Yesterday I spoke at a
session on practice management called “Practice Innovation: How to Reduce Costs
and Increase Quality.” This session offered a high-level look at the many
resources the College has available to help practices deliver high quality care
while saving money.
The session had an all-star
lineup: former (as of convocation last night) ACC President Fred Bove, M.D.,
M.A.C.C., and now current president Ralph Brindis, M.D., F.A.C.C., were the
session chairs. Ralph gave a talk about the role of registries in a reformed
health care system and how registries can help measure success, reduce health
care disparities and serve as an important tool in comparative effectiveness
research (similar to what I wrote about on Sunday).
ACC SVP of Science and
Quality Janet Wright, M.D., F.A.C.C., talked about the various quality programs
that ACC runs, such as the highly successful Door-to-Balloon campaign, the
newly formed Hospital to Home program and medication adherence initiatives.
Co-Chair of the Health IT Committee Jimmy Tcheng, M.D., F.AC.C., talked about
health IT and the tools necessary to adapt to delivery system change. My
presentation at the session covered ways of reducing variations in CV care
through tools like appropriate use criteria.
This session goes to show all
the different ways that the ACC offers members to improve quality in different
areas. That said, CV practices around the country are struggling under the
recent payment cuts put into effect by CMS to make fewer practice dollars go
farther. It’s understandable that the thought of participating in a quality
program might seem impossible at this point. However, even in economically
distressing times, the ACC continues to promote quality programs because
quality must be the core of what we as health care professionals do. At some
point (hopefully!), practices will have the resources to fully commit and
expand their participation in quality programming.
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Image from morgueFile (jdurham). ***