The Affordable Care Act. Some love it, some hate it, and some, quite frankly, don’t understand it.
Certain aspects of the new legislation, such as affordability, coverage, and payment, have been widely publicized and criticized since its implementation. Oddly enough, one critical aspect of the ACA that has been relatively ignored by the media and nonindustry masses is the initiative to improve patient safety and quality of care.
For the first time, under the ACA, hospitals will be incentivized through a number of government and nongovernment programs to provide the very best patient care. Medicare’s Value-Based Purchasing Program, implemented in October 2012, is one such effort that evaluates hospitals on 12 clinical quality measures that correlate payment to statistics pertaining to patient readmission rates, hospital and surgical errors, and patient experience of care scores, among others. http://www.healthcare.gov/news/factsheets/2011/04/valuebasedpurchasing04292011b.html
Regardless as to whether healthcare professionals have enough responsibilities on their plate, they’ll now be faced with the challenge to create and implement new procedures to guarantee that their hospital is running as efficiently, effectively, safely, and resourcefully as possible.
While this is a big step in healthcare, initiatives to improve patient safety and quality care are by no means a new issue. In 2004, as mentioned in a case study in the book Switch, by Chip and Dan Heath, Dr. Donald Berwick founded the Institute of Health Improvement to serve that exact purpose.
Employing a strategy that also serves as the foundation of our philosophy here at Brandkarma on how to change behavior, Dr. Berwick managed to alter the course of patient safety protocols in hospitals, successfully changing decades of old habits and routines.
Look for part 2 of our next installment to find out what Dr. Berwick did to achieve widespread behavioral change among healthcare professionals.
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Ken is a great deal more than just the president of a medical communications company. He is something of a hybrid. He’s part marketing manager, part creative director, and part copywriter. To the chagrin of his peers—but to the delight of his clients—Ken is a consummate perfectionist. As a former creative director for a high-end consumer agency, he challenged his creative teams to go beyond the mundane to produce work with real creative impact, something he’s just as fervent about today. From producing and directing TV commercials, to launching DTC and Rx-to-OTC switches, Ken brings his clients a world of experience in OTC pharmaceuticals as well as business, lifestyle, and high-end consumer products and services. Whether huddled with clients behind a mirror in a market research center in Houston, facilitating a strategic workshop in Madrid, or developing a global campaign either in the New Jersey or California office, Ken is always fully engaged, bringing “bestness” to all areas of his hectic but full life.