Guest guest Posted May 6, 2004 Report Share Posted May 6, 2004 This was in this morning's paper. We ranked BEST with " Patients in Seattle received, on average, only about 60 percent of recommended care for their ailments... " Scary, very scary. Thursday, May 6, 2004 Seattle health care ranks best of a rather poor lot Service falls short in 12 cities, study shows By JULIE DAVIDOW SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER Seattle scored the best among 12 metropolitan areas across the country in a new study of health care quality -- but not by much. Patients in Seattle received, on average, only about 60 percent of recommended care for their ailments, compared with a low of 51 percent in Little Rock, Ark. " That was certainly the best in the country, but I think most readers would agree they would not be satisfied with a 59 percent on their spelling test, " said Dr. Asch, a Los Angeles-area physician and one of the study's authors. The RAND Corp. study, published in the May issue of the journal Health Affairs, provides the first comprehensive comparison of health care between cities, the authors said. The universally poor performance points to structural flaws in the American health care system, rather than indicting individual doctors or hospitals, according to the study's authors. " Failing to (deliver) the care people need means we have thousands of needless deaths each year, " said McGlynn, the study's lead author. The quality gap existed in cities with disparate median incomes, numbers of uninsured residents and medical facilities. " No matter where you live, you are at risk for poor care even if you live in a community with some of the best teaching hospitals in the country, " said Dr. Eve Kerr, one of the authors of the study, which was funded by the Wood Foundation. About 7,000 patients in 12 randomly selected metropolitan areas with more than 200,000 people, including Miami, Greenville, S.C., and Orange County, Calif., agreed to allow researchers access to two years of their medical records. Participants included the uninsured as well as those with private or public insurance. From the records, researchers collected treatment information for 30 common acute and chronic conditions, including asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart failure, depression and breast cancer. Patient care was then measured against standards gleaned from a review of national guidelines and medical literature. A panel of experts also reviewed the study's standards for each medical condition. The quality of care varied across conditions, with treatment for cataracts and hypertension among the best and alcoholism and ulcers receiving some of the lowest scores. Diabetics, for example, received appropriate care only 45 percent of the time. Less than one-quarter had their blood sugar levels measured regularly. Unstable blood sugar can cause kidney problems and blindness in diabetic patients. Seattle topped other cities in care for depression, but lagged behind in cardiac care and immunizations. Americans tend to believe the main problems with health care are cost and lack of access, rather than quality, said Greg Vigdor, president of the Washington Health Foundation. They also believe their own doctors and communities provide high- quality care. But " everybody that knows the system knows there are gaps, " Vigdor said. Poor quality across cities is not surprising and reflects " the disorganized nature of the health care system, or non-system really, " said Dr. Sugarman, president and chief executive officer of Qualis Health, a Seattle-based health care quality- improvement organization. Recent efforts to improve diabetes care across the state might have contributed to Seattle's higher overall score, Sugarman said. In addition, U.S. News & World Report recently named the University of Washington the top medical school for primary care in the country. Still, the average 15-minute appointment with a doctor doesn't arm patients with everything they need to manage a chronic condition such as diabetes, Sugarman said. For patients with multiple health problems, care is often juggled among specialists, hospitals and general practitioners, leaving gaps in which basic treatments such as flu shots, blood-pressure medications or aspirin after a heart attack could be overlooked, Ashe said. Electronic medical records, the study's authors suggested, could improve health care quality by helping doctors keep track of tests and medications and creating a more unified system. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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