Friday, August 31, 2012

Promoting a Different Kind of Doctor


I came to work this morning and found some muffins and cookies left on our break room table.  Many of our staff  leave home early to get to the hospital so that patients are ready to go for their first procedure.  Many miss breakfast or just don't bother.  No doubt those folks are just as pleasantly surprised as I was to find these treats lying there.

But unlike me,they knew who brought the goods.  It was a doctor, one they work with day in and day out who does this almost every Friday. 

There has been much said about nasty interventional cardiologists in the media recently.  For a while, there never seemed to be a day when a greedy cardiologist or other physician who over-tested, over-treated, placed patients at risk for their on benefit, and spent too much money appeared.  In fact, it's gotten so bad that even our own societies have joined the fray willingly, developing "appropriate use" guidelines for everything we do, lest some bureaucratic authority step in instead. (News flash: it will probably happen anyway).

To be fair, there are times when we do test too often.  These procedures are how doctors live and defensive medicine is practiced after all.  But we should also acknowledge that there are far more decent, hard-working, and thoughtful physicians (including interventional cardiologists) in America that you will never hear about because they aren't as newsworthy to talk about.

But rest assured, this is the kind of guy who's much more likely to treat you when you need your stent at 3 am.

-Wes

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

In Defense of the American Cowboy

Atul Gawande, MD is a brilliant writer, no-doubt an excellent surgeon, and many would say a physician-visionary for all that ails America’s health care system.  He speaks first-hand of the changes that have occurred in American health care and recently offered his perspective for fixing our health care system to the fertile minds of Harvard’s recent graduating class of 2011.  In his graduation speech, published front and center (yet again) in the New Yorker magazine, he compares a “pit crew” model of health care delivery to an earlier day of individualized health care delivered by those he calls “cowboys.” In his piece, he dismisses the attributes of the independent-thinking physician “cowboy” because he claims, quite correctly, that no one doctor can possibly comprehend every aspect of medicine these days.  He implies that people who work in a larger, bureaucratic centralized locales in specialized and coordinated "pit crews" implicitly save costs and improves efficiencies.   He posits that by dividing the vast medical knowledge base amongst individuals that refine and practice a multitude of specilized skills on an individual that health care for the masses will succeed. 

So what could possibly be the problem with such a vision? After all, this vision seems so comfortable and reassuring given our health care system's need to save money while extending coverage to a larger portion of our populace.

To answer this question, perhaps Mr. Gawande should have delved into his “pit crew” metaphor a bit further.

Pit crews, by their definition, are highly trained, highly selected individuals that work on a specially formulated race car that would be the envy of any race car enthusiast. These professionals understand the very real value of working as a team: so their particular race car can complete a certain number of laps around a single racetrack in the shortest amount of time. Pit crew members, then, are highly committed to working faster and faster while streamlining their processes.  They have an intimate working knowledge of their highly specialized race car; they know each lug nut, each brake pad, each tiny screw down to its finest detail. In that sense, there are only a limited number of permutations of possible variables that are available for tweaking pit times. So they hone their efforts and as they gain confidence, their driver gains confidence in them, too.  He sees their speed, he sees their safety checks, so his confidence builds, too. Hour after tireless hour, the car, the training, the track, is the same.

But what happens when there is not one car or one track, but an infinite variety of cars entering the pit from all directions?

Suddenly, the pit crew is thrown into disarray. The benefits and safety aspects of the predicable “pit crew” model quickly dissolves. Suddenly, the pit crew isn’t sure which wheel or lug nut or brake pad to apply to each new-model car since their available supplies are limited to only their model of race car. Speed, however, remains of the essence.  Consequently, the whole mentality for car care shifts from a specialized "pit crew" to that of an assembly line approach: grab what you can, slap it on, and hope it works. Throughput, you see, is the real goal. No longer is there an allegiance to the car or the driver.  The pit crew becomes disenchanted and before you take the first lap, the Indy 500 “pit crew” morphs into the old failed Chrysler production line crisis of 2009. Pit crew members’ judgment is quickly superseded by a Pit Boss or car owner who has no clue of the frontline challenges. Just get 'em in and get 'em out as cheaply as you can.  It’s all about winning, remember?

Contrast this to the American cowboy.

