Healthcare IT NewsHealthcare IT News
TwitterFacebookLinkedInHealthcareITNews International
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Business Intelligence
    • Claims Processing
    • Data Warehousing
    • EDIS
    • Election 2012
    • Electronic Health Records
    • Enterprise Content Management
    • Enterprise Resource Planning
    • ePrescribing
    • Financial/Revenue Cycle Management
    • Health Information Exchange (HIE)
    • ICD-10
    • Meaningful Use
    • Mobile/Wireless
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Policy and Legislation
    • Privacy and Security
    • Quality and Safety
    • RIS and PACS
    • RTLS
    • Telehealth
    • Workforce Management
  • Issues
    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
  • Blog
  • Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • On Demand Webinars
  • White Papers
  • Events
  • HIMSS JobMine
  • Press Releases
  • Slideshows
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Supplements
  • Survey Analyses
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise
  • Login
  • Register
  • SUBSCRIBE
    • Newspaper
    • Email Newsletter
Home » News » Quality and Safety
Receive News By Email

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • RSS Icon
  

Choosing Wisely campaign seeks to curb health service overuse

December 21, 2011 | Stephanie Bouchard, Contributing Editor

Suggested Content

  • Internal medicine docs launch P4P initiative
  • Internist: EHR data standards needed to help primary care
  • Health Union launches mobile app to help manage migraines
  • $20B in incentives go to waste each year, says study
  • Verizon donates $100K to Philadelphia hospital for telemedicine

Related Resources

  • Simplifying Medicare Cost Reporting through the use of Report Analytics
  • Improving Community Connectivity, Care Coordination and Outcomes
  • Coordinating Care Across Communities with Microsoft HealthVault Community Connect
  • Six Ways to Protect Patient Safety
  • An Organizational Approach to Infection Prevention, Surveillance and Reporting

PHILADELPHIA – With the cost of medically unnecessary care estimated to be in the billions of dollars, a new campaign is setting out to change the medical profession’s and society’s usage of healthcare.

Choosing Wisely, a campaign developed by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Foundation in partnership with Consumer Reports and nine medical societies, seeks to get patients and doctors and others in the medical profession to think and talk about overuse or misuse of healthcare resources.

[See also: 4 keys to the cost of health IT.]

During the multi-year campaign, each specialty society will target five common tests or procedures that each designates needs discussion or should be questioned. The parameters used to narrow the options include limiting the five to the specialty’s purview and control; frequency and/or cost of the procedures; and having evidence supporting each recommended target. The societies will announce their self-developed lists in April of next year.

While some specialty societies have been putting out clinical guidelines based on evidence, the beauty of this campaign is that through Consumer Reports that same information doctors get will get out to patients said Christine Cassel, MD, ABIM Foundation’s president and CEO.

“The way this will help is that it will provide evidence-based, credible information from independent physician specialty voices about areas that are high potential for either not being useful or being misused in some way or another where the patient or the consumer can say to their doctor, ‘Do I really need this?’ And for the physician side, they will be able to have answers for the patients about that and hopefully lead to better shared decision making between doctors and patients,” Cassel said.

[See also: Premier CEO critiques ‘fragmented’ healthcare system.]

The campaign is not pushing rationing, Cassel stressed. “This is not about rationing. This is about choosing wisely.”

“When you’re sick or you’re worried about someone in your family, the instinct is to say ‘I want everything.’ Without having better information, that’s understandable,” she said. “I think that’s been the default mode up to now. In some ways the combination of recognizing the cost of care with also recognizing (that) a lot of times unnecessary medical care actually leads to harm – the combination of those two things really makes this moment in time a real opportunity to make progress.”

Follow HFN associate editor Stephanie Bouchard on Twitter @SBouchardHFN.

Stephanie Bouchard
Managing Editor of Healthcare Finance News
Follow Stephanie on Twitter @SBouchardHFN
Related Topics:
  • Christine Cassel
  • Internal Medicine
  • Philadelphia
  • Stephanie Bouchard
  • Quality and Safety

Reader Comments (0)Login to Post a Comment

Most Popular

Latest Headlines
Most Popular
  • 6 reasons physicians need to be on social media
  • Lawsuit seeks Allscripts CEO's removal
  • Tablet adoption by docs soars
  • FCC to vote on broadband space for patient monitoring
  • Computing cluster speeds targeted treatments for childhood cancer
  • Lawsuit seeks Allscripts CEO's removal
  • Web First: Q&A with Allscripts CEO Glen Tullman
  • 6 reasons physicians need to be on social media
  • Oregon to implement new statewide HIE
  • Tablet adoption by docs soars
more news

WEBINARS AND WHITE PAPERS

  • WHITE PAPERS
    Business Intelligence for Hospitals: Empowering Healthcare Providers to Make Informed Decisions
  • WHITE PAPERS
    The Christ Hospital Case Study: Improving Operations and Ensuring the Best Possible Patient Care with ECM
  • ON DEMAND WEBINARS
    Case Study: Sentara Healthcare Completes an Award-Winning EHR with Enterprise Content Management
  • UPCOMING WEBINARS
    June 6th @ 2PM ET--Healthcare Best Practices: 4 Critical IT Strategies to Avoid Data Breaches
  • WHITE PAPERS
    The Scarborough Hospital: Establishing a Document Management Strategy for EHRs
More Resources
Syndicate content

HIMSS JOBMINE

  • Network Engineer II - Carilion Clinic - Roanoke, VA
  • EMR Implementation - Project Manager Rothman Specialty Hospital - Rothman Specialty Hospital - Bensalem, PA
  • Director of Information Systems - Mission Regional Medical Center - Mission, Texas
  • Biostatistician II - Saudi Aramco - Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
  • Chief Information Officer - West Virginia - InfoPartners, Inc. - West Virginia
more jobs

Marketplace

Follow Healthcare IT News on TwitterFan Healthcare IT News on FacebookJoin Healthcare IT News on LinkedInRSS Subscriptions
Digital EditionBlogEvents
JobsMobile SiteMobile App
 
Healthcare Finance News Government Health IT EHRWatch Healthcare Payer News HITECHWatch ICD10Watch mHIMSS PhysBizTech NHINWatch
©2012 MedTech Media Healthcare IT News is a publication of MedTech Media
Subscribe Advertise About Us Privacy Policy