PODCAST: Health Insurance Customer Service Rankings

INDUSTRY RANKINGS

According to Forrester Research, Health Insurance Customer Service is Ranked 15th Out of 19 Industries.

Image result for eric bricker

BY DR. ERIC BRICKER MD

Specifically, Forrester Research Says That Customer Service is ‘Poor’ at Blue Cross of Texas and Illinois, Blue Shield of California, CareFirst Blue Cross, Anthem, United Healthcare, Cigna and Aetna.

Hospital Billing Customer Services Is Bad Too.

Hospital Billing Complexity is So Troublesome to Patients, that 40% Say They Avoid Preventive Care and Screening Tests Just to Avoid the Billing Headache.

Healthcare Customer Service is Terrible Because Health Insurance Companies and Hospitals Do Not Need Good Billing Customer Service to Be Successful, As Demonstrated by High and Rising Health Insurance Stock Prices and Large and Growing Hospital System Revenue.

For Health Insurance Companies and Hospitals, Not Fixing Their Poor Customer Service May Be a Calculated Business Decision.

Implications: To Help Make Their Employees’ Lives Better, Employers May Need to 1) Hire a Healthcare Navigation Company or 2) Deliver More Care to Their Plan Members Outside of the Traditional Health Insurance and Hospital Systems… and Avoid the Terrible Customer Service All Together.

Disclaimer: Dr. Bricker is the Chief Medical Officer of Virtual Care Company First Stop Health and is the Former Co-Founder of Compass Professional Health Services.

Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: Private Equity Firms Are Making Partial Purchases of Physician Practices.

Older Doctors Sell Out to Private Equity

Private Equity Firms Are Making Partial Purchases of Physician Practices

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

***

The Deals Are Frequently Structured as Follows:

–The Private Equity Firm Offers an Up Front Lump Sum of Money and Administrative Services Such as Billing and Collections for the Practice.

–In Return, the Doctors in the Practice Agree to Have 30-40% of All Future Revenue Go to the Private Equity Firm.

The Up Front Lump Sum Can Be Equal to as Much as 10 – 20 Years of Income for a Physician.

The Older Doctors in the Practice Who Are Usually the Partners Frequently Take This Deal, Resulting in the Younger Partners Making Less Take-Home Pay.

Implication for Employers:

Private Equity Firms Create Larger Group Practices to Have Better Negotiating Leverage with Commercial Insurance Carriers and Obtain Higher Fee-for-Service Reimbursement.

Overall Healthcare Costs for Physician Services Go Up, While the Take-Home Pay for Doctors Goes Down… and the Private Equity Firm Keeps the Difference.

NOTE: The Older Doctors Who Are Paid the Lump Sum Are Still Required to Stay at the Practice for a Certain Number of Years After the Transaction.

YOUR THOUGHTS AND COMMENTS ARE APPRECIATED

***

DIY Textbooks: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2021/04/29/why-are-certified-medical-planner-textbooks-so-darn-popular/

THANK YOU

***

Are Today’s Doctors Desperate?

Emotions Rise with Healthcare Reform

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chief]

NOTE:  I penned this essay more than a decade ago.dem2

Managed care is a prospective payment method where medical care is delivered regardless of the quantity or frequency of service, for a fixed payment, in the aggregate. It is not traditional fee-for-service medicine or the individual personal care of the past, but is essentially utilitarian in nature and collective in intent. Will new-age healthcare reform be even more draconian?

Unhappy Physicians

There are many reasons why doctors are professionally and financially unhappy, some might even say desperate, because of managed care; not to mention the specter of healthcare reform from the Obama administration. For example:

  • A staggering medical student loan debt burden of $100,000-250,000 is not unusual for new practitioners. The federal Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) program reported that for the Year 2000, it squeezed significant repayment settlements from its Top 5 list of deadbeat doctor debtors. This included a $303,000 settlement from a New York dentist, $186,000 from a Florida osteopath, $158,000 from a New Jersey podiatrist, $128,000 from a Virginia podiatrist, and $120,000 from a Virginia dentist. The agency also excluded 303 practitioners from Medicare, Medicaid, and other federal healthcare programs and had their cases referred for nonpayment of debt.
  • Because of the flagging economy, medical school applications nationwide have risen. “Previously, there were a lot of different opportunities out there for young bright people”; according to Rachel Pentin-Maki; RN, MHA”; not so today. In fact, Physicians Practice Digest recently stated, “Medicine is fast becoming a job in which you work like a slave, eke out a middle class existence, and have patients, malpractice insurers, and payers questioning your motives.” Remarkably, the Cornell University School of Continuing Education has designed a program to give prospective medical school students a real-world peek, both good and bad.

The Ripple Effects of Managed Care and Reform

“Many people who are currently making a great effort and investment to become doctors may be heading for a role and a way of life that are fundamentally different from what they expect and desire,” according to Stephen Scheidt, MD, director of the $1,000 Cornell fee program; why?

  • Fewer fee-for-service patients and more discounted patients.
  • More paperwork and scrutiny of decisions with lost independence and morale.
  • Reputation equivalency (i.e., all doctors in the plan must be good), or commoditization (i.e., a doctor is a doctor is a doctor).
  • The provider is at risk for (a) utilization and acuity, (b) actuarial accuracy, (c) cost of delivering medical care, and (d) adverse patient selection.
  • Practice costs are increasing beyond the core rate of inflation.
  • Medicare reimbursements are continually cut.

Mad Obama

Early Opinions

Richard Corlin MD, opined back in 2002 that “these are circumstances that cannot continue because we are going to see medical groups disappearing.” Furthermore, he stated, “This is an emergency that lawmakers have to address.” Such cuts also stand to hurt physicians with private payers since commercial insurers often tie their reimbursement schedules to Medicare’s resources. “That’s the ripple effect here,” says Anders Gilberg, the Washington lobbyist for the Medical Group Management Associations (MGMA).

Assessment

And so, some desperate doctors are pursing these sources of relief, among many others:

  • A growing number of doctors are abandoning traditional medicine to start “boutique” practices that are restricted to patients who pay an annual retainer of $1,500 and up for preferred services and special attention. Franchises for the model are also available.
  • Regardless of location, the profession of medicine is no longer ego-enhancing or satisfying; some MDs retire early or leave the profession all together. Few recommend it, as a career anymore.

Assessment

To compound the situation, it is well known that doctors are notoriously poor investors and do not attend to their own personal financial well being, as they expertly minister to their patients’ physical illnesses.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Tell us what you think? Are you a desperate doctor? Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, be sure to subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos 

References:

  1. www.managedcaremagazine.com/archives/9809/9809/.qna_dickey.shtml
  2. www.hrsa.dhhs.gov/news-pa/heal.htm
  3. www.bhpr.hrsa.gov/dsa/sfag/health-professions/bk1prt4.htm
  4. Pamela L. Moore, “Can We All Just Get Along: Bridging the Generation Gap, Physicians Practice Digest (May/June 2001).

Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™8Comprehensive Financial Planning Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

Hospitals and Health Care Organizations

MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES, OPERATIONAL TECHNIQUES, TOOLS, TEMPLATES AND CASE STUDIES

TEXTBOOK REVIEWS:

Hospitals and Health Care Organizations is a must-read for any physician and other health care provider to understand the multiple, and increasingly complex, interlocking components of the U.S. health care delivery system, whether they are employed by a hospital system, or manage their own private practices.

The operational principles, methods, and examples in this book provide a framework applicable on both the large organizational and smaller private practice levels and will result in better patient care. Physicians today know they need to better understand business principles and this book by Dr. David E. Marcinko and Professor Hope Rachel Hetico provides an excellent framework and foundation to learn important principles all doctors need to know.
―Richard Berning, MD, Pediatric Cardiology

… Dr. David Edward Marcinko and Professor Hope Rachel Hetico bring their vast health care experience along with additional national experts to provide a health care model-based framework to allow health care professionals to utilize the checklists and templates to evaluate their own systems, recognize where the weak links in the system are, and, by applying the well-illustrated principles, improve the efficiency of the system without sacrificing quality patient care. … The health care delivery system is not an assembly line, but with persistence and time following the guidelines offered in this book, quality patient care can be delivered efficiently and affordably while maintaining the financial viability of institutions and practices.
―James Winston Phillips, MD, MBA, JD, LLM

Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors : Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™ book cover

ORDER HERE: https://www.amazon.com/Hospitals-Health-Care-Organizations-Operational-ebook/dp/B0091ICH30/ref=sr_1_8?dchild=1&keywords=david+marcinko&qid=1626110965&sr=8-8

ASSESSMENT: Your comments and thoughts are appreciated.

INVITATIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

CONTACT: Ann Miller RN MHA

MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Ph: 770-448-0769

Second Opinions: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

THANK YOU

***

ON THE ROAD AGAIN: Public Speaking, Opining and Assigning

Dr. David Edward Marcinko is Speaking Up

Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP® enjoys personal coaching and public speaking and gives as many talks each year as possible, at a variety of medical society and financial services conferences around the country and world.

These have included lectures and visiting professorships at major academic centers, keynote lectures for hospitals, economic seminars and health systems, keynote lectures at city and statewide financial coalitions, and annual keynote lectures for a variety of internal yearly meetings.

His talks tend to be engaging, iconoclastic, and humorous. His most popular presentations include a diverse variety of topics and typically include those in all iMBA, Inc’s textbooks, handbooks, white-papers and most topics covered on this blog.