Cowboys are free to roam, to place themselves wherever they are needed, even if it’s in the most remote region of the land. They are not bound to a single track or the big city. They certainly don’t need a multi-billion dollar roof over their head when a tent will do.  They prefer the stars rather than a big screen TV. In this respect, they are highly cost-efficient.  They don't need bureaucrats to tell them how to ride, how to rope, or how to bring the cattle home. They are free to lead their herd from harm’s way, even if it means crossing a fenceline or two. They are the also the ones who slow their herd’s migration to deliver a calf because it’s the right thing to do, not because its efficient. They are the innovators and skilled improvisers who may not have every expensive widget at their disposal, but have learned the skills to do things far safer, cheaper, and faster nonetheless. Sure, they use new data and technology when it comes their way (or maybe a specialized vet if needed), but the cattle are the priority rather than the marketing team. Perhaps most important, cowboys are humble, realizing that no real cowboy has ever known everything there is to know about ranching nor has pretended they ever will.  The cowboy understands that the learning never ends.

I am convinced that Americans want their doctor to be cowboys and not pit crews. They look for someone who’s a leader, autonomous, brave, empathic, and isn’t afraid to take a risky trail if their life depended on it. They trust their cowboys. They know their cowboy would seek out professional resources unavailable to his local ranch if it was the right thing to do. They'd even let the cowboy care for their kids because they know him or her.

Our task is to train and inspire more cowboys so they can be with us when we receive the diagnosis.  No one wants an assembly line worker at such a moment. This is common-sense. Re-direct the money. In their hearts, the medical students of today want to be on their horse, not standing with power tool  in  hand waiting for the next roll-out.

One of the telltale signs of Progressive thinking is that these thought leaders would not implement their beliefs on their own personal lives. Would Dr. Gawande want his mother cared for a pit crew or a cowboy?

I wonder.

And you?

-Wes

Monday, August 27, 2012

Why Embargos Should Die

In case you missed it, a journalist was barred from attending the 2012 European Society of Cardiology scientific sessions because a story was published before the designated embargo time.  Quite a story, eh?

The idea that there is a little secret society of priveledged individuals and institutions get to have a jump on results so a nice fluffy press piece can be released simultaneously to the electronic world to increase journal's impact factor (and people's stock portfolios with insider information) has always made my stomach turn.  There are big problems with the impact factor's influence on scientific research these days.  Increasingly, doctors are left to ask if these studies are about science or is our science behind these studies really about the stock market? 

Why shouldn't physicians and scientists be able to pour over the raw data and draw their own conclusions without the help of a purified press release?  Why should journalists get access to this data for free when doctors pay for subscriptions to obtain the same content.  Might doctors add more sustance to an analysis of the data?

Perhaps.

But then again, what doctors might say may not be so good for the stock price.

-Wes
 

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Why Neil?

By now, most of the world knows Neil Armstrong died of "complications of a cardiovascular procedure" but few know why.  Death, especially sudden, unexpected death, leaves few tell-tale signs of "why."

For families who are grieving over the loss of their loved one, there is a certain futility in asking "why."  But for the doctors who cared for Neil, the quest for knowing will haunt them.

No doctor wants to make a mistake.  Teams of people work tirelessly to try to avoid every possible adverse outcome that could come to their patients: internists, surgeons, anesthesiologists, perfusionists, scrub techs, circulating nurses, intensivists, radiology and lab personnel, med students, residents, chaplains, and cleaning crews.  Regulation on top of regulation, records on top of electronic records, meeting after meeting are structured to avoid the unexpected, the unwanted, the unnecessary.  No one wants the patient to die.  No one wants the "complication." No one.

And yet, they come.

From the most obvious culprit, a cardiac rhythm disturbance like heart block, Torsades, or ventricular fibrillation, to something as tiny as a stitch gone wrong, people die.  Maybe it was a blood clot, unexpected in a time of dysfunctional platelets post-bypass, maybe not.  Maybe it was the wrong drug, maybe not.  Maybe the death could have been avoided, maybe not.  Add a wordly icon to the mix and you can bet your bottom dollar, secretly everyone wants to know.

