Patients are Terrible Consumers

Patients are Terrible Consumers

Everyone wants to consumerize sick care. However, few are really doing it.

When it comes to judging the quality of sickcare service, patients can and do tell us what they like and dislike. However, when it comes to judging quality of care, they are not always right. Now research indicates that they are not such good consumers either when it comes to making choices about consuming sick care resources. Those who want to consumerize patients might want to think twice and not expect too much.


Here are some reasons why.

What will it take to make patients better consumer/customers?

1. Education. Most patients have very low health and insurance IQs and, understandably, do not grasp the intricacies of health insurance. Doctors are not much better.

2. Simplification. Make things easier for patients to understand, whether it be the language used in the examining room or the copy used in selling sick care products. Like the complicated mortgage statement you get when you buy and sell a house, maybe it's time for a patient Truth-in-Insurance statement.

3. Engagement. We need to do a better job of targeting the 20% who consume the 80% of resources and actively help make better choices.

4. Intelligence. Better use of data and predicative analytical techniques to identify and rehabilitate frequent flyers and the doctors who treat them.

5. Closing the education-practice gap. Medical schools are not teaching students and residents value based care and population health. That needs to change.

6. Filling the gap between the data and the doctor. We need to re-engineer processes of care given the increasingly complex nature of illnesses in an aging population. Unbundle primary care.

7. Digital health. Expand digital health technologies and execute a digical care strategy to help doctors and other care intermediaries to manage patients with chronic, complex diseases. Use social media better to improve population health. For example, Tinder users in the U.K. might see a profile from a celebrity, such as Olympic gold medalist Jade Jones, with a special logo to promote the cause. Those who swipe right will subsequently be asked to register to donate their organs after their death.

8. Workforce changes. We need to educate and train a new generation of patient advocates, educators and navigators

9. Care Teamwork. Promote interdisciplinary professional education and communicate better with patient families, surrogate and personal representatives. In many instances, the patient is not the decision maker, their families or children are.

10. Incentives. Give both patients and sick care professionals the information, tools and incentives they need to cut consumption of worthless and potentially harmful interventions.

We are still trying to figure out the relationship between patient rated outcome measures and satisfaction.

If we are to lend a hand to the invisible hand, we need to empower patients. Like all students, some patients will cut classes and try to slide through. and just rely on doctors to tell them what to do. With the right teachers, though, we can raise the overall GPA. 

Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA is the President and CEO of the Society of Physician Entrepreneurs

Dr Charles Mandell

medical director/Founder at Umedex Inc

8 年

why would anyone even assume that patients could be good judges of healthcare quality?

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Robert Priddy

Healthcare Consultant serving the international community to bring U.S. and Western operations, physicians and standards

8 年

Right on, Arlen... add to these challenges the need to make many of these critical healthcare decisions on the fly... "I'm sick, I need care..." I'm not likely the best "shopper" under those circumstances. It ultimately places even greater need for physicians to be allowed to actually care for their patients rather than simply treating them.

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Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA

President and CEO, Society of Physician Entrepreneurs, another lousy golfer, terrible cook

8 年

BTW: The same applies to tools designed to change doctor behavior too.

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Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA

President and CEO, Society of Physician Entrepreneurs, another lousy golfer, terrible cook

8 年

I see many digital health/patient-customer engagement/patient market empowerment tools that have several fundamentally flawed underlying business model assumptions: 1, Patients have access to transparent, valid information to make a value based decision 2. They are willing and able to do so 3. They have enough of an incentive to do it at scale 4. Sick care products and services are like any other kind of consumer service.

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Martin Appelt

Senior Director, Animal Health Programs Division at Canadian Food Inspection Agency

8 年

This article has renewed importance in the emergence of the patient-driven "pay as you go for access to world class health care" business model.

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