***

Recognizing the Differences between Healthcare and Other ...

INVITATIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

CONTACT: Ann Miller RN MHA

MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Ph: 770-448-0769

Second Opinions: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

DIY Textbooks: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2021/04/29/why-are-certified-medical-planner-textbooks-so-darn-popular/

THANK YOU

***

My WEGO Health Awards Nomination

It’s official, Dr. David Marcinko, your advocacy is making a big impact!

Just Nominated

Congratulations on your 10th annual WEGO Health Awards nomination. Whether you’re a patient advocate, influencer or collaborator, we’re honored to recognize your contributions to the online health community.

We created the WEGO Health Awards as a way to celebrate and thank the patients and caregivers who support, educate, and inspire others. It’s now our 10th season and the patient leader community is stronger than ever. We could not be more proud to include you as a nominee.

You can expect to hear from us each week with updates and important announcements.

ASSESSMENT: Your comments are appreciated.

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-

CONTACT: Ann Miller RN MH

[Executive Director]

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: The “4 Ps” of [Medical] Marketing

THEIR Specific Meaning in Healthcare

Dallas 100: No. 6 Compass Professional Health Services ...

BY. DR. ERIC BRICKER MD

***

The 4 Ps of Marketing Have Specific Meaning in Healthcare:

Product: Must Have a 10X Better Value Proposition to Break Into a Market of Incumbents.

If the Product is for Providers, It Needs to Improve Top-Line Revenue–E.g. Robotic Surgery.

If the Product is for Payors, It Needs to Decrease Healthcare Costs–E.g. CDHPs

Price: Must Motivate the Channel to Sell the Product.

Placement: Where Customers Go to Buy Products–E.g. GPO or Broker/Benefit Consultant

Promotion: Outbound Marketing via Interruption with VALUABLE CONTENT and Inbound Marketing with VALUABLE Video, Audio, Written Content.

All 4 of These Ps Then Need to Be Applied to a Specific Market Segment… Not the Entire Market.

If Your Market is Everyone, It Is Essentially No One.

***

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.

CITE: https://www.amazon.com/Dictionary-Health-Insurance-Managed-Care/dp/0826149944/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1275315485&sr=1-4

MARCINKO ON MEDICAL MARKETING: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2019/03/28/crafting-a-medical-practice-marketing-plan/

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: Established Sales Strategies That Are Effective When Applied to Healthcare

HEALTHCARE SALES TECHNIQUES

***

Learn Established Sales Strategies That Are Effective When Applied to Healthcare:

1) Prospecting: The Strategy of Aaron Ross in Dividing Prospecting into Seeds, Nets and Spears Was Effective in Generating Leads at Compass Professional Health Services.

2) Pitching: The Miller-Heiman Strategy of Identifying Economic, Outcome and Technical Buyers Allows for Effective Pitching to a Buying Team.

3) Closing: The Model of ‘Fit-Risk-Price’ is Essential To Understanding How and When to Close a Sale.

Image result for eric bricker

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: Drs. Vivian Lee, Marty Makary, Atul Gawande and Robert Pearl Blame Physician Culture for the Poor State of US Healthcare

At Least in Part ACCORDING TO THESE BOOKS

Texas CEO Magazine Eric Bricker 1 - SO 14 - Texas CEO Magazine

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

Understandably, Many Doctors Take Issue with This Accusation and Say They Treat Their Patients with Integrity and Accountability. Both Statements May Be TRUE … How is That Possible?

Because of Bad Apples.’

While the Majority of Physicians May Put Their Patients First, There Are a Minority of Physicians that Put Money, Power, Prestige and Promotions Ahead of Patients. It’s These Bad Apples That Ruin Physician Culture.

Problem: Fee-for-Service Rewards Bad Apple Physicians, While Paying the High-Integrity Doctors as Well.

Assessment: If Doctors Want to Keep Fee-for-Service, Then the Bad Apples Must Be Reduced Through 1) Increased Transparency, 2) Greater Doctor Self-Regulation, 3) More Federal Oversight and 4) Increased Employer Investigation.

Many of the Books by Drs. Vivian Lee, Marty Makary, Atul Gawande and Robert Pearl Blame Physician Culture in Part for the Poor State of US Healthcare

Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

What is a MEME Stock?

MEME ME!

BY PROFESSOR DR. DAVID EDWARD MARCINKO MBA Certified Medical Planner®
CMP logo

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

A “MEME” stock isn’t as easily defined as a growth or value stock, so to give it a definitive categorization would be inappropriate. Nor would actually categorizing it alongside growth and value stocks. They won’t be found in textbooks anytime soon, but to overlook their impact could potentially be an expensive oversight.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource/Title/0826102549

Stonks Meme, Explained: What Can It Teach You About Actual ...

READ: https://blog.mywallst.com/what-is-a-meme-stock/#:~:text=A%20meme%20stock%20isn%E2%80%99t%20as%20easily%20defined%20as,their%20impact%20could%20potentially%20be%20an%20expensive%20oversight.

DIY Textbooks: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2021/04/29/why-are-certified-medical-planner-textbooks-so-darn-popular/

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-

CONTACT: Ann Miller RN MH

[Executive Director]

MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

***

MEDICAL: Artificial Intelligence in EHRs

ELECTRIC HEALTH RECORDS

By White Hat Anonymous

Epic Systems, the country’s leading e-health record company, says an algorithm it developed can accurately flag sepsis in patients 76% of the time. The life-threatening disease, which arises from infections, is a major concern for hospitals: One-third of patients who die in hospitals have sepsis, per the CDC. 

  • Generally, the earlier sepsis is diagnosed and treated, the better a patient’s chances of survival—and hundreds of hospitals use Epic Systems’s sepsis prediction model, The Verge reports. 

The problem: According to a study published this week in JAMA Internal Medicine, Epic Systems may have gotten the success rate wrong: The model is only correct 63% of the time—“substantially worse than the performance reported by its developer,” the researchers wrote. 

  • Part of the issue can be traced to the algorithm’s development, Stat News reports. It was trained to flag when doctors would submit bills for sepsis treatment—which doesn’t always line up with patients’ first signs of symptoms. 
  • “It’s essentially trying to predict what physicians are already doing,” Dr. Karandeep Singh, study author.

See the source image

When reached for comment, Epic Systems told us the researchers’ hypothetical scenario lacked “the required validation, analysis, and tuning that organizations need to do before deployment,” adding that the JAMA study’s findings differed from other research. 

CITE: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/foreword-mata.pdf

ORDER: https://www.amazon.com/Dictionary-Health-Information-Technology-Security/dp/0826149952/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1254413315&sr=1-5

Bottom line: Algorithms can augment healthcare, but the life-or-death nature of their use requires serious due diligence.

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated

THANK YOU

***

“HOSPITALS AND HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATIONS”

INSTITUTIONAL Foreword WITH Comprehensive Review AND FREE PREVIEW

PODCAST: The Income and Substitution Effects in Healthcare Finance

Important Economic Concepts to UNDERSTAND

Texas CEO Magazine 2016 Economic Forecast: Dallas - Texas ...

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

One of Their Applications Pertains to the Impact on Time Spent Working Vs. Time Spend on Leisure if a Healthcare Worker’s Pay is Changed.

DEFINITION: The INCOME EFFECT States That If a Worker’s Pay is Decreased, They Will Work More Hours to Maintain the Same Income. Conversely, If a Worker’s Pay is Increased, They Will Work Fewer Hours and Still Maintain the Same Income.

Citation: https://www.r2library.com/Resource/Title/0826102549

A Real-World Example of the Income Effect is When Medicare Decreased Reimbursement for Echocardiograms and as a Result, Decreased Cardiologists’ Pay. Accordingly, Cardiology Practices Increased the Number of Patients They Saw Per Day to Make Up for the Lost Pay and Maintain Their Income.

The SUBSTITUTION EFFECT States That Work and Leisure Time Have OPPORTUNITY COSTS for Each Other.

If a Worker’s Pay Goes Up, then the Opportunity Cost for Leisure (i.e. Not Working) Also Goes Up and the Worker Will Work MORE, Not LESS. Conversely, If a Worker’s Pay Goes Down, then the Opportunity Cost for Leisure Goes Down and the Worker Will Work LESS, Not MORE.

Whether the Income or Substitution Effect Dominates Depends on the Person and the Situation.

THE POINT: In the World of Fee-for-Service Reimbursement, a Decrease in Doctor Pay Per Service May Result in Doctors Providing More Services In Order to Maintain Their Income… Nullifying Any Cost-Savings.

PODCAST: The Income and Substitution Effects Are Important Economic Concepts to Understand in Healthcare Finance.

Your thoughts appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

ME-P Speaking Invitations

Dr. David E. Marcinko is at your Service

thumbnail_IMG_1663.edit1

Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP® enjoys personal coaching and public speaking and gives as many talks each year as possible, at a variety of medical society and financial services conferences around the country and world.

These have included lectures and visiting professorships at major academic centers, keynote lectures for hospitals, economic seminars and health systems, keynote lectures at city and statewide financial coalitions, and annual keynote lectures for a variety of internal yearly meetings.

His talks tend to be engaging, iconoclastic, and humorous. His most popular presentations include a diverse variety of topics and typically include those in all iMBA, Inc’s textbooks, handbooks, white-papers and most topics covered on this blog.

