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Helping chronically ill manage care improves lives, cuts costs
HEALTH CARE: "Pursuing Perfection" program is so simple, it's brilliant.
The whole point of "managed care" started out, at least in theory, as an attempt to contain health-care costs through prevention. It's no secret that's not what happened. In fact, navigating the medical maze has become more difficult than ever, it seems.
But there is a solid movement afoot to change that and Whatcom County is one of the ground-zero sites for a program called "Pursuing Perfection: Raising the Bar for Healthcare Performance." Its method isn't complicated. It seeks to help people manage their own health care, sometimes by doing something as simple as regular telephone calls to check up on patients and answer their questions. By heading off potential problems, extensive and pricey hospital visits can often be avoided and a patient's health better maintained. It's so simple, it's brilliant.
The Whatcom Community Health Improvement Consortium last year was one of seven groups in the nation to win a $20.9 million grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement that funds the program. It's not just some kind of feel-good program, either. The foundation wants to document measurable results in improvement of patients' access to care, patients' self-management and satisfaction, and a decrease in medical errors.
Caring for chronically ill people consumes as much as 70 percent of the nation's health-care dollars, so it makes sense that helping them manage their own conditions would reduce those costs and help those people lead more productive and less frustrating lives.
In Whatcom County, two of the most common chronic illnesses are diabetes and congestive heart failure. In 2000, St. Joseph Hospital had almost 700 admissions related to diabetes and almost 900 related to congestive heart failure.
Empowering patients with better information and better access to people who monitor their progress and can quickly answer questions can help keep many from becoming dangerously ill and compromising their health further. Medical advances happen quickly as new drugs are developed, more information is discovered about drug interactions and new technologies help people monitor their blood sugar. Keeping patients active in helping to make their own decisions will result in better outcomes. After all, who better to "manage" the care than the person living with the illness?