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Well no, we won't go! Brad Lindemann, President/CEO
According to Matt Gutwein, CEO of Marion County Health and Hospital Corporation, the traditional "fee for service" healthcare system in our country has fallen and can't get up. "Where else can you get a gig that pays you the same regardless of need or effectiveness or even if it's determined that the service rendered was completely unnecessary?", asks Gutwein. This fatally flawed system results in enormous variations in treatment plans for the same diagnosis with little incentive to close the gaps. According to Gutwein, providers' wellness rhetoric is trumped by constant pressure to increase fees. "Compensation drives conduct", says Gutwein. So, when it comes to wellness, the conduct of our healthcare providers is speaking loudly and clearly - "well no, we won't go!"
Despite growing opposition to the recently passed Healthcare Bill, Gutwein says there are some hidden gems within it that actually hold promise for improving the fee for service model. Such as:
- Comparative effectiveness research
- Publishing a national data base of best practices for a given diagnosis to reduce the variability in treatment plans.
- Incentives to get Electronic Medical Records into "meaningful use".
- Healthcare providers around the country have accelerated their EMR implementation plans in order to receive financial incentives from the federal gov't.
- EMR improves ability to measure and therefore manage patients' overall health.
- Establish "accountable care organizations" (ACO) and provide incentives to improve the overall health of the ACO.
- Realized savings can then be split between payers (Medicare) and providers.
- Make pre-negotiated bundled payments for a "care incident" versus the traditional fee for service approach that yields multi-page bills charging for every cotton ball.
- Provide incentives to stimulate ideas for lowering costs while improving quality of care.
- Think national suggestion box for improving healthcare.
- Create incentives to establish a "medical home" for every patient with a primary care physician in charge of coordinating all healthcare regardless of where it comes from.
Granted, most of the hidden gems above do hold some promise for improving the healthcare system. However, they also represent perilous steps down the slippery slope of nationalized healthcare -- a frightening thought to the majority of Americans. This fear was substantially responsible for shifting the Congressional balance of power from Democrats to Republicans in the recent election. However, it's also widely recognized that neither side of the political aisle has prescribed a cure for our ailing and unsustainable healthcare system. Whatever the cure, the majority of Americans do not believe that "ObamaCare" is it.
Come January, it will be interesting to see how much (if any) of the Healthcare Bill survives. Beyond that, we should watch closely for both public and private healthcare initiatives, always asking ourselves this question - will this lower the cost of treating the sick or improve the wellness of everyone? Because, until we figure out a way for healthcare providers to make money by keeping people well, they'll continue to talk a good wellness game while running up the fee for service tab... murmuring "well no, we won't go" with every diagnosis rendered.
The Health and Hospital Corporation of Marion County operates the Marion County Health Department and Wishard Memorial Hospital and its health services. Under Matt Gutwein's leadership, HHC has gone from a $70 million deficit eight years ago to a $300 million surplus in 2010. Wishard maintains a cost to quality care ratio that ranks it among the best hospitals in the nation. For an Inside Indiana look at the new Wishard Hospital currently under construction, watch this video.

CVS doubling the number of Minute Clinics
Sick and tired of waiting to see your doctor whenever you're sick and tired? CVS feels your pain and is doing something about it. You might want to check it out...if you've got a minute. "Ahh-choo!" Bless you.
Harvard Study Reveals Top 10 Secrets of Graceful Aging
No matter how old you are, you are aging...some more gracefully than others. The brainiacs at Harvard intensively studied the issue and thought you might like to know what their Top 10 says...although #1 is a real no-brainer.
According to Forbes, What Does Your Doctor Make?
This one's a little tricky to navigate through, but it's worth the effort if you want to see how the incomes of specialists compare to the $180,000 average for a family doctor in the Midwest. Hint: a picture is worth a thousand words.

"Be careful about reading health books.
You may die of a misprint."
~ Mark Twain


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Christmas Giving
Ambassador sponsored families by providing Christmas Baskets this year for an organization based in Appalachia called Christian Appalachian Project.
The families consist of two-parent households with three children each. It is very likely that these will be the only gifts these children will receive this Christmas. Ambassador teammates and families gathered together for a fun-filled evening of gift wrapping. We mailed 12 large boxes filled with gifts, to be delivered on Christmas. What a wonderful way to start the Thanksgiving Season by providing for those less fortunate!
Biggest Giver
Keeping with the spirit of Thanksgiving, Ambassador put together a new wellness program promoting weight loss and exercise, while also contributing to the greater good of the community.
For every pound lost or hour exercised, Ambassador is donating one pound of food to a local food bank. We are pleased to announce we are donating 350 pounds of food to the The Good Samaritan of Hamilton County. We will also be presenting $300 to Tom Hasler, Controller, for largest percentage of weight loss, and an additional $300 to Josh Lindemann, Senior Recruiter, for the most exercise hours. They will be donating this money to the charity of their choice. |
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