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Essential Stewardship Priorities for Academic Health Systems PDF

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Di s c u s si o n P a p e r Essential Stewardship Priorities for Academic Health Systems Victor Dzau, Gary Gottlieb, Steven Lipstein, Nancy Schlichting, and Eugene Washington September 2014 This individually authored perspective was developed as a contribution to the Learning Health System Series of the IOM Roundtable on Value & Science-Driven Health Care. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily of the authors’ organizations or of the Institute of Medicine. The paper is intended to help inform and stimulate discussion. It has not been subjected to the review procedures of the Institute of Medicine and is not a report of the Institute of Medicine or of the National Research Council. Advising the nation • Improving health Copyright 2014 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. AUTHORS Victor J. Dzau, M.D.* Nancy M. Schlichting, M.B.A. President and Chief Executive Officer Chief Executive Officer Duke University Medical Center and Henry Ford Health System Health System A. Eugene Washington, M.D., M.Sc. Gary L. Gottlieb, M.D., M.B.A. Vice Chancellor, UCLA Health President and Chief Executive Officer Sciences Partners HealthCare System Dean, David Geffen School of Medicine Chief Executive Officer, UCLA Health Steven H. Lipstein, M.H.A. System President and Chief Executive Officer BJC HealthCare The authors were assisted by the following individuals: Ashley Abarr Rose M. Glenn Elizabeth Robinson, M.P.P. Institute of Medicine Henry Ford Health System Institute of Medicine David W. Bates, M.D., M.Sc. Michael Ritt Jaff, D.O. Devdutta Sangvia, M.D. Partners HealthCare System Partners HealthCare System Duke University Medical Center and Health System Katherine Burns Elizabeth Johnston Institute of Medicine Institute of Medicine Thomas Santel Raising St. Louis, BJC Lia Ramer Bygrave Anne Klibanski, M.D. HealthCare David Geffen School of Medicine Partners Biobank and PCORI at UCLA Francesco Sergi Isaac Lin, MBA Institute of Medicine William A. Conway, M.D. UCLA Health System Henry Ford Health System Krishna Udayakumar, M.D. Jennifer K. Lodge, PhD Duke University Medical W. Claiborne Dunagan Washington University in St. Louis Center and Health System BJC HealthCare David R. Nerenz, Ph.D. Neil Wagle, M.D. Will Ellaissi Henry Ford Health System Partners HealthCare System Duke University Medical Center Sandhya Rao, M.D. and Health System Partners HealthCare System Timothy Ferris, M.D. Joseph Rhatigan, M.D. Partners HealthCare System Partners HealthCare System *Dr. Dzau is now President of the Institute of Medicine. His contribution to this Discussion Paper was completed prior to leaving Duke University. 2 ESSENTIAL STEWARDSHIP PRIORITIES FOR ACADEMIC HEALTH SYSTEMS* Victor Dzau, Gary Gottlieb, Steven Lipstein, Nancy Schlichting, and Eugene Washington In our leadership roles with Academic aware that these challenges provide the Health Systems, we are simultaneously distinct opportunity for Academic Health excited by the stunning potential we see for Systems to adapt through differentiation health and health care and also sensitive to and build upon our unique strengths by the strains that arise from the pace of changes increasing collaboration and innovation underway in the organization, financing, so that we can fulfill our responsibilities and delivery of health care in America. It is to the health system and the country. critical that as the health system grapples From our experiences and what we have with increasing pressures to improve observed, we have identified the shared outcomes and to lower costs, the capacities aspects central to our missions here as for innovation and building the workforce a list of essential stewardship priorities. of the future are not lost. Given our unique These 10 essential priorities serve as a mandates to foster progress in real-time, grounding framework for Academic Health bench-to-bedside research while ensuring Systems in order to maintain our charge the excellence of the health workforce, while establishing an ongoing capacity to we recognize that Academic Health ensure improved health through better Systems hold much of the responsibility care, innovation, and education. We offer for leading the way to a continuously examples of those experiences throughout learning and improving health system. the text and present full versions in the The fact that Academic Health Systems corresponding document on Academic also face economic challenges that call Health System Case Material. But, we are also into question the effectiveness and aware of many other examples throughout viability of current models might be a the nation and encourage the growth of this positive development. Experiences at our inventory through contributions by others. own institutions have made us acutely DEFINING CHALLENGES As the recognized stewards of innovation is equipped to use not only the skills, and progress in research, education, and information, and resources available today health care in the United States, Academic but also those likely to be available tomorrow. Health Systems (AHSs) hold primary With knowledge and tools in health and responsibilities for ensuring that the medicine changing at an accelerating pace, next-generation health care workforce and with the organizational and practice *Suggested citation: Dzau, V., G. Gottlieb, S. Lipstein, N. Schlichting, and E. Washington. 