CONTACT: Ann Miller RN MHA

MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Ph: 770-448-0769

Abbreviated Topic List: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/imba-inc-firm-services.pdf

Second Opinions: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

DIY Textbooks: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2021/04/29/why-are-certified-medical-planner-textbooks-so-darn-popular/

THANK YOU

***

HOSPITAL EMPLOYER PROVIDED TRANSPORTATION BENEFITS

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP©

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

CMP logo

COST COMPARISONS

Example 1: Dr. Kurt purchases an automobile for $15,000.

His hospital business use is 80% and he drives 20,000 total miles per year.  Operating costs for the year, including gasoline, oil, insurance, maintenance, repairs, and license fees, are $4,000. If Kurt owns the car for five years, ownership will cost $35,000 ($4,000 x 5 = $20,000, $20,000 + $15,000 = $35,000), or $7,000 per year. For, each personal use mile costs $1.75 (100% -80% = 20%, 20% x 20,000 miles = 4,000 miles, $7,000/4,000 miles = $1.75). Kurt’s employer reimburses him 34.5 cents per mile for the business-related miles. As a result, the business use of the car is only partially reimbursed (16,000 business miles x 34.5 cents = $5,520).  

However, the business usage costs Kurt $5,600(80% of $7,000). Kurt subsidizes the employer 9.25 cents per mile ($7,000 – $5,520 = $1,480, $1,480 /16,000 = 9.25 cents). Kurt’s total cost of ownership is $1.84 per mile, or $36,850 ($1.88 x 20,000 personal miles over the five-year life).

1

Example 2: Dr. Ben uses a hospital employer-provided vehicle 4,000 miles per year in 2003.

He reimburses the employer 34.5 cents per mile. His cost for five years is $6,900 (5y x 4,000 = 20,000 miles, 20,000 miles x 34.5 = $6,900).

Beginning on January 1st 2013, the standard mileage rates for the use of a car (also vans, pickups or panel trucks) were:

  • 56.5 cents per mile for business miles driven
  • 24 cents per mile driven for medical or moving purposes
  • 14 cents per mile driven in service of charitable organizations

Note the dramatic contrast, from the employee’s perspective, between the above two examples, of the company reimbursing the employee for business use of his personal car, versus the employee reimbursing the company for personal use of the vehicle.

The business, medical, and moving expense rates decrease one-half cent from the 2013 rates.  The charitable rate is based on statute.

Source: http://www.irs.gov

2

ASSESSMENT: Your updated thoughts in modernity are appreciated.

ORDER Textbook: https://www.amazon.com/Comprehensive-Financial-Planning-Strategies-Advisors/dp/1482240289/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1418580820&sr=8-1&keywords=david+marcinko

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: How New Technologies Are Predictably Spread and How it Applies to Healthcare

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

[Book Review]

***

The Technology Adoption Lifecycle Was Explained in Geoffrey Moore’s Famous Book ‘Crossing the Chasm.

If You Are a Healthcare Entrepreneur or Innovator Your MUST Understand and Apply the Technology Adoption Lifecycle.

It States that Disruptive Innovation (i.e. Innovations that Require Behavior Change) Is Not Evenly Adopted Across a Population.

Rather, People Segment Themselves into Sub-Groups That Adopt the New Innovation Differently. To Whit:

**************

Early Adopters Love Tinker and Like New Innovations Just Because They Are New. Early Adopters Tend to Not Be Price-Sensitive.

Pragmatists Have a Specific Problem that the New Innovation Will Solve and If They See Other People Using It, They Will Use It Too. Pragmatists Are Somewhat Price-Sensitive.

Conservatives Would Rather Not Adopt the New Innovation, but if it is Already Built-in to Something They Already Buy, Then They Will Be More Likely to Use It. Conservatives are Very Price Sensitive.

Skeptics Will Never Adopt the New Innovation.

**************

To Spread a New Innovation, One Must Cross the Chasm Between the Early Adopters and Pragmatists With a ‘Niche‘ and ‘Bowling Pin‘ Strategy.

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

New “MEDICAL SPECIALTIES” 2.0

BY DR. DAVID E. MARCINKO MBA CMP®

Image result for dasvid marcinko
CMP logo

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

GLOSSARY OF PRACTITIONER TERMS?

Each generation of doctors and medical professionals is extraordinarily complex, bringing various skills, expertise and expectations to the modern medical work environment. Determining the best method to unite such diverse thinking is one of the many challenges faced by physician executives and healthcare leaders today.

And, as linguistic evolution occurs, the nomenclature of hospitalist was followed by that of intensivist, proceduralist and nocturnalist, etc [www.MedInnovationBlog.com and Personal communication Richard L. Reece MD].

Is it any wonder that many medical leaders and executive in the Baby Boomer generation find themselves at a loss? The days of functional leadership are gone and suddenly, no one cares about the expertise of the Baby Boomers or how they climbed the corporate ladder, in medicine or elsewhere. Leadership in the new era is no longer about command-control or dictating with intense focus on the bottom line; it is about collaboration, empowerment and communication. And, it is not about titles and nomenclature; it is about lifestyle choice.

What else drives these new-wave specialists?

The answer, of course, is the next-generation of physicians and their emerging new medical business and practice models, which include:

  • “Ambulists” are doctors that travel locally, have no, or only a sparse physical office presence of their own. They sporadically provide services that are additive to traditional practice models [i.e., endocrinologist in a large family medical office with many diabetics]. 
  • “In-Situ” physicians regularly provide services that are complimentary to existing traditional practice models [i.e., dentists or podiatrists in a medical practice].
  • “Laborists” are obstetricians that do not wish to be on-call. First begun in Cape Cod and other Massachusetts hospitals, such obstetricians work regular shifts for the sole purpose of delivering babies.
  • “Locum Tenens” doctors travel around the country as itinerants [i.e., cruise ships] as temporary substitutes for another the same specialty.
  • “Officists” remain in their own physical practice, and rarely see patients in the hospital, nursing home, patient home, out-patient facility, etc.
  • Finally, “dayhawk physicians” mimic the “nighthawk physician” model where radiologists in remote locations read films in the middle of the night as cash-strapped hospitals often find it cheaper to outsource with better services and more timely interpretations in many cases.

Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: Soap-Box Opera of Healthcare Reform?

By Carolyn McClanahan MD CFP

Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

Comprehensive Financial Planning Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

ORDER: https://www.routledge.com/Comprehensive-Financial-Planning-Strategies-for-Doctors-and-Advisors-Best/Marcinko-Hetico/p/book/9781482240283

***

HUMANITARIAN WISDOM IN PATIENT CARE AS AN ETHICAL AND MORAL IMPERATIVE!

AND … RISK MANAGEMENT TOOL?

7f4a80b3-c6c3-49b5-9cdd-9f8e116683cd-original

BY DR. DAVID EDWARD MARCINKIO MBA CMP®

CMP logo

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

To start, let us all recall the Canadian physician Sir William Osler MD, one of the founders of Johns Hopkins Hospital in my hometown of Baltimore Maryland, and where I played stickball in the parking lot as a kid. He left a sizeable body of wisdom that has guided many physicians in the practice of medicine. So, allow me to share with you some of that accumulated wisdom and the quotes that have served me well over the years.

From Dr. Osler, I learned the art of putting myself in the patient’s shoes. “The motto of each of you as you undertake the examination and treatment of a case should be ‘put yourself in his place.’ Realize, so far as you can, the mental state of the patient, enter into his feelings.” Osler further stresses that we should “scan gently (the patient’s) faults” and offer the “kindly word, the cheerful greeting, the sympathetic look.”1

“In some of us, the ceaseless panorama of suffering tends to dull that fine edge of sympathy with which we started,” writes Osler in his famous essay “Aequanimitas.”2 “Against this benumbing influence, we physicians and nurses, the immediate agents of the Trust, have but one enduring corrective — the practice towards patients of the Golden Rule of Humanity as announced by Confucius: ‘What you do not like when done to yourself, do not do to others.’”

Medicine can be both art and science as many physicians have discovered. As Osler tells us, “Errors in judgment must occur in the practice of an art which consists largely of balancing probabilities.”2 Osler notes that “Medicine is a science of uncertainty and an art of probability” and also weighs in with the idea that “The practice of medicine is an art, based on science.”3,4

Osler emphasized that excellence in medicine is not an inheritance and is more fully realized with the seasoning of experience. “The art of the practice of medicine is to be learned only by experience,” says Osler. “Learn to see, learn to hear, learn to feel, learn to smell, and know that by practice alone can you become expert.”5

Finally, some timeless wisdom on patient care came from Osler in an address to St. Mary’s Hospital Medical School in London in 1907: “Gain the confidence of a patient and inspire him with hope, and the battle is half won.”6

***

0

***

Osler has also imparted plenty of advice on the business of medicine. In “Aequanimitas,” Osler says there are only two types of doctors: “those who practice with their brains, and those who practice with their tongues.”7

In a valedictory address to medical school graduates at McGill University, Osler suggested treating money as a side consideration in a medical career.8 “You have of course entered the profession of medicine with a view of obtaining a livelihood; but in dealing with your patients let this always be a secondary consideration.”

“You are in this profession as a calling, not as a business: as a calling which exacts from you at every turn self-sacrifice, devotion, love and tenderness to your fellow man,” explains Osler in the address to St. Mary’s Hospital Medical School.6 “Once you get down to a purely business level, your influence is gone and the true light of your life is dimmed. You must work in the missionary spirit, with a breadth of charity that raises you far above the petty jealousies of life.”

