About Quality First

One of the biggest issues facing the US today is health care. From the White House, to the halls of Congress, to kitchen tables across our nation, it's an issue that weighs heavily on the minds of millions, particularly the 47 million Americans without health insurance. Travel anywhere and you’ll find physician and patient satisfaction levels decreasing as a result of misaligned incentives, lack of coordination of care, medical liability concerns and inconsistent quality. Our health care system is primed for reform.

With this in mind, the American College of Cardiology’s (ACC) Quality First campaign aims to set a new standard for health care reform centered on patient value and access to quality care.

In current discussions of reform, much time is devoted to cost, which is an important component of any reform. However, focusing simply on costs will not provide long-lasting solutions to the problems in our nation’s health system.  The focus should be on patient value – providing the highest quality of care at the most effective cost.

Currently, providers are rewarded based on the amount of care they provide, not the quality of care. This must change. Health care providers who consistently choose what works best at the most effective cost should be rewarded. Such a system would encourage both cost savings and improved quality.

Rewarding health care practitioners for providing high quality, cost-effective care is one of many ways in which quality can be improved. Other ways include: improved coordination across sources and sites of care; a sense of partnership between providers and patients; increased transparency; and a renewed focus on measurable health outcomes to provide accountability within care. The implementation and utilization of health information technology is also critical, and most would agree that there is a need for access to quality care and some form of public/private financing.

Quality First supports the following principles as fundamental to health care reform:

  • A focus on patient value – the highest quality of care at the most effective cost
  • Payment incentives for quality care
  • Coordination across sources and sites of care
  • Health care provider professionalism and partnership with patients
  • Increased transparency
  • Measurable health outcomes to provide accountability
  • Access to quality care

In striving to fulfill its mission of helping cardiovascular professionals provide high quality care, the ACC addresses many of these issues. The ACC is considered a leader in creating clinical guidelines and criteria for the appropriate use of medical technology that are grounded in data collection and professional consensus. It has invested millions in its quality infrastructure, including the largest national cardiovascular data registry. From this work, it is clear the ACC has much to bring to the health care reform discussion.

Through Quality First, the ACC is committed to taking quality care to the next level, by moving beyond process to focusing on health outcomes. In addition, the College is working with payers, Congress and other like-minded organizations on pilot programs, legislation, strengthened quality measures and expedited guidelines.

With 43% of Medicare dollars spent on heart disease – our country’s #1 killer – there is no time like the present to begin transforming health care from the inside out.

For more information, visit http://qualityfirst.acc.org, or contact QualityFirst@acc.org.

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About the Authors

The ACC in Touch blog is co-authored by current ACC President William Zoghbi, MD, FACC, and Board of Governors Chair Dipti Itchhaporia, MD, FACC.  William Zoghbi

William Zoghbi, MD, FACC, became ACC president in March 2012. Dr. Zoghbi is the William L. Winters endowed Chair of Cardiovascular Imaging at The Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center and director of the Cardiovascular Imaging Institute at the Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas.
Dipti Itchhaporia

Dipti Itchhaporia, MD, FACC, began as the chair of the Board of Governors in March 2012. Dr. Itchhaporia holds the Robert and Georgia Roth Chair for Excellence in Cardiac Care and is the medical director of disease management for Hoag Heart and Vascular Institute.

Learn more about Drs. Zoghbi and Itchhaporia.

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