When we stop to explore what when wrong, we learn.  For physicians, there is healing, too.  To know that it wasn't the stitch, the medication, or the clot is just as important to the responsible doctor (maybe more so) as finding the ultimate cause of death.  But increasingly, the pressures of the job leave little time or money for such self reflection.  Time is precious these days and the pressure to produce immense.  Still, for doctors of today and tomorrow, we must continue to make this retrospective exploration a priority.

I have no idea if the team that cared for Neil really knows why he died since I was not involved in his care.  It doesn't take rocket science to assume someone who had recent heart surgery might have died of a "cardiovascular cause."  But for one of the world's most iconic explorers (not to mention ourselves) we should never stop trying to find out why.

-Wes



Friday, August 24, 2012

A Value Proposition: What Am I Worth?

Recently I was asked to serve as a consultant on a medical matter.  Interestingly, they requested my hourly price for my services.  I thought about this and wondered, "What am I worth in per hour in the open market?"

It is an interesting question to ponder.

I have decided to ask the blog-o-sphere.  Call it a bit of "free market economics."  For the record, 100% of my hourly wage for my services will be sent to our cardiovascular research fund at our hospital to avoid any conflict of interest.  I will not see ANY of the money the blog-o-sphere decides personally, but I really want to know what people think.

So where to begin?

Should I compare my hourly wage to MGMA standards for the annual physician salary of a physician of my subspecialty?  If so, do I pick the 50% percentile, 25th percentile, 75th percentile, or 95th percentile?  On what basis do I have to assure this is a fair price?  Who sets this price?  Are these data accurate or based on earlier years' hospital data and physician surveys?  Can I verify that their hourly price is justified?  If so, how?  Or are their data proprietary?

Or maybe I should set my price based on the 2013 Physician Fee Schedule Proposed Rule? (I have no idea how to calculate it, but I'm sure there's a per-hour number in there somewhere).

Or should I compare my hourly wage to other advanced medical professionals like cardiothoracic surgeons or neurosurgeons?

Or maybe, since primary care doctors are the most numerous physicians out there and I want to be fair, I should calculate my price based on their salaries?  Again, do I base my price on where I live and what I guess primary care doctors are making these days?  Should I base my price on their estimated gross salary or net salary?

Or what about other well-paid advanced degree professions, like lawyers?  Should I charge a price similar to a corporate law firm partner?  Or maybe just his junior partner?

Or maybe I should consider setting the price relative to some really smart hospital CEOs or COOs?  Should I compare my hourly price to theirs?  After all, they carry some pretty big responsibilities managing all those lives, too. 

Or maybe I should take it a step further.  Maybe I should set my hourly price to others in the pharmaceutical, insurance, or medical device industry.  Wow, I wonder what their hourly price is if one considers not only their salaries, but benefits, stock options, and the like?  Our research fund might rock, then!  But at the same time, maybe this number will be too high and result in me losing the opportunity to consult.  Should I worry about this?

Or (what the heck), maybe I should I compare my hourly wage to a pro baseball player or a pro basketball player?   We're professionals too, right?

Or maybe I should ask a patient who received a pacer from me at two in the morning and got through it fine, without an infection or other complication and lived to see another day what they think I should be paid.

Then again, maybe I should factor in not just what my price should be now, but what my price will be in 2014 when 30 million more people are added to our health care system and doctors are in short supply.

Seriously.  What do YOU think a doctor who is board certified in cardiac electrophysiology, cardiology and internal medicine with almost twenty years of medical experience charge to consult on a per-hour basis? 

Think about it but be sure to justify your price per hour.  Then put it in the comments.  I'll try to post your thoughts as fast as I can, given today's clinical constraints.

If nothing else, this should be interesting.

-Wes

Thursday, August 23, 2012

An Actual Chart Note No One Needs

"Teaching team will be off tomorrow.
New plans and orders to be placed by attending.
Housestaff cross coverage available for urgent matters."

So who exactly is doing the teaching?

Attendings: take note.

-Wes






Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Who's Got the Tiller?

The seas of health care are heavy with no end in sight.  The crew is tired. They're taking on water.  As fast as they can, they're bailing the ship, bucket by bucket.  They need a pump, but no one's listening.  Everyone is busy shouting.  And the captain?  Where's the captain?

No one's sure who the captain is any longer.