It is not easy for doctors to combine a passion for patient care, a knowledge of science and the maintenance of business, according to Osler in the British Medical Journal.9 “In the three great professions, the lawyer has to consider only his head and pocket, the parson the head and heart, while with us the head, heart, and pocket are all engaged.”

While some aspects of practice may fall short or be devoid of appropriate financial remuneration, the giving of one’s time, expertise and experience in improving patient outcomes and the quality of their lives may be the greatest gift. “The ‘good debts’ of practice, as I prefer to call them … amount to a generous sum by the end of each year,” says Osler.9

And so, as you practice medicine and reflect on your career, always remember the words and wisdom of Dr. William Osler, and keep patient welfare as your first priority.

References

1. Penfield W. Neurology in Canada and the Osler centennial. Can Med Assoc J. 1949; 61(1): 69-73

2. Osler W. Aequanimitas. Chapter 9, P. Blakiston’s Son and Co., Philadelphia, 1925, p. 159

3. Bean WB. William Osler: Aphorisms, CC Thomas, Springfield, IL, p. 129.

4. Osler W. Aequanimitas. Chapter 3, P. Blakiston’s Son and Co., Philadelphia, 1925, p. 34

5. Thayer WS. Osler the teacher. In: Osler and Other Papers. Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore, 1931, p. 1.

6. Osler W. The reserves of life. St. Mary’s Hosp Gaz. 1907;13 (1):95-8.

7. Osler W. Aequanimitas. Chapter 7, P. Blakiston’s Son and Co., Philadelphia, 1925, p. 124

8. Osler W. Valedictory address to the graduates in medicine and surgery, McGill University. Can Med Surg J. 1874; 3:433-42.

9. Osler W. Remarks on organization in the profession. Brit Med J. 1911; 1(2614):237-9.

10. Jacobs. AM: PMNews, April, 2015.

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors : Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™ book cover

ODER TEXTBOOK: https://www.routledge.com/Risk-Management-Liability-Insurance-and-Asset-Protection-Strategies-for/Marcinko-Hetico/p/book/9781498725989

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-

THANK YOU

***

COVID-19 Financial Resources for Physicians

Bhagwan Satiani, MD, MBA, DFSVS, FACHE, FACS

Todd A. Zigrang, MBA, MHA, FACHE, CVA, ASA

Jessica L. Bailey-Wheaton, JD

ABSTRACT

The appropriate focus in managing the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States has been addressing access and delivery of care to the population affected by the outbreak. All sectors of the U.S. economy have been significantly affected,including physicians. Physician groups of all specialties and sizes have experienced the financial effects of the pandemic.Hospitals have received billions of dollars to support and enable them to manage emergencies and cover the costs of the disruption.

However, many vascular surgeons are under great financial pressure because of the postponement of all non-emergency procedures. The federal government has announced a myriad of programs in the form of grants and loans to reimburse physicians for some of their expenses and loss of revenue. It is more than likely that unless the public health emergency subsides significantly, many practices will experience dire consequences without additional financial assistance.

The authors have attempted to provide a concise listing of such programs and resources available to assist vascular surgeons who are small businesses in accessing these opportunities.

Health Capital Consultants - Healthcare Valuation

WHITE PAPER: https://www.healthcapital.com/researchmaterialdocuments/publishedarticles/Journal%20of%20Vascular%20Surgery%205.8.20.pdf

Your comments are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

ORDER BOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1448163039&sr=8-9&keywords=david+marcinko

****

NHICs = Prepaid Preventative and Maintenance Health Care Networks

Emerging New MEDICAL BUSINESS Models 2.0

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP®

CMP logo

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

Many folks feels that private preventative medical contracts may be one possible solution for those Americans going without healthcare; especially the young and healthy. Generally, and generically, they have a moniker like the “No Health Insurance Club”; or similar

Why?

Some pundits are leaning toward universal healthcare, or Medicare-4-All, which seems too socialized for others. Yet, private insurers continue to increase premiums, which prices healthcare out of reach for the average American. Employers can no longer float the cost of insurance so they pass it on to their employees. Patients aren’t the only ones being affected by the current state of healthcare. More and more doctors are going out of business and hospitals are cutting back due to escalating costs and payment defaults.

So, current remedies to this dilemma include major medical insurance policies for catastrophic events with high-deductibles to keep monthly premiums down, Medicaid, mini retail-clinics at grocery stores/pharmacies, and emergency room visits for common illnesses; as well as the PP-ACA.

Medical Maintenance

But, preventative healthcare and medical maintenance is not typically addressed. More than 90 percent of health related issues can be taken care of with preventative care and maintenance but only a small percentage of Americans currently enjoy the benefit of preventative healthcare. Healthcare economists are rethinking healthcare by offering an affordable alternative to traditional insurance options. NHICs, connect patients with participating board certified physicians that will treat and care for preventative healthcare needs for a one-time prepaid annual membership fee.

In this NHIC model:

  • Patients make a one-time annual payment that is typically less than a one-month premium with traditional insurance.
  • Patients receive up to 12 office visits per year that also include immunizations, $10 or less in-office prescriptions, and additional services including blood tests.
  • No deductible, no co-pays, no premiums.
  • No surprise bills to patients.
  • Viable alternative to COBRA for employees disengaged from work.
  • Low cost option for the self-employed.
Yakima DentiFlex Membership Club | Your Dentist in Yakima, WA

The Doctors

What’s in it for the doctors? How about no insurance clerks, no need to snail mail medical insurance claims or use expensive electronic claims submission clearinghouse services, no bad debts or bad expense write-offs, no ARs; and fast cash.

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are comments are appreciated.

Product Details

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1448163039&sr=8-9&keywords=david+marcinko

SECOND OPINIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

PHYSICIAN BRANDING: Post Corona Virus Pandemic

SELF-BRANDING IN THE MODERN ERA

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP©

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

CMP logo

In 1987 the magazine Fast Company published an article authored by Tom Peters entitled “The Brand Called You.” Although some individuals may shy away from the concept of self-branding in actuality, many of the online social network sites such as Facebook become media by which we in fact brand ourselves.

In his article, Peter’s stated. “Regardless of position, regardless of the business we happen to be in, all of us need to understand the importance of branding. We are CEOs of their own companies: Me Inc. to be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called you.”

As a medical practitioner how do you differentiate yourself from others in your specialty and why should a new patient choose your practice above those of the others in the field?

Branding is about finding your big idea and building your identity and game plan around it. The bottom line: if you can’t explain who you are, and the value you bring to your practice in a short sentence or two, you have work to do.

According to Catherine Kaputa, a personal coach she suggests that there are the objective things: your credentials, the schools you went to, your years of experience, and your skill set, which represent what she refers to as hard power. Then there’s soft power: your image and reputation, your visibility in the community, your network of contacts, supporters and mentors. In today’s competitive marketplace, soft power plays a vital role in attracting people to you and your practice.

Standing Out

Peters suggests that everyone has a chance to stand out. Everyone has a chance to learn, improve, and build up their skills. Everyone has a chance to be a brand worthy of remark. Corporations spend millions of dollars creating and maintaining their distinct brand.

The Olympic Rings are representative of a brand which the International Olympic Committee guards zealously. Professional services firms such as McKinsey, foster self-branding among their employees. Major corporations have as employees those individuals who are smart, motivated and talented. Self-branding allows the employees to differentiate themselves from their peers. For one to engage in self-branding is first necessary to ask the question,

What is it that my practice does that makes it different?”

You can begin by identifying the qualities or characteristics that make you distinctive from your competitors-or your colleagues.

What have you done lately-this week-to make yourself stand out? What would your colleagues say is your greatest and clearest strength?

What would they say is your most noteworthy personal trait? As a practitioner does your customer get dependable, reliable service that meets his or her strategic needs?

In addition, ask yourself: “what do I do that adds remarkable, measurable, distinguished distinctive value.”

Branding For A Medical Practice & It's Importance ...

Business Cards

While we are on the topic of mass media look at your business card and check to see if it has a distinctive logo on it. Keep in mind that packaging counts.

Getting and using power, intelligently, responsibly, and powerfully are essential skills for growing your brand. One of the things that attract us to certain brands is the power they project. Power, is largely a matter of perception. If you want people to see you as a powerful brand, act like a credible leader.

Another technique advocated by Peters is developing loyalty among your patients. In addition, you yourself need to be loyal to your colleagues, your staff, patients and to yourself.

Another way in which you can begin to promote yourself is, with a personal visibility campaign; getting yourself on a panel discussion with signing up to make a presentation at a workshop. If you are a medical writer, try writing about the corona pandemic, or contributing a column on a regular basis to your local newspaper. Community newspapers and professional newsletters are always seeking articles to fill the space. Not only does it give you the opportunity to express yourself it also is an excellent means to expose your practice and your capabilities to a mass audience.

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are comments are appreciated.

Product Details

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1448163039&sr=8-9&keywords=david+marcinko

SECOND OPINIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

PODCAST: Is Doctor Culture Uncaring?

Dr. Robert Pearl’s Book from Moral Injury to Fee-for-Service … and More

Bricker - This Week Health

By Eric Bricker MD

Dr. Robert Pearl Was the CEO of the Permanente Medical Group from 1999 to 2017. Permanente is the Physician Group for all of Kaiser Permanente. It is the Largest Physician Group in America with 10,000 Doctors, 38,000 Staff and 5 Million Members.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Normally, book reviews are boring but this presentation from colleague Eric Bricker MD is well worth a watch.

