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Susan Scheid's avatar

Dr. Wentworth, I was expecting your Monday article to be good, but you have FAR exceeded expectations. Some observations, all pointing to why this article is so good:

First: re “value-based care,” I recently read the linked piece by Dr. Wachter about that very thing. I think he is a good man, trying to work in the system as it is, but of course the question is –is that a good thing to do—and, if not, what are the alternatives? (I have opinions on this, but as I’m going try to not go on for weeks here, I’ll just lay out the question—and you’ve ID’d a LOT of the problems in your bullet points.

https://academic.oup.com/healthaffairsscholar/article/1/1/qxad002/7203669

I appreciate so much your concrete suggestions, and I’m going to give a little “patient view” on two listed below. (Just as background, both I and my spouse have gone through cancer. Not fun, but glad to report we’re still here—and very, very grateful to people like you who saw us through it. I am retired, but also worked in health care-related fields, so I have enough knowledge to be dangerous about these things!) So, with that, here goes:

>Fill out every survey. Be honest and include specific feedback. Be stingy with your stars. (I once organized a successful patient complaint campaign after a manager fired our parking valets and patients had to walk up a steep hill for their treatments.)

Here’s the problem I encounter: The issues we’ve faced that are most problematic are on the admin/systems end, not on the care received. Yet we have never, between us, received a survey that asks for input on those issues, only on how we thought the physician and front desk staff performed. While I scouted around and found an address to write to, I have no confidence that, if I spend the time, it won’t just go into the slush pile (this doesn’t mean I’m giving up, just that I feel I need to learn more to figure out how not to end up in the slush pile).

The thing is, to the vast AMC system, the issues we have encountered may feel like tiny details, while, for the patient, these are much bigger deals.

Here’s an example: My Reclast infusion had to be delayed because of dental work. The only person in the whole system who was charged with alerting me that if, the timeframe went over 30 days, I’d have to get a new set of bloodwork, was the MD. She didn’t happen to think of it, and my view is it shouldn’t be on her to do so. Rather, the AMC should, for goodness sake, have a system that spits out info and reminders on this to the patient portal. As it was, I didn’t find out until I arrived, the lab was backed up, and my infusion session was therefore 90 minutes longer than it should have been. (And here’s a former cancer patient “extra”: I hadn’t realized, as chemotherapy was so long ago, how distressing it would be to go to the infusion center, which also treats cancer patients. That extra 90 minutes revived some of the horrible earlier experience. This was all unnecessary, not the MD’s fault, not the nurse’s or staff’s fault, but rather the admin system’s fault.)

PS: And don’t even get me started on the ER. Here’s your money quote on that one: “What actually happens is a very complicated redistribution of wealth. The revenue generated from profitable departments (known as “The Three Billion Dollar Club”) subsidizes other departments like infectious disease and the ER that are consistently in the red. For example, many years ago I was told that the profit from ONE radiation treatment machine covered the year-end bonuses for every employee in the hospital system. And yet we couldn’t get funding for another cancer center social worker. But I digress…” And, believe me, you do NOT digress on that one. It’s the central problem.

>Don’t complain to your doctor. Doctors probably do not have the power to address your concerns about the lab, parking, nurses, waiting room, scheduling, someone’s attitude, etc. They do not manage the staff and likely agree with you.

Agree 100%. See above.

Bottom line, which you have outlined here so well: We need to change the system in which the health care providers work and in which patients receive care. Unfortunately, the financial incentives are perverse. The perennial question is how to make that change.

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Mark Kalstrup's avatar

Our health care system is anything but caring. Decisions are financially driven and made in board rooms for profit and stock holders. NO ONE should come between the Doctor and their patients.

I have tried to remain transparent about my journey. I wrote this in 2019 several months after completing my initial treatments realizing there was more to the story. I share it in support of you or someone you may know. We all have something. Love ❤️

As a cancer survivor I see so many commonalities in our special world. We have awakened to a new life. Many of us are striving to be our best self. Many are now, after enduring treatment being their best self while enduring the side effects of treatments. Cancer is scary, the side effects are what we live with. At some point each of us must make a mindful choice to endure treatments and knowing how these will change our lives forever. We develop PTSD, we continue to fight, fighting the cancer, side effects and the consequences and costs of life long medical care. It’s not a journey we chose but we do choose to live. It’s so often we hear, you look great. Only at that moment do we realize how unimportant how we look is. We choose to live. We choose to continue to better ourselves. We choose to live each day and moment. I never understood, until I did.

Cancer survivors and those who succumbed to this terrible disease( I love you Dad) YOU ARE MY INSPIRATION. YOU are an amazing person and I understand what you have shown and shared. #cancersucks.

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