Have you visited ACC Central?

by Jack Lewin March 31, 2009 03:18

Great overview of ACC Central on CVN!

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A Presidential Transition

by Jack Lewin March 31, 2009 02:59

Yesterday, the ACC said goodbye to one wonderful president, Douglas Weaver, M.D., M.A.C.C., and welcomed a new one, Alfred Bove, M.D., F.A.C.C. Dr. Weaver has contributed so much to the College, leading ACC health care reform efforts, representing the College at various events, including at the White House, and supporting the College’s mission. It is sad to see him go – but I am sure he will remain active, especially with national health care reform efforts moving full steam ahead.

But, as the saying goes, when one door closes another opens ... I’m thrilled to have Fred Bove as our new president because he has so much to bring to the table on so many subjects.

As he said in his opening remarks last night, his presidency will be centered on bringing the focus back to the patient, as part of a very exciting initiative, dubbed “The Year of the Patient” (Watch a CVN interview with Dr. Bove on the initiative here). He said it best in his recent post to this blog, the emphasis of the Year of the Patient is "not only on respecting the cardiologist who provides continuous cardiac care to keep patients active and symptom free, but also in bringing patients into the care team and empowering them to participate in their care decisions."

The theme will resonate throughout national leadership and into our state chapters not only in 2009, but as a long-term theme for the College. Programming will be held that will strengthen the patient-physician relationship with both short- and long-term strategies, including greater promotion of our patient portal, CardioSmart.org. The College also will work with lawmakers to implement policies that encourage patient empowerment.

The College believes that the pathway to quality is through the patient. If we make sure that patients remain the focus during health care reform efforts, high-quality care will be the natural result.

Take This, Capitol Hill

by Jack Lewin March 30, 2009 11:46

Tomorrow in Room W101, ACC.09 will feature a “D2B: Sustain the Gain” symposium featuring experts in the field discussing current topics in STEMI care. If you’re asking yourself right now: I thought it was called “D2B: An Alliance for Quality?” – you’re right, it was. “D2B: Sustain the Gain” represents Phase 2 of the campaign. Since Phase 1 (An Alliance for Quality) was such a success [go to the Participant’s Workshop tomorrow morning, from 7 – 9 a.m. at the Rosen Centre Hotel, Salon 3, to hear why], the ACC is using D2B: Sustain the Gain to figure out how we can maintain those gains. It’s clear that there are many challenges inherent in sustaining D2B times of 90 minutes or less. We’ll be developing materials and support tools that hospitals need to continue their success.

Quality efforts like D2B are crucial in making a difference in health care reform efforts. The federal government doesn’t have to tell cardiologists to improve quality – cardiologists are working together to do it themselves. Through D2B, we’re making serious in-roads in improving quality – and I know from my visits to the Hill, lawmakers are taking notice.

Meanwhile, stay tuned this summer for the ACC’s newest national quality improvement initiative, Hospital to Home (H2H). With H2H, we’ve set a measurable goal of reducing the 30-day all-cause readmission rate for patients with heart failure or heart attack by December 2012. To register for this program in advance visit: www.acc.org/h2h/enrollment. This is an exciting opportunity to improve patient care and reduce preventable and costly readmissions. We have a great partner in IHI for this initiative as well.

What do you think is the biggest issue facing our health care system?

by Jack Lewin March 30, 2009 04:19


A Quality Obsession

by Jack Lewin March 30, 2009 02:24

The ACC is obsessed with quality. It’s the focus of everything we do, not only for science and education but also advocacy (I mean, our health care reform campaign is called QUALITY First). In fact, this blog was created so that the College could talk about quality.

Supporting this mission, ACC Annual Scientific Sessions are always overflowing with ways to improve quality. On Sunday, there was tons of fantastic programming, including the Simon Dack and Louis Bishop lectures, and sessions on bringing quality into practice and examining the value of pay-for-performance. Other “can’t be missed” events for this year include: 

  • Delivering Cardiovascular Care in Different Health Care Systems, today, 12:15 p.m. – 1:45 p.m., Room W104
  • Challenges in Health Communications: Meeting and Exceeding Patient Expectations, today, 2 p.m. – 3:30 p.m., Room W230
  • The American College of Cardiology Door-to-Balloon: Sustain the Gain Symposium, tomorrow, 10:30 a.m. – 12 p.m., Room W101
  • Evaluating and Improving Quality in Cardiovascular Imaging: Challenges and Opportunities, tomorrow, 12:15 p.m. – 1:45 p.m., Room W110B

Also, we’re trying to gage how members feel on health care reform through a survey that can be found in your portfolio bag. If you fill it out fast enough this morning and return it to ACC Central, booth 2062, there will be a free gift waiting for you (I’m not telling what it is, but it’s quite useful). For those of you a little slower in checking out ACC Central, there might not be any gifts left – except for the gift of helping ACC better understand its membership. That could be the best gift of all.