PODCAST LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omPqBq6_f-E

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

The CORPORATE PRACTICE of Medicine?

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP®

CMP logo

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

CORPORATE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE (CPM) LAWS

OK – I admit that I am not an attorney. But, approximately half of states in the U.S. have made it unlawful for practicing physicians to be employees of corporations. This ban on the corporate practice of medicine (CPM) is intended to keep medical professionals independent and free from financial pressures and influence.

Most states have made exceptions allowing physicians to become employees of not-for-profit organizations and sometimes hospitals. States such as California, Iowa, and Texas, have declined to allow hospitals to employ physicians, although even those states have special exceptions. Iowa hospitals may employ pathologists and radiologists, and Texas public hospitals and California teaching hospitals may employ physicians. Ohio has no ban on the corporate practice of medicine.

ASSESSMENT: Anyone can own a physician practice in Ohio.

QUERY: So, who does the aggrieved patient sue?

YOUR THOUGHTS ARE APPRECIATED

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.routledge.com/Risk-Management-Liability-Insurance-and-Asset-Protection-Strategies-for/Marcinko-Hetico/p/book/9781498725989

Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

NASEM Recommends a Primary Care Physician to Every American

By HEALTH CAPITAL CONSULTANTS, LLC


On May 4, 2021, the National Academies for Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) released a major report expressing a dire need to improve primary care in the U.S. 

Since January 2020, an extensive committee within NASEM has worked to develop an implementation plan that will reopen the discussion of improving primary care as a means to improving overall health and achieving health equity.

(Read more…)

Primary Care|Global Events|U.S.A|Europe|Middle East|Asia ...

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1287563112&sr=1-9

Product Details
Product Details

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Financial-Management-Strategies-Healthcare-Organizations/dp/1466558733/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1380743521&sr=8-3&keywords=david+marcinko

THANK YOU

***

The Business of Medical Practice [3rd. edition]

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

CMP logo

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1448163039&sr=8-9&keywords=david+marcinko

SECOND OPINIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

Health Dictionary Series of Administrative Terms

CMP logo

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

To keep up with the ever-changing healthcare industrial complex, we must learn new definitions and re-learn old terminology in order to correctly apply it to practice. By aggregating the most up-to-date abbreviations, acronyms, definitions and terms, the Health Dictionary Series offers a wealth of information to help understand the ever-changing terms-of-art in healthcare today.

Each 10,000 item handbook is essential for doctors, nurses, benefits managers, financial advisors/planners, and insurance agents, CPAs, and administrators; as well as graduate and under graduate students and professors. Our goal to for each dictionary to be designated as a Doody’s Core Title.

Dictionary of Health Insurance and Managed Care

With more than 10,000 definitions, 4,000 abbreviations and acronyms, and a 3,000 item oeuvre of resources, readings, and nomenclature derivatives, this dictionary covers the Medicare, managed care and Medicaid, private insurance, Veteran’s Administration and PP-ACA language of the entire health and long-term care insurance sector.

Product Details
Product Details
Product Details

Dictionary of Health Economics and Finance

Health economics and finance is an integral component of the health care industrial complex. Its language is a diverse and broad-based concept covering many other industries: accounting, mathematics, the actuarial sciences, stochastics and statistics, salary reimbursements, physician payments, compensation and forecasting are all commingled arenas.

Product Details
Product Details
Product Details

Dictionary of Health Information Technology Security

There is a myth that all healthcare stakeholders understand the meaning of information technology jargon. In truth, the vernacular of contemporary systems is unique, and often misused or misunderstood. Moreover, emerging Heath Information Technology (HIT) thru the HITECG initiatives; in the guise of terms, definitions, acronyms, abbreviations and standards; often puts the non-expert in a position of maximum uncertainty and minimum productivity.

Product Details
Product Details
Product Details

FOREWORDS

[Mike Stahl PhD MBA] *** [Foreword Dr.Mata MD CIS] *** [Dr. Getzen PhD] 

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

Congress Ignores Doctor Shortage?

By Bonner R Cohen

Congress bypassed an opportunity in recently enacted COVID-19 relief bills to significantly increase the number of Medicare-funded residency positions at hospitals.

In the last package, which amounted to $1.4 trillion in government spending and was signed by President Trump on December 31, lawmakers set aside $120 million for 1,000 new physician training slots over the next five years. There was a more ambitious bill on the table that would have added 15,000 residencies over the next five years, but it failed to make it into the giant year-end coronavirus relief package.

“The increase of 1,000 slots is a good first step but a far cry from what is needed,” said David Balat, director of the Right on Health initiative at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

See the source image

READ: https://heartlanddailynews.com/2021/02/congress-ignores-doctor-shortage/

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

Hospitals and Healthcare Organizations

SPONSOR: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

CMP logo

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Hospitals-Healthcare-Organizations-Management-Operational/dp/1439879907/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1334193619&sr=1-4

SECOND OPINIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: How Financial Advisors Can Achieve Success in the Medical Marketplace 2016-2021 and Beyond!

Vicki Rackner MD --- Selling to Doctors - Experts

By Vicki Rackner MD

PODCAST LINK: https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=vicki+rackner&docid=608036072061497500&mid=08727E5CFAC1C7A88A5A08727E5CFAC1C7A88A5A&view=detail&FORM=VIRE

***

BEST PRACTICES: https://www.targetingdoctors.com/blog/adopt-physicians-best-practices

MD PANDEMIC CLIENTS: https://www.targetingdoctors.com/

E-MAIL MARKETING: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2014/11/30/12-email-marketing-tips-for-mds-and-fas/

SELLING DOCTORS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2015/05/06/doctors-rethink-selling/

EDITOR’S NOTE: I first met Vicki Rackner MD FACS a few years ago. day. She is the founder of Thriving Doctors.  Vicki calls on her personal experience as a practicing surgeon, clinical faculty member at the University of Washington School of Medicine and serial entrepreneur, to help financial advisors thrive. We appreciate her contributions to the ME-P.

-Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP©

[Certified Medical Planner©]

***

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are welcomed.

Enter the CMPs

cmp

THANK YOU

***

The CERTIFIED MEDICAL PLANNER® Online Designation Program is Now Automated

[By Staff Reporters]

The concept of a self-taught and student motivated, but automated outcomes driven classroom may seem like a nightmare scenario for those who are not comfortable with computers.

Now everyone can breathe a sigh of relief, because the Institute of Medical Business Advisors just launched an “automated” final examination review protocol that requires no programming skill whatsoever.

Enter the CMPs

cmp

In fact, everything is designed to be very simple and easy to use. Once a student’s examination “blue-book” is received, computerized “robotic reviewers” correct student assignments and quarterly test answers. This automated examination model lets the robots correct tests and exams, while the students concentrate on guided self-learning.

SplitShire-

http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

Assessment

According to Eugene Schmuckler PhD MBA MEd, Dean of the CERTIFIED MEDICAL PLANNER® professional designation and certification program,

“This option allows the modern adult-learner save both time and money as s/he progresses toward the ultimate goal of board certification as a CMP® mark holder.”

The trend is growing and iMBA, Inc., is leading the way.

imba inc

THANK YOU

TEXTBOOK LINK: https://www.amazon.com/Comprehensive-Financial-Planning-Strategies-Advisors/dp/1482240289/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1418580820&sr=8-1&keywords=david+marcinko

***

Non-Traditional Physician Compensation Models

Creative Compensation Models

"Advisors Only" | The Leading Business Education Network ...

BY DR. DAVID EDWARD MARCINKO MBA CMP®

A Review of Some Newer Compensation Models

http://www.CERTIFIEDMEDICALPLANNER.org

CMP logo

Today, whether independent or employed, physicians can pursue several creative compensation models, other than fee-for service reimbursement based on Current Procedural Terminology [CPT®] codes, not popular a few decade ago:

