Is it time for a dose of DOSE?

Is it time for a dose of DOSE?

According to the WSJ, "Lost amid Donald Trump ’s nomination blitz this week was what might turn out to be his best idea: He has handed Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk the job of running a new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to reform and shrink the federal government...none of this will be easy. Lawsuits will proliferate. Mr. Trump’s own cabinet officers will resist cuts in their budget and regulatory sway. The iron triangle of the bureaucracy, interest groups and Congress will conspire to portray every decision as a threat to public health and safety. The press will pile on."

Is time for a dose of the Department of Sick care Efficiency (DOSE) at the federal and state levels too?

Jarid Polis, the Governor of Colorado, thinks so and has started to chip away at waste and reducing sick care costs. In 2019, Governor Jared Polis signed an executive order that established the Office of Saving People Money on Health Care, with the goal to study, identify and implement policies that will lower health care costs while ensuring access to affordable, quality care for Coloradans.

Opportunity targets abound including almost every stakeholder.

Take training institutions, for example. They are those that deliver health professional education include public and private universities and colleges, individuals affiliated with the delivery or administration of health professional education, and trade or professional associations representing these institutions, organizations, and individuals.

The cross hairs would target:

  1. Hospital administrators and CEOs
  2. Faculty tenure and promotion policies and procedures
  3. Student selection procedures
  4. Workflow and process maps
  5. Business models
  6. Wasteful and redundant silos
  7. Administrivia
  8. Costly professional credentialing, privileging, and certification
  9. Fraud, waste, and abuse
  10. Costs and workforce resizing in non-clinical care areas, particularly those impacted by artificial intelligence.
  11. Filling jobs with non-college graduates
  12. Unnecessary care

Everyone who touches patients knows that there is substantial variation in how much a given doctors spends to treat a patient with a certain condition. But why? Here are some possible reasons:

They get paid more if they do

They don't care if they get penalized for spending more

They have no clue what things cost

Patients and their families demand unnecessary tests and interventions

Insurance companies and third-party intermediaries require worthless tests like getting a plain X-ray of something when an MRI will inevitably be ordered

There is no Moor's Law in medicine

Tests ordered by inexperienced house officers

Poor clinical judgement

Hospital systems are wasteful and vary from region to region

Poor hand offs and lack of care coordination during a hospitalization

Process mapping, affectionately know as care pathways in sick care, is one way to drive out waste.

As noted, Musk and Ramaswamy won't have an easy time.

But this is not our first rodeo:

It should be borne in mind that there is nothing more difficult to arrange, more doubtful of success, and more dangerous to carry through than initiating changes. The innovator makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old order, and only lukewarm support is forthcoming from those who would prosper under the new. Their support is lukewarm ... partly because men are generally incredulous, never really trusting new things unless they have tested them by experience.

Niccolo Machiavelli

Repeat after me:

This ain't my first rodeo

This ain't the first time this ol' cowboy's been thrown

This ain't the first I've seen this dog and pony show

This ain't my first rodeo

But just in case you didn't get the memo, here is a guide to your first rodeo.

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

Jason Cox, MD

Owner of IAME Continuing Medical Education, provider of CMEGenius?, the Only All-in-One CME LMS Software and Accreditation Hub | Radiologist, Online CME Course Creator in Radiology, Cardiology, and OB/GYN Imaging

4 天前

This is a great article. Just want to add that medical malpractice environment in terms of the direct cost of premiums, the "risk mitigation" department of the hospitals making doctors test patients for things they don't have etc, and reactionary policies that do cost money. Why check a GFR on patients for group II gadolinium products when guidelines clearly state there is no need to do it? Because the hospital risk teams says so. But the rest of the "targets" are right on.

Michael Geylman

Oral Implant Surgery at Dr.Michael Geylman DDS

4 天前

Spending on bloated Government agencies and inefficient hiring of employees with redundant skills was a great way for the Biden administration to lower unemployment numbers. The identical problem exists in Canada with a Universal Medicare system. 30 hour waits in emergency for meagre results from ER physicians who are handcuffed by government budgets.People dying more often in the ER than ever before. 50% of every tax dollar one pays to the province of Québec goes to Healthcare,yet if you are unfortunate enough to have a family physician who is retiring,there is a 2 year wait before you are assigned to a new one. Coincidentally Prime Minister Trudeau,a flaming leftist has an approval of 28%,and the country is ready to vote in conservatives to clean up the fiscal mess. Private clinics are opening faster than ever in Canada and people would rather get immediate healthcare than wait 3 years for a kidney or cardiac procedure. Yes people die while they wait. Liberals think money grows on trees.Just print more dollar bills,the national debt be damned.After all a broke America is your children's problem,they'll solve it with ideas from Tic Toc. Overspending foolishly beyond your budget can lead to insolvency .Government is no different.

Let's do this, it's simple and easy. Get coca Cola and Pepsi Cola OUT of all schools, all concession stands, and all Hospitals. These products are straight up poison less Dasani and Aquafina.

Steven Panowyk

Financial Well-Being | Legacy Planning | Business Strategy | for Professionals, Business Owners & Successful Families

4 天前

Arlen - pithy, thought provoking post - possibly a great boost for innovations and entrepreneurial efforts in healthcare.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA的更多文章