Health Reform -- Will you be paid in the future?

by Jack Lewin March 29, 2009 10:27
Check out this CVN interview with health care economist Len Nichols at ACC.09. Nichols gave the Bishop Lecture earlier today -- he said that ACC members should contribute to health care reform by participating in quality measurement, appropriately using technologies and engaging policy makers.

It's a Celebration!

by Jack Lewin March 29, 2009 09:51

2009 marks the 25th anniversary of ACC/AHA clinical practice guidelines ... a milestone worthy of celebration! The creation of guidelines has been a joint activity between the ACC and AHA since the 1980s, advancing the missions of both organizations by providing clinical recommendations to improve cardiovascular health. Well-developed guidelines have the potential to enhance the appropriateness of clinical practice, improve the quality of cardiovascular care, lead to better patient outcomes, improve cost-effectiveness, and identify areas of further research needs. Past President Jim Dove, M.D., M.A.C.C., has addressed the challenges we’ve faced over past years, and the future of guidelines as he sees it, in a post on this blog in February.

If you visit ACC Central at booth 2062 (and you really should!) you’ll see our clinical materials all marked with the symbol on the right. We’re giving away free CDs of interactive versions of the guidelines and other tools that will work on your PDA and desktop. We also have the very popular pocket guides: 53 percent of you said that pocket guides are your favorite tool to implement guidelines, in a Lewin Report poll last month.

Forget Disney World – Orlando is the Home of ACC.09

by Jack Lewin March 29, 2009 04:20

This is it, folks. The event you’ve been waiting for all year -- ACC.09, of course. The science is at an all-time groundbreaking level, attendance is high and the education simply can’t be beat. This year’s meeting will focus on quality, quality and more quality in cardiovascular practice.

We started this morning with the the ACC.09 Scientific Showcase, featuring the Simon Dack Lecture by Princeton University economics professor Uwe Reinhardt, a presidential address by ACC President Doug Weaver, M.D., F.A.C.C., and a JUPITER trial presentation. Reinhardt discussed the challenges facing the health care system and its stakeholders, while Dr. Weaver discussed the challenges facing the cardiology profession.

Starting a little after noon, noted health care economist Len Nichols will present the 48th Annual Louis Bishop lecture on “What Health Care Reform Will Cost Us: And Why Doing Nothing Will Cost Us Even More.”  Nichols, who spoke at our 2009 Health System Reform Summit, will discuss the problems with the health care system and its payment structure. The health care system can’t afford “business as usual” and something must change. Following his presentation, president-elect Fred Bove, M.D., F.A.C.C., immediate past president, Jim Dove, M.D., M.A.C.C., and past president Tim Garson, M.D., M.A.C.C., and I will discuss the implications of and chances for health care reform.

Reform isn’t going to be easy, but we’ve got to do it. If we can just implement some of the ideas from Reinhardt and Nichols, we’ll be well on our way.

*** Image from Flickr (Stacy Young) ***

Welcome to ACC.09 from ACC President Doug Weaver

by Jack Lewin March 28, 2009 11:22

Check out the CVN video of ACC President Doug Weaver from ACC.09. He discusses his most recent meeting at the White House (this is his second trip to the White House recently), previews ACC.09 and discusses the imperative for health care reform.

POLL: What are you looking forward to most during ACC.09?

by Jack Lewin March 27, 2009 09:11

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About the Authors

The ACC in Touch Blog is primarily co-authored by current ACC President John Gordon Harold, MD, MACC, and Board of Governors Chair David May, MD, PhD, FACC.

Harold John Gordon Harold, MD, MACC, became ACC president in March 2013. Dr. Harold is a clinical professor of Medicine at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles.

May David May, MD, PhD, FACC, began as the chair of the Board of Governors in March 2013. Dr. May currently works as a managing partner at his private practice, Cardiovascular Specialists, PA (CVS) in Lewisville, Texas.

Learn more about Drs. Harold and May.

Statements or opinions expressed on the Blog reflect the views of the contributor, and do not reflect the official views of the ACC, unless otherwise noted.

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