  • Pay-for-Performance Initiatives [P4P]: According to Mark Fendrick, MD and Michael E. Chernew, PhD, instead of the one size fits all approach of traditional health insurance, a “clinically-sensitive” cost-sharing system that supports co-payments related to evidence-based value for targeted patients is emerging. In 2014, for example, there were a number of changes to Medicare’s pay-for-performance programs [personal communication]. These value-based payment modifiers will show up in physicians’ paychecks in few years, and will be expanded to practices with 10 or more eligible professionals. The program, mandated by the Affordable Care Act, assesses a provider’s quality of care and costs, and increases Medicare payments for good performers and decreases them for bad ones. And, doctor performance will be reflected in adjustments to 2016 payments. As much as 2% of Medicare payments will be at risk in 2021 based on physician performance in 2019. It was only 1% for 2015, which was based on doctors’ 2013 performance.
  • Physician Quality Reporting Initiative Model.  The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services [CMS] paid out more than $40 million in monetary incentives to medical providers who reported data on quality of care delivered between July 2020 and December 2020; as part of its PQRI. Under the PQRI, healthcare providers who participated received bonuses of 1.5 percent of their total CMS payments during the reporting period.
  • Direct Reimbursement Payment Model:  A Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) is a tool which is used to provide direct reimbursement by an employer for qualified medical expenses.  The HRA is an employer-established benefit plan, and contributions to the plan may only be made by the employer.  The HRA can be used in conjunction with any insurance plan, including a high-deductible plan. Qualified reimbursements made under the HRA are tax-deductible for the employer, and the payments are not counted as income for the employee.  Any balance in an HRA can generally be carried over to the next year.  This plan allows for flexibility and tailored to meet the particular needs of both employers and employees in a tax-advantaged manner.  From the physician’s perspective, increasing use of HRAs poses new challenges.  Payment for services in the medical office may be required of the patient/employee before reimbursement from the employer occurs.  These extra steps can easily result in delayed payment or non-payment to medical providers who are not prepared to work with this model of reimbursement.  The provisions for this model are outlined in IRS publication 969, http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p969.pdf.
  • Concierge Practice Model:  The concept of concierge medicine (CM), also known as retainer medicine, first emerged in Seattle, Washington in the 1990’s. With CM, the physician charges an annual retainer fee to patients.  The fee usually ranges from $1,000 to $20,000 per year, and the number of patients in a practice is usually limited to a few hundred.  In return, patients receive increased levels of access and personalized care. This often includes same day appointments, extended visit times, house calls, and 24/7 access to the physician by pager and cell phone. An annual executive physical is often included, as well as an increased emphasis on preventive care.  Many physicians choosing this type of practice model do so for lifestyle and control reasons, although the average income for a successful CM primary care physician is higher than that of a typical primary care physician. .
  • Global Healthcare Model: American businesses are extending their cost-cutting initiatives to include offshore employee medical benefits, and facilities like the Bumrungrad Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand (cosmetic surgery), the Apollo Hospital in New Delhi, India (cardiac and orthopedic surgery) are premier examples for surgical care. Both are internationally recognized institutions that resemble five-star hotels equipped with the latest medical technology. Countries such as Finland, England and Canada are also catering to the English-speaking crowd, while dentistry is especially popular in Mexico and Costa Rica. Although this is still considered “medical tourism,” Mercer Health and Benefits was recently retained by three Fortune 500 companies interested in contracting with offshore hospitals and The Joint Commission [TJC] has accredited 88 foreign hospitals through a joint international commission. To be sure, when India can discount costs up to 80%, the effects on domestic hospital reimbursement and physician compensation may be assumed to increase downward compensation pressures.
  • Locum Tenens Practitioner Model: Locum Tenens (LT) as an alternative to full-time employment is enjoying a comeback for most specialties. Some younger physicians enjoy the travel, while mature physicians like to practice at their leisure. Employment factors to consider include: firm reputation, malpractice insurance, credentialing, travel and relocation expenses (which are negotiable). However, a LT firm typically will not cover taxes [NALTO.org and http://www.studentdoc.com/locum-tenens.html%5D

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

Physician Recruitment and Executive Search Firms

Facts about Physician Recruiters and Executive Search Firms

May Launches the Busy Season

By Dr. David E. Marcinko MBA CMP®

CMP logo

Sponsored: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

1) If you are job hunting, you should send your resume to recruiters

Different recruiters know about different positions. They do not usually know about the same ones. This is particularly true with retained firms. By sending your resume out widely, you will be placed in many different confidential databases and be alerted of many different positions. If you send your resume to only a few, it may be that none you send to will be working with positions which are suited for you. Throw your net widely.

If you change jobs, it is also wise to send follow-up letters to the recruiters and alert them of your new career move. Many search firms follow people throughout their careers and enjoy being kept up-to-date. It is a good idea to have your resume formatted in plain text so you can copy and paste it into email messages when requested to do so. Then, follow up with a nicely formatted copy on paper by postal mail.

Some estimate that only 1% to 3% of all resumes sent will result in actual job interviews. So, if you only send 50 resumes, you may only have less than 2 interviews, if that many. Send your resume to as many recruiters as you can. It is worth the postage or email time. Generally, recruiters will not share your resume with any employer or give your name to anyone else without obtaining your specific permission to do so. The recruiter will call first, talk to you about a particular position and then ask your permission to share your resume with that employer.

2) Your resume will be kept strictly confidential by the executive search firm.

It is safe to submit your resume to a search firm and not worry that the search firm will let it leak out that you are job hunting. Recruiters will call you each and every time they wish to present you to an employer in order to gain your permission. Only after they have gained your permission will they submit your name or resume to the identified employer. The wonderful aspect of working with search firms is that you can manage your career and your job search in confidence and privacy.

3) Fees are always paid by the employer, not the job candidate.

Recruiters and search firms work for the employer or hiring entity. The employer pays them a fee for locating the right physician for the job opening. This is important to remember, in that when you interact with executive recruiters, you are essentially interacting with an agent or representative of the employer. Recruiters are more loyal to employers than they are to job candidates because they work for the employer. This should not present a problem, but, should cause you to develop your relationship with the recruiter with the same integrity and professionalism that you would with the employer.

Recruiters are paid fees in one of two ways – retainer fees or contingency fees. This is an important distinction and will affect your process with both the employer and the recruiter. Some employers prefer working with contingency firms and some with retained firms. Both are respected by employers and useful in your job search, but, the two types of firms will not be handling the same positions with the same employers simultaneously.

A “retained recruiter” has entered an exclusive contract with an employer to fill a particular position. The retained recruiter, then, is likely to advertise a position, sharing the specifics of the position, location and employer openly. The retained firm feels a great obligation to fulfill the contract by finding the best person for the job.

A “contingency recruiter” on the other hand, usually does not have an exclusive relationship with the employer, and is only paid a fee if the job search is successful. Often, if the employer uses contingency firms, there will be more than one contingency firm competing to fill a certain position. As a job hunter, if you are sent to an interview by a contingency firm, you may find that you are competing with a larger number of applicants for a position. Generally, retained firms only send in from 3 to 5 candidates for a position.

Recruiters will be paid fees equal to about 25% to 35% of the resulting salary of the successful candidate plus expenses. This does not come out of the job candidate’s salary. This is paid to the recruiter through a separate relationship between the employer and the search firm. This may seem like a large fee, but, keep in mind that recruiters incur a great many expenses when searching for successful job candidates. They spend enormous amounts of money on computer systems, long distance calls, mail-outs, travel and interviews. Recruiters work very hard for these fees. Employers recognize the value of using recruiters and are more than willing to pay recruiters the fees. All you have to do is contact the recruiter to get the process moving. 

4) Not all medical recruiters work only with physicians.

Some search firms work exclusively with physicians or in healthcare, while others may work in several fields at once. Some of the larger generalist firms will have one or more search consultants that specialize in healthcare. It is important for you, as a job hunter, to assess the recruiters’ knowledge of your field. If you use industry or medical specialty buzz words in describing your skills, experience or career aspirations, you may or may not be talking a language the recruiter understands fully. It is wise to explore fully with the recruiter his understanding of your field and area of specialization.

5) Recruiters and search consultants move around.

Recruiters, like many professionals, move to new firms during their careers. Often you will find that recruiters will work at several firms during their careers. Since it is much more effective to address your letters to a person rather than “to whom it may concern”, it is smart for job hunters to have accurate and up-to-date information about who is who and where, since this can change frequently. Search firms also move their offices, sometimes to another suite, street or state. If you have a list of recruiters that is over one year old, you will certainly waste some postage in mailing your resumes and cover letters. Many of your mail-outs will be returned to you stamped “non-deliverable”, unless you obtain an up-to-date list. A resource, like the Directory of Healthcare Recruiters is updated very frequently, usually monthly [www.pohly.com/dir3.html].

6) Most search firms work with positions all over the country.

If you are from a particular state, and want to remain in that state, don’t make the mistake of only sending your resume to recruiters in your state. Often the recruiters in your state are working on positions in other states, and recruiters in other states are working on positions in your state. This is usually the case. Very few recruiters work only in their local area, most work all around the US and some internationally. Regardless of your geographic preference, you should still send your resume to all the healthcare recruiters. If you really only want to remain in your area, you can specify that preference in your cover letter.

7) Recruiters primarily work with hard to fill positions or executive positions.

Some recruiters specialize in clinical positions for physicians, managed care executive positions, healthcare financial positions or health administration positions. Others may specialize in finding doctors, nurses or physical therapists. Generally, an employer does not engage a recruiter’s assistance in filling a position unless it is hard to fill. Sometimes employers will engage search firms to save them the valuable time of advertising or combing through dozens of resumes.

A Career in Medical Recruiting - The Campus Career Coach

ASSESSMENT

Contingency recruiters tend to work with more mid-level management and professional positions, but, this is not always the case. Retained firms generally work with the higher level clinical or administrative positions.

One thing you will be assured of is that if a recruiter is working on a position that means that the employer is willing to pay a fee. That usually means that the position is a valued position and one worth closer inspection on your part. Even in healthcare, with certain exceptions, our economy is an “employer’s market”. This means that employers receive a deluge of resumes for their open positions. Increasingly, employers are using recruitment firms to handle their openings and schedule the interviews because employers simply do not have the manpower or time to handle the many resumes they receive.

Therefore, if a job hunter is submitted by a recruiter, that job hunter has a great advantage over all other applicants.

Your thoughts are appreciated.

Product Details

ORDER Textbook: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1448163039&sr=8-9&keywords=david+marcinko

SECOND OPINIONS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/schedule-a-consultation/

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

FINANCIAL ADVISORS: Prospecting Physician Clients?

