conversely, it is untrue to imply that the MMC is bent on arbitrarily punishing doctors for trivial issues. Legal representation is almost always encouraged and due process always given extended leeway to arrive at the truth of every dispute.

A minimum of nine councillors must be present to form a quorum to decide on any full inquiry, which is a form of jury of our peers. A decision to sanction or to acquit any doctor is taken very seriously and only after much discussion and debate, as well as an internal discourse with our own conscience, experience and moral underpinnings.

Most decisions are made by majority vote, but very often on unanimity, which underscores the commonality of purpose and ethical compass, which everyone pledge to perform as MMC member. We all understand the seriousness of our collective decisions. Making a decision is not at all a frivolous exercise of misguided power play, as implied by the letter writer.

Although some MMC findings have been overturned by the High Court due to procedural lapses - long delays and more rarely, misunderstandings on exact expectations of legal interpretations - the MMC as a regulatory body stands by its collective disciplinary decisions.

methadone-drugsThe decisions are, by and large, representative of quite serious misconduct applicable to doctors the world over, such as causing harm due to callous disregard to one's training and expertise; yes, employing unregistered persons to act as 'doctors' in helping to run their clinics; dishing out drugs without seeing or examining patients; or sometimes acting as high-class drug pushers for drug addicts; or selling medical chits.

Please don't confuse the MMA with the MMC. The MMA does not have the power to suspend, deregister or to reprimand any doctor under the law. We may however, help facilitate some complaint mechanism for further action.

Middle path


The MMA has already expressed dismay about the 1Malaysia clinics to be run by medical assistants instead of doctors. We are taking steps to see how we can influence its unwelcome direction. Although we understand that this may be a preliminary step - just 50 clinics in urban areas, this move may be a starting point to further extend this exercise, which will demoralise the profession of doctors, and worse would undermine the standard of health care for our less- than-informed rakyat.

We are working unfortunately behind the scenes to try and ameliorate its fallout, failing which, some greater collective action may be called for. Holding an EGM or conducting signature campaigns or even protest rallies may be just some of the options that we may contemplate.

We are likely to begin with a signature campaign to enlighten the ministry and the premier that most, if not all, doctors are really opposed to this move. However, it is clear that different doctors will see different actions as appropriate, while others will not. We will still strive for a middle path.

Unlike the British or German Medical Association, the MMA was not registered as a trade union, and thus our approach cannot be the same. Nevertheless, the MMA has been acting as a de facto professional body, which does look after the welfare and the various benefits for our members and doctors.

swine flu sungai buloh hospitalMost of the many perks, wage gains, overtime reimbursement, and promotion prospects of public service doctors have been won through the arduous efforts and campaigns led by the MMA, through its Section Concerning House Officers, Medical Officers and Specialists. Clearly we cannot have everything we want to be accepted wholesale, by any authority, let alone the government.

We have been successful in many ways, but weaker in others such as private GP concerns. This may be because many GPs choose to be rather apathetic and reactive unless issues impinge upon their practices.

Most GPs also are disjointedly single-minded, and not as cohesive as the public service doctors. We recognise some of these weaknesses and are working hard to rectify these so that we can be better represented at crucial dialogues with the ministry and the government.

With regard to doctors being able to pool funds to protect their rights, this is a fool's paradise! We have problems even asking doctors to be members of the MMA, when our annual dues are just below RM300.

When we finally looked into our membership rolls (previously more than 13,000), we had to delist some 4,000 doctors for defaulting on membership fees. We now have 8,200 members in benefit, from a total of around 27,000 registered doctors as at 2009.

Go figure! How strong can we be when most doctors are only interested in their own narrowly prescribed world? And no, there is no compulsion for any doctor to be part of the MMA, unlike the Bar Council (all lawyers are mandated to be a member), although this may be the way forward should the government accede to our request to bring this about!

The German and some western medical associations are compulsory for all registered doctors, and their fees are usually commensurate with their status.

Under such constraints, of course, the MMA is doing its best to cope with all these challenges, which will differ in style and approach with every leadership. My own position is to engage and influence without fear or favour.

But on the surface, this is harder to appreciate because contrary to what many members choose to perceive, not all or any of our press releases or communiqués are likely to see the light of day. We do not control the media, and neither can we control their prerogative to publish or to slant their headlines.

Under the best of circumstances, the mainstream media and the authorities may choose to ignore the best of our intentions. But plod on, we must, and we do the best we can.