-Wes

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Creamed Onions

Sometimes I write things for this blog, but after considerable reflection, decide (for whatever reason) not to post them.  Tonight, my wife an I were having dinner and she turned to me and mentioned that she had stumbled across a Word document on our computer containing a piece that she suspected I had written for my blog.  It was.  She asked if I had posted it.  I thought I had.  She turned to me briefly and whispered, "That was really nice.  You know,  it's strange.  I can't even recall the exact day she died.  I should remember details like that.  Damn."

Later I sat down at my computer and searched my blog for the piece and realized it had never been published, probably because it was written about my mother-in-law and things were moving too quickly.  It was to be her last Thanksgiving, and while it's not Thanksgiving now, it contains details that I, too, had forgotten, but helps me reflect on her wonderful life now.
I met her nearly thirty years ago: a older woman with a thick Bostonian accent. Opinionated. Forthright. Not afraid to share her thoughts. That’s the way it was. It was, after all, her house.

We met at the small wooden kitchen table that used the wall-hung telephone as its centerpiece and pierced the air with the loudest ring I’d ever heard. (I later learned her husband had been an infantryman in the Korean war who had heard his share of mortars.)

She had fixed dinner for the family – all of whom were arriving to meet her daughter’s new boyfriend: a small salad, ham, yellow mustard, mashed potatoes, and creamed onions.

The latter, I was to discover, was her personal favorite. Any gathering of family importance had them; the small iridescent pearls of tiny onions resting on cream-based sauce carefully created from a flour roux and can of the pearly whites. If it weren’t for her enthusiasm, I probably could have passed on them, but as it was, I had no choice but to place them on my plate. That’s the way she was.

A few Thanksgivings ago I sat with her, her eyes more sunken, her temples more defined. Her legs were thinner than I had remembered them just months before, and her voice was softer. Her graciousness, however, remained. She arrived bundled in her nicest jacket, her gait assisted by a quad cane and her husband’s gentle lift only a day after being discharged from the hospital. She smiled at the cacophony that greeted her. Folding chairs were pushed aside. She was led to a prime location to supervise the kitchen, a more stable chair arranged. The matriarch had arrived.

She saw that her son’s house was as hers had been this time of year: abuzz with activity and controlled chaos. Within the hustle and the bustle of meal preparation and family photos, came a phone call. Her daughter answered. Amongst the chatter a recipe was mentioned. It seems her granddaughter, unable to attend the local meal, had called to share a tradition involving small onions in her home. I saw the tiniest of smiles rise from her lips. For a brief moment the tumor didn’t matter, her pain forgotten.

Before long the meal materialized. Turkey, oyster stuffing, potatoes, green bean casserole, and there, hidden in the corner hidden in a warming dish, her creamed onions. More food than could ever be consumed. As we all waited our turn, her husband made her plate with tiny flecks of turkey, a strand or two of green bean, a half teaspoon of sweet and mashed potatoes, and a single creamed onion.

Her husband said the grace. “Bless us, o’ Lord, and these thy gifts which we are about to receive…” I stared at our plates and then at hers. The tiny onion, there alone. Her eyes closed and soft hands folded. I wondered what she was thinking. What does one think at their last Thanksgiving? I hated myself for wondering.

Really, it doesn’t matter. It was about the here and now that mattered. “Life is what happens when you’re making other plans,” my wife reminds me. And sure enough, despite a week and a half of food intolerance and dehydration, she ate it all.

Even the creamed onion.

And for that, we were all incredibly grateful.

-Wes

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Granny and Me

Ugh. It’s impossible to watch the news these days. Whether you’re conservative, liberal, independent or non-committed, it’s impossible to avoid the political bickering these days as the U.S. Presidential campaign enters its final countdown. As a physician, seeing the video of Granny being pushed off a cliff is about all I can handle.

Seriously?

No politician I know has to deal directly with Granny, but I do. I have to look her in the eye. I have to talk to her. I have to be there when she comes in with a heart that’s not beating. I have to look at her struggling to breathe.  I have to decide, based on the available information like her current and past medical history, social situation, family member concerns, prior surgical history, medications, lab tests, and a myriad of other variables whether to given granny a pacemaker or not.

Not you, Mr. Politician. Not Obamacare. Not my hospital. Not the insurance company. Not Big Data.