2014. Essential stewardship priorities for academic health systems. Discussion paper, Institute of Medicine, Washington, DC. http://nam.edu/wp- content/uploads/2015/06/academichealthsystems. 3 patterns in health care in a period of dynamic performing, coordinated health system and competitive flux, the challenges that requires the simultaneous engagement confront all in health care today impinge of innovation in the delivery of care, acutely on the Academic Health System advancement of clinical research, and community. AHSs find themselves fixed in a training and deploying a population health crucible of expectations that they will deliver conscious, team-based health care workforce. advanced expertise and performance, despite Sustaining the ability of AHSs to contribute the context of circumstances that place them leadership in these arenas requires adapting to at the bleeding edge of revenue streams and changing economic circumstances traditions that are neither nimble nor easily adapted to{ The 10 essential }without sacrificing the changing financial stewardship priorities reflect unique capabilities the strategies that, in our that only AHS’s can circumstances. experiences, are central to contribute. Reports on A health system the success of AHSs building the economic viability grappling with upon their strengths in of Academic Health increasing pressures the evolving health care Systems make it clear to improve quality landscape that the status quo is no while reducing costs depends longer an option. A 2014 report from on the tools of innovation and workforce the Association of American Medical Colleges effectiveness and efficiency to achieve the (AAMC) Advisory Panel on Health Care triple aim of better care, lower cost, and reviewed in detail the challenges to the improved health outcomes. The onus of sustainability of AHSs and identified eight responsibility for development, validation, elements for close consideration, which were and standard-setting for key components generally as follows: systems orientation, often falls to AHSs, even as the funding geographically and clinically; governance and resources that support them dwindle. strongly aligned with internal and external Stewarding these capacities is critical to accountability; evolution in university the future of American health, and that relationships to enhance the capacity to function depends on the success and respond to change; new organizational roles adaptability of Academic Health Systems. and skills for physician leaders; transparency in clinical outcomes and financial performance; Health care systems without these restructuring the operating model for cost broader stewardship responsibilities have and quality; population health orientation responded to cost pressures with a strategy and accountability; and candid ongoing of consolidation and efficiency initiatives, assessment of strengths and weaknesses.1 counteracting thinner margins by spreading fixed costs over a greater volume of activity Each of the AAMC report themes represents and with acquisitions that diversify revenue a practical management priority important streams to disperse financial risk over a to AHS operational and financial success larger population base. However, a longer- moving forward. Our aim in this Institute of term, system-wide transformation to a better Medicine Discussion Paper is to provide a 4 complementary emphasis on the dynamics Together, these priorities represent a strategy that must be addressed on the mission side of adaptation through differentiation, tailored of AHS responsibilities, which are clearly to the unique AHS responsibilities, needs, and central considerations for our business resources. What will be critical to success in models. In this respect, we draw from making the necessary changes is a willingness our various experiences leading different to develop meaningful partnerships, both Academic Health Systems to underscore 10 with our stakeholders and with each essential priorities, which are common to our other, as Academic Health System leaders missions and which must be kept squarely in working cooperatively toward shared goals. focus as we contend with the turbulent times. CONTRIBUTORS TO HEALTH PROGRESS Academic Health Systems represent a Delivery of complex services to high risk critical and distinctive component of the populations nation’s health enterprise. Also known as The complexity of the patient population Academic Medical Centers, AHSs represent served by Academic Health Systems is well partnerships between accredited higher beyond that served elsewhere. AHSs tend education institutions, health professions to provide services that are less common schools, and health care providers. As both and more specialized than in non-teaching clinical and academic leaders, AHSs serve hospitals, and they also disproportionately a critical role in the national dialogue on serve populations at higher risk. With respect health and health care. They also hold to services, 87 percent of teaching hospitals responsibility for educating and training the provide psychiatric emergency services, future health workforce and often represent compared to 25 percent for non-teaching an essential link in the bench-to-bedside hospitals.2 Similarly, teaching hospitals progression of clinical research. Many of the provide 63 percent of our nation’s pediatric most transformational opportunities and intensive care.3 AHSs have traditionally innovations in the health system are focused played a critical role in community health on integration and coordination, from