Events Calendar

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Psychiatry and Psychological Disorders
2021-02-08 - 2021-02-09    
All Day
Mental health Summit 2021 is a meeting of Psychiatrist for emerging their perspective against mental health challenges and psychological disorders in upcoming future. Psychiatry is [...]
Nanotechnology and Materials Engineering
2021-02-10 - 2021-02-11    
All Day
Nanotechnology and Materials Engineering are forthcoming use in healthcare, electronics, cosmetics, and other areas. Nanomaterials are the elements with the finest measurement of size 10-9 [...]
Dementia, Alzheimers and Neurological Disorders
2021-02-10 - 2021-02-11    
All Day
Euro Dementia 2021 is a distinctive forum to assemble worldwide distinguished academics within the field of professionals, Psychology, academic scientists, professors to exchange their ideas [...]
Neurology and Neurosurgery 2021
2021-02-10 - 2021-02-11    
All Day
European Neurosurgery 2021 anticipates participants from all around the globe to experience thought provoking Keynote lectures, oral, video & poster presentations. This Neurology meeting will [...]
Biofuels and Bioenergy 2021
2021-02-15 - 2021-02-16    
All Day
Biofuels and Bioenergy biofuel is a fuel that is produced through contemporary biological processes, such as agriculture and anaerobic digestion, rather than a fuel produced [...]
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases
2021-02-15 - 2021-02-16    
All Day
Tropical Disease Webinar committee members invite all the participants across the globe to take part in this conference covering the theme “Global Impact on infectious [...]
Infectious Diseases 2021
2021-02-15 - 2021-02-16    
All Day
Infection Congress 2021 is intended to honor prestigious award for talented Young Researchers, Scientists, Young Investigators, Post-Graduate Students, Post-Doctoral Fellows, Trainees in recognition of their [...]
Gastroenterology and Liver Diseases
2021-02-18 - 2021-02-19    
All Day
Gastroenterology and Liver Diseases Conference 2021 provides a chance for all the stakeholders to collect all the Researchers, principal investigators, experts and researchers working under [...]
World Kidney Congress 2021
2021-02-18    
All Day
Kidney Meet 2021 will be the best platform for exchanging new ideas and research. It’s a virtual event that will grab the attendee’s attention to [...]
Agriculture & Organic farming
2021-02-22 - 2021-02-23    
All Day
                                                  [...]
Aquaculture & Fisheries
2021-02-22 - 2021-02-23    
All Day
We take the pleasure to invite all the Scientist, researchers, students and delegates to Participate in the Webinar on 13th World Congress on Aquaculture & [...]
Nanoscience and Nanotechnology 2021
2021-02-22 - 2021-02-23    
All Day
Conference Series warmly invites all the participants across the globe to attend "5th Annual Meet on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology” dated on February 22-23, 2021 , [...]
Neurology, Psychiatric disorders and Mental health
2021-02-23 - 2021-02-24    
12:00 am
Neurology, Psychiatric disorders and Mental health Summit is an idiosyncratic discussion to bring the advanced approaches and also unite recognized scholastics, concerned with neurology, neuroscience, [...]
Food and Nutrition 2021
2021-02-24    
All Day
Nutri Food 2021 reunites the old and new faces in food research to scale-up many dedicated brains in research and the utilization of the works [...]
Psychiatry and Psychological Disorders
2021-02-24 - 2021-02-25    
All Day
Mental health Summit 2021 is a meeting of Psychiatrist for emerging their perspective against mental health challenges and psychological disorders in upcoming future. Psychiatry is [...]
International Conference on  Biochemistry and Glyco Science
2021-02-25 - 2021-02-26    
All Day
Our point is to urge researchers to spread their test and hypothetical outcomes in any case a lot of detail as could be ordinary. There [...]
Biomedical, Biopharma and Clinical Research
2021-02-25 - 2021-02-26    
All Day
Biomedical research 2021 provides a platform to enhance your knowledge and forecast future developments in biomedical, bio pharma and clinical research and strives to provide [...]
Parasitology & Infectious Diseases 2021
2021-02-25    
All Day
INFECTIOUS DISEASES CONGRESS 2021 on behalf of its Organizing Committee, assemble all the renowned Pathologists, Immunologists, Researchers, Cellular and Molecular Biologists, Immune therapists, Academicians, Biotechnologists, [...]
Tissue Science and Regenerative Medicine
2021-02-26 - 2021-02-27    
All Day
Tissue Science 2021 proudly invites contributors across the globe to attend “International Conference on Tissue Science and Regenerative Medicine” during February 26-27, 2021 (Webinar) which [...]
Infectious Diseases, Microbiology & Beneficial Microbes
2021-02-26 - 2021-02-27    
All Day
Infectious diseases are ultimately caused by microscopic organisms like bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites where Microbiology is the investigation of these minute life forms. A [...]
Stress Management 2021
2021-02-26    
All Day
Stress Management Meet 2021 will be a great platform for exchanging new ideas and research. It’s an online event which will grab the attendee’s attention [...]
Heart Care and Diseases 2021
2021-03-03    
All Day
Euro Heart Conference 2020 will join world-class professors, scientists, researchers, students, Perfusionists, cardiologists to discuss methodology for ailment remediation for heart diseases, Electrocardiography, Heart Failure, [...]
Gastroenterology and Digestive Disorders
2021-03-04 - 2021-03-05    
All Day
Gastroenterology Diseases is clearing a worldwide stage by drawing in 2500+ Gastroenterologists, Hepatologists, Surgeons going from Researchers, Academicians and Business experts, who are working in [...]
Environmental Toxicology and Ecological Risk Assessment
2021-03-04 - 2021-03-05    
All Day
Environmental Toxicology 2021 you can meet the world leading toxicologists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and also the industry giants who will provide you with the modern inventions [...]
Dermatology, Cosmetology and Plastic Surgery
2021-03-05 - 2021-03-06    
All Day
Market Analysis Speaking Opportunities Speaking Opportunities: We are constantly intrigued by hearing from professionals/practitioners who want to share their direct encounters and contextual investigations with [...]
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Latest News

You want patient engagement? Make the system navigable

patient engagement

By Irv Lichtenwald, Medsphere Systems President and CEO

Last month, New York Times reporter Robert Pear died at age 69 from complications of a stroke. The name was unfamiliar to me, and I guess that’s to be expected, given what I’ve learned of the man since.

