(Press-News.org) Contact information: Steve Graff
stephen.graff@uphs.upenn.edu
215-349-5653
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Despite rising health costs, few residency programs train doctors to practice cost-conscious care
Penn Medicine physician calls for expansion of training in high-value, cost-conscious care
PHILADELPHIA—Despite a national consensus among policy makers and educators to train residents to be more conscious of the cost of care, less than 15 percent of internal medicine residency programs have a formal curriculum addressing it, a new research letter published today in JAMA Internal Medicine by a Penn Medicine physician found.
The study, led by first author Mitesh S. Patel, MD, MBA, a physician at the Philadelphia VA Medical Center and Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, evaluated survey responses from nearly 300 residency programs in the US in 2012.
Health care costs continue to rise, accounting for nearly $3 trillion a year. Even more remarkable is that 30 percent of health care costs—over $750 billion annually—is considered wasted care that could be avoided without affecting the quality of care, reports the Institutes of Medicine.
To help address such staggering statistics, in 2010 the Medicare Payment and Advisory Committee recommended that nearly $3.5 billion in funding for graduate medical education be reallocated to as performance-based payments. A year later, the American College of Physicians (ACP) called for high-value, cost-conscious care to become a critical competency for physicians. Dr. Patel was one of the physicians to serve on the ACP's curriculum development committee, which produced the High-Value Care Curriculum in an effort to help residents practice habits of care that reduce unnecessary costs to the health care system.
"Teaching new physicians to practice high-value, cost-conscious care has been recognized as a national priority," Patel said. "In this study, we evaluated whether formal curricula were in fact being adopted by internal medicine residency programs. While we found that this was not the case in the overwhelming majority of internal medicine residency programs, there is hope in that about 50 percent of programs stated they were working on it."
In August 2012, the Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine (APDIM) survey committee, led by study co-authors Vineet M. Arora, MD, MAPP, of the University of Chicago, and Darcy A. Reed, MD, MPH and Furman S. McDonald, MD, MPH, of the Mayo Clinic, conducted the survey on the state of the cost-conscious care curricula. They evaluated presence of formal curricula, teaching and assessment methods, and perceptions of medical education's role in teaching cost-conscious care.
Interestingly enough, 85 percent of the programs surveyed agreed that graduate medical education has a responsibility to curtail the rising costs of health care. However, only 47.5 percent agreed that the majority of their faculty consistently role modeled cost-conscious care, and only 33.2 percent agreed that residents had access to information on costs of tests and procedures they order.
Programs in the western United States, those that were university-based and had more residency positions were more likely to have adopted a cost-conscious care curriculum.
"If graduate medical education is going to play a significant role in curtailing the rising cost of health care, it must leverage such models to develop more robust teaching and assessment methods and provide faculty development," the authors write.
The internal medicine residency program at the University of Pennsylvania Health System (UPHS) is among the first programs in the country to adopt a formal training based on the ACP's High-Value Care Curriculum.
During its first year, Dr. Patel taught several of the sessions at UPHS and furthered research on the topic by working with colleagues to develop the VALUE Framework for teaching-hospitals, academic medical centers, and residency programs. It can be used by physician trainees to assess whether a medical intervention will provide value for patients while reducing unnecessary spending. It includes deciding the most appropriate medical tests to order, selecting the most cost-effective medications to prescribe, and discussing with patients whether or not to have surgery.
"There's a lot of work ahead as we look for ways not only to expand adoption of these curricula, but also to find ways to better standardize teaching and assessments methods that can be better implemented during residency training," said Patel. "Early adopters of cost-conscious care curricula should look for ways to further its efforts by studying its impact on physician training and patient care."
Laura Loertscher, MD, of Providence St. Vincent Medical Center, is also a co-author.
INFORMATION:
Despite rising health costs, few residency programs train doctors to practice cost-conscious care
Penn Medicine physician calls for expansion of training in high-value, cost-conscious care
2013-12-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Physicians who prefer hospice care for themselves more likely to discuss it with patients
2013-12-17
Physicians who prefer hospice care for themselves more likely to discuss it with patients
Despite preferences for their own care, many physicians still delay hospice discussions with patients
Although the vast majority of physicians participating in ...
Antihypertensives associated with lower dialysis risk for patients with advanced CKD
2013-12-17
Antihypertensives associated with lower dialysis risk for patients with advanced CKD
Patients with stable hypertension and the most advanced stage of chronic kidney disease (CKD) before dialysis appeared to have a lower risk for long-term dialysis or death if they were treated ...