DR DAVID KL QUEK was editor-in-chief of MMA News (bulletin of the Malaysian Medical Association) for 11 years and is currently president of the MMA.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Med J Australia: The decline of clinical contact in medicine

Bill Lancashire, Craig T Hore and Robert G Fassett
MJA 2009; 191 (9): 508-510

Abstract


  • Patient contact with medical students and clinicians may be on the decline.


  • Increasing medical graduate numbers, workforce and training demands, and the institution of safe working hours are putting pressure on opportunities for direct clinical interaction.


  • Medical education curricula and clinical postgraduate education supervisors must ensure that students and junior doctors recognise the importance of hands-on clinical contact with patients.


  • Although many new developments aid health care efficiencies and can assist with the complexities of care required in a modern hospital, clinicians need to maintain their focus on the patient.

    -----------------ooooooooo0000000000000ooooooooooo-------------------------
    My Comments:
    Declining soft therapeutic skills, lost art of the Clinical Encounter
    Another recent commentary from the Medical Journal of Australia, which decries the gradual but steady decline in doctor-patient contact, an erosion of the clinical learning experience, a diminishing of the special doctor-patient encounter and relationship.


    It's time to focus back on the patient and enhance and enrich that unique relationship--that clinical contact which would make us less dependent on technology and lessen the aloofness which some patients are complaining about more and more. Many are finding the so-called modern encounter too rushed,  too brief and too impersonal. This may be driving some patients away to alternative therapies which somehow emphasise more personal and empathetic outreach...


    We must learn to rekindle this clinical skill and recognise its importance!

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Health Care Reform and Plea for a return to better Clinical Culture

Health Care Reform and Clinical Culture


It is a tired and cynical cadre of physicians who will implement health care reforms. Yet few published perspectives include the view from the factory floor. The usual platitudes about changing financial incentives, increasing efficiency, and delivering high-quality care sound naïve to clinicians who deal with the imperfections of human nature and the messy effects of illness on patients.

Doctors are already, by training, sophisticated decision-making machines, capable of achieving extreme efficiency through the use of heuristics and experience.


The main problems that clinicians face in achieving efficiency and reducing costs are, first, a perceived need for certainty in diagnosis and treatment — a need driven by secular expectations and malpractice concerns; second, gross inefficiency created by obligatory documentation to satisfy billing requirements that have little value for clinical care; and third, restrictions on the use of clinical judgment that could avoid excessive testing. None of these problems, whose solutions would save money and time, have been incorporated into the national discussion about reform.

One change that would augment the role of clinical judgment would be for the health care system to resist the temptation to require adoption of often-elusive “best practices.” There has been an assumption by analysts that published clinical trials provide a sound guide for therapy, but all reputable studies report odds, hazard ratios, and effect sizes, almost all of which are small or modest. Absolutes are discordant with the realities of sickness and health.

There may be guidelines and measurable outcomes for mundane problems, but for the vast majority of daily doctor’s visits and hospital decisions, incremental or recursive approaches to diagnosis and treatment are more effective and efficient.


A second reform should be to limit malpractice awards so as to reduce physicians’ fear of lawsuits. Regardless of the arguments of defenders of open-ended malpractice payments, this insidious concern is a major driver of overtesting and overconsulting.

A third key reform would be to eliminate the time sink of the comprehensive exam and its lengthy documentation required by Medicare — a requirement that is likely to be adopted or exaggerated in any new codified system. Immaterial information is already cluttering the electronic medical record.

My survey of neurology notes, which I presume would be among the most thoughtful in medicine, shows that less than one fifth of the average note is taken up with analysis and discussion of the patient’s problem; the remainder is part of the “waste” in modern medical care.

Fourth, payment codes should be reduced to “simple” and “complex” — or at least the numerous billing levels and codes should be conflated, and payment should be based on diagnosis and time expended. Physicians should also be paid for their expertise.

Health care reform can redress slowly accrued and detrimental cultural changes, particularly the loss of reliance on clinical judgment. It would be a missed opportunity if practicing physicians (as contrasted to their representative bodies and societies) were excluded from the center of the conversation. The efficient use of the professional workforce will be more powerful than rules.

Allan H. Ropper, M.D.
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Boston, MA
This article (10.1056/NEJMopv0907607) was published on August 26, 2009, at NEJM.org