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NH Society of Healthcare Engineers and Vermont Healthcare Engineers Society

Twin State Seminar

July 28, 2011

Welcome to DHMC and the Third Annual Twin State Seminar

Some Perspective on the Challenges Facing Our Nation and Our Industry

But First…a Test

1966 2000 2010 2015 20207.5%

8.5%

9.5%

10.5%

11.5%

12.5%

13.5%

14.5%

15.5%

16.5%

9.0%

12.4% 12.9%

14.3%

15.9%

Medicare Enrollees as a Percentage of U.S. Population

2000 to 2010 Growth - DHMC Discharges 35% - DHMC OR Cases 60%%

34 Years

10Years

5Years

1966 2000 2010 2015 20207.5%

8.5%

9.5%

10.5%

11.5%

12.5%

13.5%

14.5%

15.5%

16.5%

9.0%

12.4% 12.9%

14.3%

15.9%

Medicare Enrollees as a Percentage of U.S. Population

2000 to 2010 Growth - DHMC Discharges 35% - DHMC OR Cases 60%%

34 Years

10Years

5Years

When Does the Aging of America Begin?

1966 2000 2010 2015 20207.5%

8.5%

9.5%

10.5%

11.5%

12.5%

13.5%

14.5%

15.5%

16.5%

9.0%

12.4% 12.9%

14.3%

15.9%

Medicare Enrollees as a Percentage of U.S. Population

2000 to 2010 Growth - DHMC Discharges 35% - DHMC OR Cases 60%%

34 Years

10Years

5Years

5Years

1966 2010 20207.5%

8.5%

9.5%

10.5%

11.5%

12.5%

13.5%

14.5%

15.5%

16.5%

9.0%

12.9%

15.9%

Medicare Enrollees as a Percentage of U.S. Population

The Medicare population as a % of the U.S. population will increase by approximately the same amount over the next 10 years as it has since inception.

45% of that increase will occur in the next five years.

Access will be a challenge even without reform

Facility Requirements

Will Be Significant

Under 18 18 - 64 65 and Over $0

$2,000

$4,000

$6,000

$8,000

$10,000

$12,000

$14,000

$16,000

$2,650

$4,511

$14,797

Difference in Annual Per Capita Spending by Age Group

Per capital health care spending for the 65 and older population is more than five times higher than spending per child and three times spending per working-age person

- U.S. Health Care Expenditures

We are on a pathway as a nation that is unsustainable

Health Care Reform Oversimplified

• At the highest level, the health care system in the U.S. is too costly and doesn’t produce outcomes commensurate with the investment we are making (currently 16% of GDP)

• Health care reform in its most simplistic form is about impacting cost and quality/outcome and creating value

• As health care providers we need to be laser focused on:

This focus is very consistent with the fundamentals of health care reform and is what society is expecting of us.

Value = Quality TimeCost

Takeaway

• Combining the rapid change which will occur in the Medicare population with the fact that the majority of the health care dollar is spent in the latter years of life will put significant pressure on the U.S. health care system and capacity (beginning in the next five years)

11

As Facilities Managers and Engineers you will need to be at the top of your game:

- Access- Quality- Cost- Contributing to the financial sustainability of your organizations

The Impact of Engineering and Facilities Management on DHMC

We Have a Rich History

Dartmouth-Hitchcock ClinicFounded 1927(over 80 years ago)

Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, founded 1893 (almost 120 years ago)

We’ve Come A Long Way(DHMC 20 Years Ago)

Who We Are Today Has Been Largely Influenced by Our Facility

Where Will We Be in 2030?

?

Project Description: – 102,750 Square Feet – $38 million project including equipment

Strategic Investment:– Facilitating project to provide Inpatient capacity (at a controlled cost)– Outpatient capacity (50,000 sq. ft. for Medical Homes)– Flexible and Cost Effective

Ramifications if not built:– Capped inpatient capacity– Family Medicine stays in adequate space– Constrained outpatient volume– Loss of current investment

D-H Heater Road

Project Description:– Two ORs, Intra-Op MRI and CT– 12,000 Square Feet, – Total Project cost: $19.4 million– D-H Share: $6.2 million with balance from NIH

and Dartmouth College

Strategic Investment:– Only research facility of its type in the country.– Design of new integrated imaging and surgical systems (only intra-op in the

country with both MRI and CT)– Excellent opportunity to improve outcomes/reduce cost nationally– Key differentiating service

Ramifications if not built:– Loss of NIH grant funding ($10 million)– Missed opportunity for advanced

imaging excellence

Advanced Surgery Center for Translational Research

Mission Vision

We advance health through research, education, clinical practice and community partnerships, providing each person the best care, in the right place, at the right time, every time.

Achieve the healthiest population possible, leading the transformation of health care in our region and setting the standard for our nation.

Mission Vision

We advance health through research, education, clinical practice and community partnerships, providing each person the best care, in the right place, at the right time, every time.

Achieve the healthiest population possible, leading the transformation of health care in our region and setting the standard for our nation.

People

Thank You for Coming and Thank You for All That You Do

for the Patients and Staff of the Organizations You Support and Care For!

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