Turns out Robert Pear was a thoughtful, unassuming reporter who wanted the accuracy and validity of his work to speak for him. This approach engendered much respect among his peers in the 40 years that he primarily covered healthcare policy.

“Robert was an exacting reporter,” writes Edward Pound in the Health Affairs blog. “He wasn’t interested in the sound of his own voice. He listened, always he listened, the trademark of a great reporter … Robert was easy to be around, easy to work with. You knew you could trust his reporting: no mistakes in his memos, no nonsense, just clear prose. He was, to be sure, a reporting machine.”

I’ve come across similar remembrances in recent weeks from those who knew Pear. To a person, they are both saddened at his departure and concerned about the hole his death leaves in healthcare journalism.

After reviewing several articles, I understand why. Robert Pear performed yeoman’s work in terms of explaining healthcare to citizens. We need more like him, sure, but what his work may better illustrate is that we need a navigable healthcare system in which patients don’t feel so overwhelmed that they completely lose hope.

Look, for example, to an article Pear wrote in January of this year on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ proposal to make hospitals publicly post their prices (you’re welcome for the alliteration).

“The list price for a hospital service is like the sticker price for a car. But as it is playing out, it is as if the car dealers were disclosing the price for each auto part, without revealing the charge for the vehicle as a whole. The result has baffled consumers.”

Yes, most if not all consumers will see transparent pricing as a good thing and support CMS. Pear uses an easily understood analogy to explain why that is not what’s happening, regardless of what CMS Administrator Seema Verma says on Twitter. The end result is a better informed but still confused, frustrated and, in the end, no more engaged, citizenry.

I don’t think we can exaggerate this point: An informed but exasperated citizen population loses hope, giving rise to diseases of desperation and shorter life spans.

Pear’s skill is not the only reason colleagues are remembering his life. He was also the practitioner of an art too few people now perform. What shall we call them? I don’t know. Healthcare truth tellers? Healthsplainers? Yes, those are bad, but I hope they still illustrate that Jimmy’s fallen in the well and Lassie is futilely barking at a bunch of drunks at a kegger.

The system is broken, we hear. The system is corrupted, we read. Both are true, given the examples reported on every day. See, for example, articles this past week on a deal Medtronic made with the FDA to keep reports on a malfunctioning cardiac device from the public.

I will argue, however, that the system is both broken and corrupted in part because it is hopelessly complex—that it offers too many “degrees of freedom,” as BizMed founder Margarit Gur-Arie calls it. A complex system is easier to exploit, after all, often without even breaking any laws.

“Health care is complicated because it has so many degrees of freedom, few of which we can reliably identify,” Gur-Alie says. “Some degrees of freedom are yet to be discovered, others look independent, but are not, and vice versa. Furthermore, the boundaries of what we call the health care system are ill-defined and in a perpetual state of flux.”

This is what we get in embracing a hybrid system that goes largely unregulated. The degrees of freedom include the freedom to act in a nakedly self-interested way. Ours is not the only Franken-system, to be sure, but it is the only one that permits individuals and organizations to enrich themselves without effectively defining the bright lines beyond which they cannot go.

Insulin is a grand example of this. The original inventors gave away their patent roughly 100 years ago, thinking something so essential to so many should not be subject to markets. Modern pharmaceutical companies made some valuable improvements, but those can hardly justify the 13x price hike by Eli Lilly for one insulin product between 2009 and 2017, causing former Acting CMS Administrator Andy Slavitt to go “full socialist” and suggest nationalizing insulin production.

I am not excluding my own industry from culpability regarding both added complexity and costs. Healthcare IT has, in many ways, complicated physicians’ lives and, for many organizations, added significant costs. While technology has the potential to both ease complexity and help manage costs, until it realizes both goals, I see no reason to mortgage the future when affordable, comprehensive healthcare IT alternatives exist.

Of course, Pear left behind many who continue to tell the truth about healthcare and even offer viable alternatives. Gur-Alie, for example, after years covering the industry suggests both strategic moves and even reasons for hope.

“If we keep it simple, and if we are careful when detaching little pieces from the tangled mess that is our health care system, we should be fine,” she says.

Perhaps, but it won’t be because Congress came up with another fix, which generally just adds more byzantine regulation. Simplification has to come from smaller networks, communities and organizations, even if federal funding is essential. As is so often the case, the states may have to take the initiative and come up with something ingenious. Colorado, for example, just passed a law limiting insulin costs to $100 a month.

Robert Pear’s primary task was to explain healthcare policy to those who must navigate the system, which is just about all of us. It’s a noble, if daunting, goal. For the efforts of Pear, Gur-Allie and thousands more to be truly impactful, however, we must create a healthcare system that is navigable.  That starts by stripping away some of the layers and making it less complex. Let the serious conversation about exactly how to do that commence immediately.