CMP logo

SPONSOR: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

LINK: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2014/12/21/why-youre-probably-using-the-wrong-medical-dictionary/

On “Meaningful” Tchotchkes and Health Dictionaries for Doctors

The doctor is out: 5 tips when leaving an inside sales ...

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

WALMART Medical School

Walmart heir to build medical school in Arkansas

[By Alia Paavola]

Walmart heir Alice Walton said she plans to finance and build a medical school in northwest Arkansas. 

The Whole Health School of Medicine in Bentonville will be a nonprofit, independent entity, and students enrolled will receive a doctor of medicine degree, according to a March 4 announcement. 

The medical school plans to admit its first class of 40 to 50 students in fall 2023. Construction on the facility is scheduled to begin next year. 

“The Whole Health School of Medicine will help medical students rise to the health challenges of the 21st century through a reimagination of American medical education that incorporates mental, emotional, physical and spiritual health, the elements of Whole Health, to help people live healthier and happier lives,” Ms. Walton said in the news release.

The project is related to the billionaire Walmart heir’s Whole Health Institute, a nonprofit center promoting holistic wellness slated to break ground next month. The institute is in Bentonville.

Pharmacies at Walmart, Sam's Club move to set opioid limits

READ HERE: https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/capital/walmart-heir-to-build-medical-school-in-arkansas.html

Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

PODCAST: Transgender Health [Focus on Resiliency]

Network of the National Library of Medicine [NNLM]

[By Charlene Ice]

DEFINITION: Transgender people have a gender identity or gender expression that differs from the sex that they were assigned at birth. Some transgender people who desire medical assistance to transition from one sex to another identify as transsexual.

Citation: https://www.amazon.com/Dictionary-Health-Insurance-Managed-Care/dp/0826149944/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1275315485&sr=1-4

Network of the National Library of Medicine

And so, the Network of the National Library of Medicine Pacific Southwest Region at the UCLA Biomedical Library and Southeastern Atlantic Region at the University of Maryland-Baltimore are excited to announce the first NNLM Transgender Health webinar series.

With approximately 1 million adults in the U.S. identifying as Transgender/Gender Non-Binary (TGNB), this series will promote awareness of the social determinants of health, health disparities, and resilience in these individuals and communities.

A pioneer in LGBTQ care, Tang takes two steps forward for ...

PODCAST LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evs-DScvcyc&t=784s

Gay Doctors: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2009/04/03/the-gay-physician-dilemma/

Mental Health Programs: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2020/09/30/mental-health-entrepreneurial-start-up/

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

A Treatise on Disabled Physicians

The disabled doctors not believed by their colleagues

[By Miranda Schreiber]

FACT: People often feel nervous when they visit a doctor with some fearing their symptoms may not be believed.

QUERY: But what if you are the doctor, and your colleagues dismiss your disabilities and mental health difficulties?

Three Ways to Improve Care for Patients With Disabilities ...

LINK: https://www.bbc.com/news/disability-56244376?utm_source=pocket-newtab

EDITOR’S NOTE: I had a classmate in both high school and medical school with Charctot-MarieTooth disease so I am aware of this phenomenon: https://www.ninds.nih.gov/Disorders/Patient-Caregiver-Education/Fact-Sheets/Charcot-Marie-Tooth-Disease-Fact-Sheet

Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA

[Editor-in-Chief]

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated

THANK YOU

***

What Exactly is a D.O.?

DOCTOR OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

See the source image

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko MBA CMP®

[Editor-in-Chief]

OK; I admit it. I have a formal educational background in allopathic, podiatric and osteopathic medicine. I also have both earned and conferred medical degrees from the States as well as Europe. I even dropped out of dental and law school back in the day … Such the protean dilettante!

Now, today there are about 950,000 allopathic physicians, 20,000 podiatrists, 150,000 dentists and 50,000 osteopaths. And, from this cohort of medical professionals, the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine [DO] seems to be the least well understood practitioner.

And so, I thought this essay from Very Well Health might be helpful to all our Medical Executive-Post readers and subscribers [Differences Between a DO Physician and an MD – Comparing Osteopathic and Allopathic Medical Training].

LINK: https://www.verywellhealth.com/do-doctors-vs-md-doctors-whats-the-difference-3157310

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts are appreciated.

INVITE DR. MARCINKO: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/dr-david-marcinkos-bookings/

THANK YOU

***

The Future of Health Care Under President Joe Biden?

A look at the President’s expressed priorities and actions to date

Todd Zigrang

By Todd Zigrang, MBA, MHA, FACHE, CVA, ASA

Jessica L. Bailey-Wheaton

By Jessica Bailey-Wheaton, Esq.

Health Capital Consultants, LLC

On January 20, 2021, Joseph R. Biden, Jr. was inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, among other concerns and long-standing issues, health care has become a central political issue and was hotly contested during the 2020 presidential debates.

A look at President Biden’s expressed priorities, signed executive orders, cabinet nominations and agency appointments during his first months in office provides indications as to the future—at least the short-term future—of U.S. health care.

Health Capital Consultants | LinkedIn

LINK: https://www.healthcapital.com/researchmaterialdocuments/publishedarticles/SLMM_April_2021-Biden.pdf

Your thoughts are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

About Podiatry Prep.org

pod_prep_text

Pass ALL the Certification Boards!

By: http://www.PodiatryPrep.org

The Foot and Ankle Research Consortium, Inc. (FARC) is the leading publisher of Podiatric educational software. Since 1992, we have been producing the most effective and innovative method of preparing for ALL the Podiatry Board Examinations.

CURIOUS STUDY: Hallux Valgus Met I

SCARF: scarf osteotomy

This includes: The American Board of Podiatric Surgery, The American Board Of Podiatric Orthopedics and Primary Podiatric Medicine, the American Podiatric Medical Specialties Board, ABLES and the PMLexis. (Now includes the latest information for all Board Re-Certifications).

CONTENTS: https://podiatryprep.org/compatibility-test/

Customization and private  tutoring services also available.

FAN CLUB: https://podiatryprep.org/podiatryprep-fan-club/

doctor_pass2

PURCHASE – PREPARE – PASS®

ORDER HERE: https://podiatryprep.org/order-form/

GOOD LUCK!

Thank You

***

The Integrated Patient-Centered Medical Home Model

Join Our Mailing List

Tools for Transforming Our Healthcare

By Matias A. Klein

[VP, General Manager, Clinical Quality and Collaboration, Portico Systems]

The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) continues to attract increasing attention from many industry stakeholders. The PCMH model has the potential to enhance the US healthcare system by rejuvenating primary care in a way that improves clinical outcomes, lowers costs, promotes wellness, and increases patient and physician satisfaction.

PCMH Pilot Programs

PCMH pilots are currently being tested in almost all states, including a 3-year Medicare medical home demonstration project overseen by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. However, few organizations have scaled the PCMH across their entire healthcare network, and the existing implementations appear to remain focused on care management at the expense of patient wellness. The value of focusing equally on promoting wellness (although an underappreciated nuance in the implementation of a PCMH) is a critical factor in effectively leveraging the PCMH model to improve clinical outcomes and the US healthcare system.

Centered on the Patient

The PCMH model, as its name suggests, is centered on the patient. The underlying thought is that if a comprehensive, longitudinal view of a patient is taken throughout a patient’s lifespan, the patient’s health could be better “managed” and better aligned with best medical practices. It is well documented that physicians do not consistently or frequently apply evidence based, recommended care to patients. Therefore, a major goal of the PCMH model is to improve the consistent application of evidence-based guidelines and best practices, by making longitudinal information about the patient available to providers and to patients – including any risks and recommended “intervention opportunities.” And although adherence to best practices in disease management is crucial, the PCMH model also focuses on preventing costly episodes by promoting and incentivizing wellness.

PCPs = Medical Homes

To effectively manage a patient’s health and promote wellness, primary care physicians – designated as medical homes – need to act as health “quarterbacks” or “coaches.” In such a role, these physicians will assist in aggregating a patient’s health information, making best practices transparent, offering health education and counseling, as well as coordinating the provisioning of any healthcare services the patient may need. With physicians spending significant time coaching and making critical clinical decisions, these services will be delivered with the support of care management nurses, who will handle the majority of the information processing and operational activity.

An Innovation in Care

The PCMH model is an important innovation in care delivery and has the potential to reduce medical and administrative costs, while improving the quality of care. However, how to implement the PCMH model within a care-delivery system remains unclear. Providers need the requisite infrastructure and capabilities at their locations to meaningfully participate in a PCMH. Patients must be engaged over long periods of time in proactively managing and improving their health. Outcomes and quality must be objectively measured to optimize the delivery of best possible patient care.

Potential Value

To realize the potential value of the PCMH, three distinct stakeholders – patients, providers, and health plans – must work in a collaborative way. Getting these stakeholders synchronized (i.e., aligned in their goals, using interoperable tools, and collaborating on an operational level) is no small feat but can be accomplished with the smart application of technology. Bringing these three stakeholder groups together on a common, collaborative technology platform results in what some are beginning to call the integrated PCMH. The integrated approach to the PCMH can best ensure that implementing a PCMH model does not create additional administrative burdens to health plans or provider organizations.

An integrated PCMH provides a framework for stakeholders to collaborate in a transparent fashion, and where quality, best practices, and outcomes are incentivized. The integrated PCMH also provides a pathway being awarded a medical home designation.