Me.

And for the moment, I’ve got granny’s back.  No matter what, if she wants and needs a pacemaker, she'll get it.

But everything that is being proposed to save costs in health care these days threatens my ability to make the right choice for granny.

For Democrats, they want a 15-member non-elected panel that might set a limit on certain aspects of when I can give granny a pacemaker despite what she and I might think. For Republicans, they want to allow insurance companys and their Big Data (or a pre-programmed supercomputer called “Watson”) to tell be when I can or cannot give Granny a pacemaker despite what we might think.   And both political parties want to do this in the face of a tort system that hasn't had to change at all to account for these financially-imposed ultimatims for care. 

In addition, both political parties seem to be aligning behind ideas that cut payments for what I do directly, and somehow pay me for my "outcomes" of care via “bundles” (or some other concocted payment scheme) that defines how to distribute the bundle to the various “stakeholders” in granny’s care, including me.   Even more telling, we see another new iniative currently being rolled out: if Granny gets an infection despite perfectly acceptable care and comes back for follow-up management, guess who won’t get paid for her ongoing care after January 1, 2013?  Neither my hospital nor me.

Talk about shifting risk!

So the risk of Granny’s pacemaker care in our current capitated ACO world is shifting ever-so-quickly from a company who is in the business of taking risk (insurers), to hospitals and me who are not in the business of taking risk. I am in the business of caring for patients and expecting I’ll get paid for that care. I do not have a big, fat, holding pen of reserves that people pay in to for assuming their health care risk like an insurance company. I just have a personal checking and savings account. (No wonder hedge funds are lining up behind insurance companies - it's a win/win for their profits!)

This trend is only getting worse.  In a piece entitled “Tackling Rising Health Care Costs in Massachusetts” that appeared yesterday in the online version of the New England Journal of Medicine, we find that the near-universal health care law in Massachusetts (upon which our current health care law is modeled and was sold as cost-cutting) has the "highest personal health care spending per capita of any state."  As a result, we also learn of a new law that was just passed to counteract this fact that contains measures that further shifts the cost risk further from insurers to the hospitals and doctors. In fact, as one former Boston hospital CEO has pointed out:
Even if you believe that capitated contracts are the best thing that could happen in health care, you should not and cannot believe that the transfer of risk inherent in such contracts should go unrecognized. The state's failure to account for this gift to the insurance company represents an example of incomplete policy-making.
But doctors in Massachusetts have recognized the problem.  The legislature there forgot to consider what doctors are actually doing in Massachusetts:

… they’re leaving.

Hey Granny! Maybe we should push the insurers and these well-funded politicians off the cliff.

-Wes

Monday, August 13, 2012

High Voltage Riata ST Defibrillator Lead Failure and Its Implications for Durata

It came from a case report published online before print in PACE from Dr. John Marenco of Tufts University in Springfield, Massachusetts:

A 60-year-old man had a single-chamber St.Jude Atlas VR defibrillator (St. Jude Medical, St. Paul, MN, USA) with a dual coil St. Jude Riata 7001 defibrillator lead (My note: this is actually a downsized, second-generation 7 Fr Riata ST model whose internal construct shares many similarities to St. Jude's currently-marketed third-generation 7 Fr Durata lead) placed in 2006 for primary prevention secondary to an ischemic cardiomyopathy and prior myocardial infarction.  All routine device interrogations, both remote and in-office, had been normal with stable sensing amplitude, lead impedances, and capture thresholds. The device was programmed with two zones: a ventricular tachycardia (VT) zone from 340 ms (176 beats/min) and a ventricular fibrillation (VF) zone from 260 ms (231 beats/min).  The VT zone had a morphology discriminator “on” with interval stability and sudden onset “passive.” Five years from implant, he presents with palpitations, light-headedness, and a single implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) discharge.  He has a friend drive him to the emergency room and is found to be in ventricular tachycardia over 200 beats/min. The ventricular tachycardia terminated with intravenous amiodarone bolus before need for external defibrillation. Device interrogation demonstrated an initial rhythm of atrial fibrillation with the appropriate detection of the onset of ventricular tachycardia with a cycle length of 245 ms, within the device’s VF zone (Fig. 1). Discriminators were not activated in the VF zone, but the morphology discriminator clearly demonstrates a failure of the electrogram signal to match the template (indicated by the “x” in the marker channel). After detection of 12 intervals (interval average) within the VF zone an episode is declared and a 25-Joule (693 V) shock is delivered, failing to restore sinus rhythm.  No additional shocks are delivered despite appropriate redetection within the VF zone (Fig. 2).  After a fifth detection, the device declares “no more therapies” with VT continuing indefinitely. Device interrogation in the emergency department reveals a pacing lead impedance was 465 ohms, signal amplitude 1.8 mV, and capture threshold 0.75 V at the rate of 0.5 ms. What is the differential diagnosis of failure to deliver appropriate therapy and why did this device fail to deliver more than a single shock?
Further review of the case's figure disclosed appropriate VT detection, a high voltage impedance of 0 ohms, and an "aborted charge because of possible output circuit damage" on device interrogation after the event.  Importantly, at the time of lead revision, "there was no fluoroscopic insulation breach and no obvious insulation breach in the pocket."  Fluoroscopic screening of these leads, therefore, would not have detected pending lead failure.  Further, as far as we can tell from the report, no antecedent device alerts were triggered before this event.