and expanding access to care, and, in 2013, bridging research and practice to developing Academic Health Systems represented 6 fluid data streams to enhancing resource use percent of hospitals but provided 40 percent across different care sites in a community. of the nation’s charity care and received 40 Academic Health Systems therefore offer an percent of transfers for complex care.4 ideal venue for research, development, and training around technologies and approaches Training the health and health care workforce that stand to benefit from interdisciplinary perspectives and a culture of learning and With health and health care comprising more experimentation. Some of the ways in which than 17 percent of the national economy AHSs hold unique and disproportionate in the United States, the workforce needs societal responsibilities are highlighted in health and health care are substantial below. and dynamic.5 The estimated current U.S. 5 health workforce of nearly 12 million people Academic Health Systems are also expected extends well beyond the approximately to serve as sources of counsel and, as 800,000 physicians, 2.7 million nurses, appropriate, as test beds for demonstration 300,000 pharmacists, 300,000 laboratory and validation of new models and new technicians, and other licensed health care approaches for the delivery and improvement professionals in active practice.6, 7, 8, 9, 10 AHSs of care processes. yearly graduate nearly 17,000 new physicians Developing instruments of evaluation, as well as about 20,000 nurses who graduate with bachelor’s degrees.11, 12 Approximately accountability, and data management 5,000 pharmacists and 6,000 physician Just as critical as their roles in developing assistants also graduate annually, and some new approaches and new models, faculty 110,000 medical residents are in training within Academic Health Systems are often programs approved by the Accreditation sources of leadership in the assessment and Council for Graduate Medical Education.13, measurement of care costs and outcomes. 14, 15 Along with professional societies and The drive across the health system toward the relevant government agencies, Academic improved outcomes and lower costs requires Health Systems serve as the vehicles through better metrics and better tools for assessing which the health workforce pipeline needs and improving in real time as well as for are assessed and addressed. identifying and communicating the return Leadership in clinical practice and quality on investment of research activities. Of special importance in this respect is the AHSs are responsible not only for the expectation that AHSs will provide leading- numbers in the health professions pipeline edge expertise in the development and use but also for their skill sets and, again in of the digital infrastructure for care delivery, partnership with professional societies and assessment, and improvement—a particular relevant government agencies, for adherence challenge since a sizable proportion of to training and practice standards. With AHS patients are referrals from outside the the continuing focus on care outcomes and system, requiring interfaces with multiple continuous improvement, the development of information technology (IT) platforms. evidence-based clinical guidance continues Biomedical and clinical research advancement to be an important tool for improving care and translation quality. Currently, nearly 2,600 clinical guidelines are contained in the National Academic Health Systems are positioned to Guidelines Clearinghouse maintained by the generate new knowledge and to discover new Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. approaches to overall health improvement. 16 AHSs are not as large as many mega multi- With an estimated public and private state health systems and multi-specialty investment totaling $120 billion in 2012, the physician organizations, yet AHS clinicians U.S. remains the largest source of biomedical serve disproportionately in key roles in the research in the world, and much of this work production of those guidelines as well as is conducted in Academic Health Systems.17 in their implementation and assessment. 6 Of the approximately $31 billion budget for research, development, and training of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) around technologies and approaches that in 2012, three-quarters went to AHSs.18, 19 stand to benefit from interdisciplinary The pharmaceutical and biotech industry perspectives and a culture of learning and invested nearly $70 billion in biomedical experimentation. research in 2012, and although much of Catalyzing attention to population health that was intramural research, a substantial opportunities and priorities share of the investment was shaped through professional interaction with members of the A natural corollary of the advantageous Academic Health System community.20 AHSs capacity of AHSs for interdisciplinary study continue to produce new insights about and practice is the growing need for them to individual variation in disease susceptibility, serve as a source of leadership and guidance diagnosis, and treatment. Perhaps the most for population-wide health improvement rapidly emerging tool in biomedical and efforts. In acknowledgement of both the clinical research is found in the many forms potential and the necessity for population of the developing digital infrastructure -based initiatives for health improvement, and the concomitant opportunities to draw the Patient Protection and Affordable Care lessons and