Study analyzes diabetes drug metformin as obesity treatment for children
2013-12-17
Study analyzes diabetes drug metformin as obesity treatment for children
Treatment with the diabetes drug metformin appears to be associated with a modest reduction in body mass index (BMI) in obese children when combined with lifestyle interventions such ...
Innovative instrument probes close binary stars, may soon image exoplanets
2013-12-17
Innovative instrument probes close binary stars, may soon image exoplanets
Fiber optic imagers on Lick and Subaru telescopes boost resolution to study close binaries
A new instrument that combines two high-resolution telescope techniques – adaptive ...
The Liverpool Care Pathway has been made a scapegoat, says palliative care consultant
2013-12-17
The Liverpool Care Pathway has been made a scapegoat, says palliative care consultant
'It is as illogical to discredit the LCP because of errant clinicians as it is to ban the Highway Code because of bad drivers.'
Claud Regnard, FRCP, a palliative care consultant, ...
Drought and climate change: An uncertain future?
2013-12-17
Drought and climate change: An uncertain future?
Drought frequency may increase by more than 20% in some regions of the globe by the end of the 21st century, but it is difficult to be more precise as we don't know yet how changes in climate will impact on ...
2 in 3 13-year-old girls afraid of gaining weight
2013-12-17
2 in 3 13-year-old girls afraid of gaining weight
Six in ten 13-year-old girls, compared to four in 10 boys the same age, are afraid of gaining weight or getting fat according to new research on eating disorders from the UCL Institute of Child Health (UK) ...
Common misconceptions by cat owners lead to high numbers of unwanted kittens
2013-12-17
Common misconceptions by cat owners lead to high numbers of unwanted kittens
Overpopulation in cats is recognised to contribute to high numbers of cats entering rescue shelters each year. New research suggests that the high number of unwanted kittens may ...
Assessing the impact of climate change on a global scale
2013-12-17
Assessing the impact of climate change on a global scale
Thirty research teams in 12 different countries have systematically compared state-of-the-art computer simulations of climate change impact to assess how climate change might influence global ...
Lung cancer death rates continue to fall, helping the decrease in overall cancer death rates
2013-12-17
Lung cancer death rates continue to fall, helping the decrease in overall cancer death rates
Annual Report to the Nation includes special feature highlighting the large contribution of other diseases on survival of cancer patients
The Annual ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Scaling up neuromorphic computing for more efficient and effective AI everywhere and anytime
Make it worth Weyl: engineering the first semimetallic Weyl quantum crystal
Exercise improves brain function, possibly reducing dementia risk
Diamonds are forever—But not in nanodevices
School-based program for newcomer students boosts mental health, research shows
Adding bridges to stabilize quantum networks
Major uncertainties remain about impact of treatment for gender related distress
Likely 50-fold rise in prevalence of gender related distress from 2011-21 in England
US college graduates live an average of 11 years longer than those who never finish high school
Scientists predict what will be top of the crops in UK by 2080 due to climate change
Study: Physical function of patients at discharge linked to hospital readmission rates
7 schools awarded financial grants to fuel student well-being
NYU Tandon research to improve emergency responses in urban areas with support from NVIDIA
Marcus Freeman named 2024 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year
How creating and playing terrific video games can accelerate the battle against cancer
Rooting for resistance: How soybeans tackle nematode invaders is no secret anymore
Beer helps grocery stores tap sales in other categories
New USF study: Surprisingly, pulmonary fibrosis patients with COVID-19 improve
In a landmark study, an NYBG scientist and colleagues find that reforestation stands out among plant-based climate-mitigation strategies as most beneficial for wildlife biodiversity
RSClin® Tool N+ gives more accurate estimates of recurrence risk and individual chemotherapy benefit in node-positive breast cancer
Terahertz pulses induce chirality in a non-chiral crystal
AI judged to be more compassionate than expert crisis responders: Study
Scale-up fabrication of perovskite quantum dots
Adverse childhood experiences influence potentially dangerous firearm-related behavior in adulthood
Bacteria found to eat forever chemicals — and even some of their toxic byproducts
London cabbies’ planning strategies could help inform future of AI
More acidic oceans may affect the sex of oysters
Transportation insecurity in Detroit and beyond
New tool enables phylogenomic analyses of entire genomes
Uncovering the role of Y chromosome genes in male fertility in mice
[Press-News.org] Despite rising health costs, few residency programs train doctors to practice cost-conscious carePenn Medicine physician calls for expansion of training in high-value, cost-conscious care