This case report discloses several important issues. (1) High voltage coil damage in a 7Fr  Riata ST lead can lead to either ineffective high voltage therapy delivery, withholding of further therapies, or both despite appropriate arrhythmia detection.  St. Jude defibrillators are engineered to automatically withhold energy delivery in low high-voltage lead impedance situations to avoid excessive current delivery and device overheating in such circumstances (personal communication).  (2) This failure mechanism, while curently very rare, may affect implanters decisions regarding whether or not to replace existing Riata leads irrespective of their performance characteristics and flouroscopic appearance at the time of battery change.  Already there have been other reported high voltage failures in Riata leads with externalized wires.  Some have advocated testing the high voltage leads as part of Riata lead follow-up to screen for this failure mechanism, especially since the therapeutic implications of high voltage lead failure is much more significant and difficult to detect than low-voltage (sensing lead) failures. 

Perhaps most important for St. Jude going forward is how this case will influence implanters' choice of later-generation 7 Fr St. Jude defibrillator leads with their Optim coating but similarly-downsized inner lumen dimensions.  I look forward to St. Jude's update of their Riata Communications website regarding these recently published case reports.

-Wes

References:

Marenco JP. "Failure to Deliver ICD Shocks after a Failed Discharge Despite Redetection of Rapid Ventricular Tachycardia? What Is the Cause?" PACE DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8159.2012.03484.x Published online 21 July 2012.

For an excellent overview of the Riata ICD lead recall by Dr. Jay Schloss: http://cardiobrief.org/2012/02/22/guest-post-more-lessons-from-the-riata-icd-lead-recall/

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Reentry

It's hard to believe I'll be back at work tomorrow. 

It seems strange that I worry more about this now.

Perhaps it is the deluge of e-mails and EMR inbasket messages that have already required my attention.  Perhaps it is the prospect of knowing I'll be on call again this week (welcome back!).  Or perhaps it's the administrative burdens that are heavier now than earlier in my career.  I'm not sure.  More cases await.  More challenges.   There is guilt that comes with vacation time for physicians.

Mind you, I had one heck of a nice time off.  I saw friends.  Heard my son play his cello professionally.  Fished from a canoe.  Kayaked through sea caves.  Played guitar.  Watched plenty of sunsets.  Read some articles.  Rode a moped. Laughed with the kids.  Had great talks over coffee with my wife.  I didn't touch a computer.  And slept later than I can remember.

But while I was away, others toiled.  They booked cases and I didn't.  This month, their RVU total grew while mine shrunk.  They answered e-mails and messages and I didn't.  I wasn't a worker bee.  I was not productive.  Instead, I was a vacationing slacker. 

It's strange to think of yourself as a slacker.  Strange indeed. 

Especially now when I look back and realize how incredibly productive I just was.

-Wes

Thursday, August 02, 2012

Goin' Fishin'



I'll be off with family for a while and will leave the blog dark for a while.  It's good for the soul to recharge and remember that all this on-line sound and fury really signifies, in the Big Scheme of things, absolutely nothing.

Back soon!

-Wes