knowledge from data sets of Act (ACA) contains a number of provisions unprecedented size. to strengthen the national population health Fostering interdisciplinary perspectives and improvement agenda. As sources of expertise programs and data for population health, AHSs find themselves with new demands and One compelling research avenue for which opportunities for alliances and partnerships Academic Health Systems are also uniquely in the provision of health and health care positioned is that of interdisciplinary programs that can meet the needs of diverse research. An important limiting factor of communities and the populations they serve. previous research activities has been the lack Maintaining ties to global issues and of capacity to assess the ways in which many perspective factors—biological, social, environmental, and behavioral—intersect to affect disease Communication, commerce, and travel occurrence and treatment. With the patterns have substantially changed developments occurring now in biology perspectives, horizons, and interactions so and information technology, the capacity to that the need and the opportunity to share study and understand those intersections information and progress globally is becoming is greater, but there are few places outside a practical reality. Historically, the academic of the university and Academic Health health arena, through initiatives that are System environments in which the necessary binational, multinational, and international scientific disciplines can be assembled into in nature, has been the leading focal point for teams to conduct this important work. these relationships. Those links—particularly As a result, Academic Health Systems institution-to-institution collaborations— currently offer the most promising venue 7 have increased substantially in the wake it is likely that many AHSs will still bear of new communication capabilities, and, disproportionate responsibilities for action although these communications are likely on the global scene to share best practices to become more diversified and networked, and improve care across the world. THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE Along with overall forces for change at interest. Increasingly, health systems are play in the American health system— being challenged to develop models that consolidation and reform in the insurance shift care out of the hospital setting, moving market, concerns about escalating the locus of care to the outpatient setting, costs, incentives and practices around the home, and the workplace where the IT implementation, stronger focus on emphasis can also shift to prevention, early outcomes and accountability, requirements detection, and longitudinal care management for transparency, and information available of chronic conditions. The special challenge to consumers—Academic Health Systems for AHSs is moving the locus of its activities are also facing changes in the revenue (care delivery, education, and research) stream prospects related to support for without compromising either innovation or health professions training and biomedical the need to provide care across the entire research. Highlights follow for some of the continuum. Similarly, the pressures for cost developments and trends with particular discipline and efficiency are coming at a importance to the landscape for AHSs. time that coincides with the need to better understand and apply emerging scientific Nature of the care process insights about opportunities for tailoring clinical interventions to individual patients Whether economic, managerial, scientific, and to responsibly introduce data from technical, or cultural, the care process is personal mobile sensors into diagnostic the common conduit for the influence of and decision processes. Relatedly, the care the various forces in play, and many of process is beginning to be altered by the these forces can contribute positively to the growing culture around patient and family evolution of the care process. Recognition involvement, through developments such and concern about substantial shortfalls as patient care portals, decision aids, and in the efficiency and effectiveness of care, access to Web-based information. Given including in Academic Health Systems, their stewardship of the frontiers of health creates pressures for change that can care, AHSs bear a special obligation to keep be difficult to accommodate from an abreast of evolving opportunities and to help institutional perspective. But, if the result is guide their appropriate assessment and use. that patients are receiving more of the care they need and less of the care they do not and that what they receive is delivered more efficiently, then the result is in the patient’s 8 Role of patients and families and pressure to reduce Graduate Medical Education funding through the Medicare A number of developments are under way that program increases the strain at a time when may lead to fundamental change in the roles the number of medical schools has increased played by patients and families in health care. by about 15 percent.21 The administration Access to scientific information in health and has proposed reducing GME support by medicine is open to the public not only via about $11 billion over the coming 10 years.22 availability and retrieval on websites but also The limitations are examined further in via patient portals and mobile monitoring the recently released IOM report Graduate devices. Patients and families have ready Medical Education That Meets the Nation’s access to sources of information important Health Needs.23 Outside of the clinical and to their care. As patients and families become direct patient care arena is the considerable more fully and actively involved, their roles need for more informaticians. Both the as fully functioning partners in the care team Office of the National Coordinator for Health becomes more a reality, with substantial Information Technology and the Bureau of implications for the effectiveness of care. Labor Statistics are predicting substantial shortages—between 35,000 and 50,000 Again, change of this potential magnitude people by 2020—in the supply of health offers opportunity and a mandate for AHSs information managers. 