Vertical Integration Deployment

The key to deploying an integrated PCMH is an end-to-end vertical integration of the care-delivery process – that is, a process in which the provider network management, automation, information exchange, and analytics solutions are tightly integrated with patient and provider information. With so much complexity and so many “moving parts” in the delivery of the PCMH model, this end-to-end vertical integration is a practical solution that enables effective coordination of care and accurate measurement of quality: with such system integration, the provider network (e.g., the health plan) can bring economies of scale to even the smallest provider offices to optimize the quality of care delivery.

The 5 Keys

The five key components for such an integrated PCMH are:

  1. A source-of-truth for mapping medical home – designated providers, patients, as well as  the associated relationships with health plans and other medical professionals; a central medical home fact checking is critical for effectively identifying, managing, and communicating with medical home and their networks.
  2. A set of collaborative workflows that align stakeholders with best practices, incentives, and quality measures reporting; these collaborative workflows help each stakeholder understand where a given patient is in the care-delivery process, potential intervention opportunities, why certain interventions are being emphasized, and what incentives are available for executing specific interventions.
  3. An infrastructure for clinical integration and distribution of intervention opportunities, clinical reference content, education, alerts, and reminders. This infrastructure allows all stakeholders to have access to up-to-date, accurate patient information; it aligns stakeholders and helps reduce or eliminate duplication of procedures and tests.
  4. Interoperable clinical applications and collaboration tools to enable patients and physicians to engage in medical home processes; these tools – which include electronic medical records, e-prescribing, e-labs, secure e-mail, personal health records, and document management and exchange technology – can help manage health information, assist with decision-making, and improve communication between patients, providers, and health plans.
  5. Incentive management and analytics tools for modeling, setting, measuring, and rewarding incentives based on quality measures and outcomes; these tools must span the entire PCMH delivery process and are required for objectively evaluating and optimizing the performance of a medical home.

When considering the multiplicity of stakeholders, information, software systems, and knowledge that has to be coordinated in the context of a PCMH model, implementing a medical home pilot and scaling it to a full-blown network may seem a daunting task. The integrated PCMH offers a real-world solution for deploying a scalable and flexible infrastructure for the management of this emerging care-delivery model.

Assessment

Early evaluations of the PCMH model show promising, albeit inconclusive, outcomes. The integrated PCMH model offers a practical road map for deploying a management system that will enable objective measurement of PCMH performance and outcomes.

Conclusion

Although the jury is still out on the ultimate value of the PCMH, deploying an integrated PCMH system can help position PCMH pilots in a way that enhances their flexibility and scalability to support full-scale network transformation.

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Product Details

Product Details 

World Bi-Polar Day 2021

By staff reporters

Bipolar disorder, formerly called manic depression, is a mental health condition that causes extreme mood swings that include emotional highs (mania or hypomania) and lows (depression).

When you become depressed, you may feel sad or hopeless and lose interest or pleasure in most activities. When your mood shifts to mania or hypomania (less extreme than mania), you may feel euphoric, full of energy or unusually irritable. These mood swings can affect sleep, energy, activity, judgment, behavior and the ability to think clearly.

Episodes of mood swings may occur rarely or multiple times a year. While most people will experience some emotional symptoms between episodes, some may not experience any.

Although bipolar disorder is a lifelong condition, you can manage your mood swings and other symptoms by following a treatment plan. In most cases, bipolar disorder is treated with medications and psychological counseling (psychotherapy).

***

Primary Care Provider – Eliminating the Term

Eliminating the Term Primary Care “Provider”

Consequences of Language for the Future of Primary Care

By Allan H. Goroll, MD

LINK:

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2506307

***

BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT TEXTBOOKS OF INTEREST TO SAVVY PHYSICIANS

BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT TEXTBOOKS OF INTEREST TO SAVVY PHYSICIANS
Courtesy: https://lnkd.in/eBf-4vY

Health Economics, Finance, Accounting, Investing, HR and Insurance; etc.
BOOKS: https://lnkd.in/dys_xQz

 


INVITATION: https://lnkd.in/d2SefCY
SPEAKING TOPIC LIST: https://lnkd.in/e7WrDj9
MY “AVATAR”: https://lnkd.in/d6BU-TQ
Thank You
***

International Day of Women and Girls in Science

International Day of Women and Girls in Science

***

***

Inside the “Fall” of the CDC?

By Pro Publica

LINK:

https://www.propublica.org/article/inside-the-fall-of-the-cdc?utm_source=pocket-newtab

***

Your thoughts are appreciated!

***

Navigating Relationships and Communication in 2020 (Web 2.0, 3.0 and beyond)

Navigating Relationships and Communication in 2020 (Web 3.0 and beyond)

By Joseph Prokop

CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER©

CERTIFIED MEDICAL PLANNER© (candidate)

http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

 

We are able to connect and communicate in more ways than ever before, and yet we seem more disconnected, divided, and confused than ever before. Yet, if we get caught in the trap of watching the same news channels and getting our data from the same source, then it is ineventible that our views and perspectives start to be swayed in that particular direction. Almost everyone is on a social media platform of some sort if they aren’t on all of them. Once you share or like posts, the algorithms go to work to show you things they know you will like and engage in even if that puts you inside an echo chamber of ideas and thoughts that prevent us from having any meaningful dialogue around complex issues.

When it comes to investing and financial planning in 2020 there is an abundance of information and resources. There are discount brokerage firms that allow you to trade stocks for free. Firms are offering world class educational materials, webinars, seminars, etc. It seems everyone who can fog a window has articles on the internet about investment strategies and ideas – from pot stocks, to crypto-currency, to Roth conversions, etc. It can be daunting trying to figure out where to go and who you can trust.

The truth is there is no one best way to use these tools, resources, and the vast amount of technology at all of our fingertips. But there is just one rule – As the novelist E.M. Forster said, “Only connect.” I’ve been asked a million times if I have a ‘stock tip’ or ‘hot idea’ by friends, family, and clients. 

My recommendation as it relates to investing and financial health is always to develop a financial plan and stay the course. Just as there is no perfect solution for connecting and communicating, there is no perfect investment for everyone.

Now, regarding communication – you can take your pick: You can communicate via blogs, tweets, chat rooms, Facebook, and other social networks.

Or, when investing you can take your pick as well: you can do it yourself and utilize stocks, bonds, funds, ETFs, options, etc. Or, you can have someone do it for you to help keep the emotions out of investing and help keep your plans on track.

CONCLUSION: And so, whether we are talking about connecting and communicating online – or whether we are talking about financial planning or investing my main point is to get started. There are tons of benefits between social connection and good health. There is a ton of correlation between financial piece of mind and good health. So, take an inventory of the tools at your disposal, and let’s discuss some plans and goals for you, and let’s get to work.

***

***

ENTER A HEALTHCARE ENTREPRENEURIAL BUSINESS “DISRUPTOR” FOR 2020

ENTER A HEALTHCARE ENTREPRENEURIAL BUSINESS “DISRUPTOR” FOR 2020
Courtesy: https://lnkd.in/eBf-4vY

A New Initial Public Offering [I.P.O.]

On January 30, 2020, 1Life Healthcare, Inc. (One Medical) went public, opening at $14 per share, and closing at $22.07 per share. The innovative San Francisco-based direct primary care organization more closely resembles a technology start-up than a traditional healthcare organization.

LINK: https://lnkd.in/eZxrhtp

Their membership model service provides “seamless access” to primary medical care services at “calming offices,” 24/7 virtual care, and 21st century technology (e.g., a mobile application that allows patients to schedule appointments and message their providers).


And so, here is a report from colleagues over at Health Capital Consultants, LLC.
ESSAYhttps://lnkd.in/gVqDVR4
Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.

BUSINESS, FINANCE, INVESTING AND INSURANCE TEXTS FOR DOCTORS:
1 – https://lnkd.in/ebWtzGg
2 – https://lnkd.in/ezkQMfR
3 – https://lnkd.in/ewJPTJs
THANK YOU
****

WANT TO JOIN A PRIVATE MICRO-NETWORK?

THE FUTURE VALUE IS IN “WHO” WE CONNECT !

By Dr. David E. Marcinko MBA

Forget amassing “likes”, “smiles”, “winks” or cultivating your online persona. Micro-Networks are all about being your true authentic self with just a select and carefully curated few people; and that’s it! No social influencers, marketers or viral posts. Just micro-segmentation!

THINK: Family members, professional colleagues, neighbors and close friends; sport or class-mates, and co-workers or faculty members in small distinct groups. There is no “network” as you occupy the space with just these people. The total number of participants is pre-determined; 25, 50, 100, 175, 250; etc. And, when reached, the only way to add new members is for existing members to drop out.

“The Vital Few … Not the Trivial Many.”

QUERY: Would you join a micro-network? What cohort of members?

Please comment.

QUERY: Would you pay a small membership surcharge? How much?

Please comment.

ASSESSMENT: Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.

THANK YOU

***

Tell Us the Issues Affecting your Medical Practice, Clinic, Start-Up Wellness Center or Hospital

Join Our Mailing List

[By staff reporters]

Tell us about the issues affecting your medical practice, clinic, hospital, wellness center, or healthcare organization in 2020.

We are conducting a brief survey to learn more about the key issues affecting your healthcare entity, and how they impact your outlook for the coming year.

Just send in your thoughts on the survey form below.

 

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Product DetailsProduct Details

Product DetailsProduct Details

***