QUALITY: "Lucky 13" Policy Wonks Map Out Path to Health Quality

May 13, 2008 - 9:23am

A lucky 13 top-notch health policy wonks outlined concrete and achievable stops to improve quality, reduce cost, and repair our health care system in the May/June issue of Health Affairs. For instance, beyond the common refrain for increased use of "evidence-based" medicine, the "Quality Crossroads Group" called on Congress to immediately create a national center to support effectiveness research so we can at least get started on examining what treatments work best and when to administer them.

We also liked the call by the authors, including New America's Len Nichols, to replace the fee-for-service payment model with systems that reward clinically effective and efficient population health management--like bundled chronic care episode payments and paying for population health performance.

As we continually say in this space and elsewhere, successful reform must address coverage, costs and quality at the same time. This Quality Crossroads Group outlines better and more succinctly than most how quality improvement, cost containment, and coverage expansion are inextricably linked. Ultimately, the group offered five ways to achieve a high-performance health system:

  1. Create a national center for effectiveness research.
  2. Develop models of accountable health care entities capable of providing integrated and coordinated care.
  3. Develop payment models to reward high-value care.
  4. Develop a national strategy for performance measurement.
  5. Pursue a multistakeholder approach to improving population health.

To be succinct, we agree.

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