24 Although few would to understand and lead the change process question the need for a studied assessment of of predictive, personalized, and integrative the health workforce needs—profiles, skill health care models for patients and families. sets, and strategies—creativity will clearly be important in the years ahead, and some Changing workforce needs and the prospect of AHSs may be able to get ahead of the curve reduced support for training by expanding their focus beyond physician Greater dependence on information education to create more interdisciplinary management technology to track, mobilize, programs with other health professionals and effectively apply the exploding body of in growing areas such as population health scientific information; changes in the nature management and clinical informatics. 25 of the care process; and an emphasis on care Biomedical research funding teams all require adjustment in the culture and content of health professions training. Acute challenges to the core activities of The success and sustainability of coordinated many Academic Health Systems derive care will require a balanced workforce. from the prospect of reduced funding for Opportunities for inter-professional biomedical research. Currently, the revenue education will be critical to building the supporting AHSs comes from several key capacity and competencies necessary sources: Medicare, 21 percent; Medicaid, 17 for effective teamwork in the health care percent; commercial insurers, 33 percent; and setting. Our “call for attention and action” grants and contracts, 12 percent; with various is accentuated by the prospect of reduced other sources making up the balance.26 Of support for training. Increasing scrutiny of 9 these, the only category expected to shift as they are both with the analytic capability dramatically is the share coming from grants and with the foundational philosophical and contracts, with a projected decline of commitment to openness and truth that nearly 25 percent between 2010 and 2020.27 represent the basis for the establishment This reflects projections based on the nearly of the universities with which most are 22 percent decline in purchasing power from identified. 2003 to 2012 as a result of NIH expenditures on biomedical research remaining essentially Health sector consolidation flat in the face of recession and inflation.28 The dominant strategy for health systems As a direct corollary, the NIH study section seeking financial security under changing scores required for funding grant applications circumstances has been acquisition and have tightened substantially, which has, in consolidation, forming bigger, more particular, placed younger investigators at inclusive care delivery and population health a disadvantage.29 AHSs will need to forge management systems. Academic Health partnerships with each other and with those Systems require a more nuanced approach holding private sector research resources. to adaptation that balances the efficient New research capacities and funding streams delivery of care against the responsibility to can take advantage of patient care and related support clinical research and educate the data systems as tools in developing novel and next generation of clinicians. The pace of accelerated clinical research and knowledge AHS consolidation is accelerating, and the translation strategies. pressures for expansion and scale through Transparency, accountability, and value merger and/or acquisition are undeniable. The report of the AAMC Advisory Panel Throughout health care, there is a strong and on Health Care concluded that AHSs have growing emphasis on the importance of—and four options: form a system, partner with need for—transparency, accountability and others in a collaborative network, merge better outcomes in health care. Because the into a system, or shrink in isolation.30 In health system as a whole has been relatively recent years, many AHSs have expanded opaque in its processes—not to mention their clinical faculty and expertise in clinical its costs—external pressures now demand care and health services delivery in order to the inevitable movement toward increased better leverage their size, unique services, transparency for collecting and reporting and market prominence. Still uncertain are outcomes data. Academic Health Systems the implications of these dynamics for the should be well-positioned to provide the unique AHS stewardship roles for teaching, model for performance reporting, equipped research, and care innovation. 10

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Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. 16 AHSs are not The pharmaceutical and biotech industry invested .. This requires more upstream and downstream .. AACN (American Association of Colleges of Nursing). 2013.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.