rahd poster_lr
TRANSCRIPT
Preliminary ResultsPhysicians
Hospital Management
Lawyers
Researchers
Legislators
Bureaucrats
Patients
Everyone
Educators
Insurance
Health Businesses,Industry Lobby, Media
Who Created the Problems with our Health System? *
75%
10%
8%3% 4%
Encourage Collaboration
Congressional Leadership
Professions Should Find aMiddle Ground
Allow for a Market Approach
One Profession Should Createa Strategy
45%
9%
36%
9%
Physicians
Educators
Legislators
Lawyers
Best StrategyWhat's the Move Forward?to
13%
2%
5%
48%
7%
2%
5%
2%
2%
2%
12%
Lack of Access
Lack of CollaborationUn- and Underinsured
CostLack of Quality and Waste
Lack of Political Will Health Disparities
ACALack of Preventive Care Physician Shortage
Systems-Based Problems
What is the single Biggest Issue? **
* Total count of responses by participants** Categorized open-ended responses
4%
23%
16%
3%16%
6%
9%
5%
13%
2% 2%
What is the single Best Solution? **
Ensure Equal Access
Ensure Equal Treatment
Focus on Policy Solutions
There is No Single Solution
Cost Control
Collaborative Enterprise
Create Improved Delivery Models
Decrease Regulation
Increase Physician or Decrease Adminstration Pay
MD: “Everyone, Legislators, Physicians, Hospital Management”MPH: “Everyone, Legislators, Bureaucrats, Hospital Management”JD: “Legislators, Everyone, Hospital Management”
Everyone Agrees:“We need to Encourage Collaboration”
“Cost is the Biggest Issue”Everyone Agrees
Which Profession?
MD: “Policy Solutions, Single Payer, Other”MPH: “Single Payer; Focus on Cultural Issues, Population Health or Other; Policy Solutions”JD: “Single Payer; Focus on Cultural Issues, Population Health or Other; Policy Solutions”
MD: “Legislators, Bureaucrats, Everyone”MPH: “Everyone, Legislators, Physicians and Hospital Management”
JD: “Legislators, Everyone, Hospital Management”
Survey Results From Graduate Students:83 MPH, 93 MD, 20 JD, 19 Doctoral, 12 MBA, 8 PA, 11 Joint Degree
The United States health care delivery process operates within a large network of healthcare providers, administrators and other professionals. Separate training within each profession has undermined the e�ectiveness of professionals’ complementary roles resulting in a decentralized, inne�ective and inne�cient health care system. These roles must collaborate and share responsibility to build a better, improved system.
Roundtable on American Healthcare Delivery (RAHD) provides an opportunity to address an unmet educational need within Drexel’s professional student constituency. RAHD is composed of Drexel graduate students from the College of Medicine, School of Public Health, School of Law, and College of Business that come together bimonthly to dialogue about multifaceted healthcare-related topics and to apply knowledge through collaborative, experiential and project-based learning.
Single Payer System
Focus on Cultural Issues, Population Health, or Other
(A)synchronous discussions, brainstorming, and value-mapping
360 view of current topics in health delivery
Diverse stakeholders, innovative thought streams
Non-member participation for broad conceptualization
Semi-monthly meetings
Problem-based experiences
Application of Design-thinking
Analysis Synthesis
References:
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73
45
25
10265
39
152
35
Who is Responsible For Making Change? *
47
77
64
11785
39
103
11 23
Roundtable on American Health DeliveryIntroduction 39%
32%
2%
27%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
Yes Maybe No, I'm notinterested incollaboration
No, for otherreasons
Wish you were part of aCollaborative Group?
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Yes No Opinion
Do you believe in a need forMore Collaboration?
How vital is it that we changethe systems and practices of care?
1-10
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
N
We sent a survey to a number of Drexel graduate studentsWe received 235 responses in one week, mostly from MD, MPH and JD students
Demonstrated Need
The Future of RAHD
Methods
36%
24%
2%
37%
42%
39%
0%
19%
45%
30%
5%
20%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
Yes Maybe No, I'm not interested incollaboration
No, for other reasons
MD
MPH
JD
Project-Based Learning focused on solutions 360 Analysis Synthesis Public Health need for better demonstration of ROI Chart of Accounts
Health Policy Proposal competition
Business Plan case competition (Mammography SOC)
Root Cause Analysis and Synthesis
The AHRQ assembled the US Preventive Services Task Force with experts from various �elds
Research approach similar to the USPSTF Higher Ground, Better Solutions
IOM leadership representative experts in diverse array of health care organizations
RAHD creates opportunities for professional student leadership to develop in a
necessarily diverse and complex environment
Expanded use of IT and public access to project work
1
2
3
Current Academic Silos University Setting With Engaged
Interdisciplinary Program
RAHD
1. Institute of Medicine. 2012. For the Public’s Health: Investing in a Healthier Future. Chapter 3, Informing Investment in Better Health. Washington, D.C. <nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=13268>
2. Baiada Incubator Competition / Ian J. Berg Business Plan Competition / Business Concept PaperCompetition, Drexel University Baiada Institute for Entrepreneurship
3. a. AAMC focus on Root Cause Analysis / Student Super-Utilizer Poster Competition at JU Population Health Colloquium <https://www.aamc.org/initiatives/hotspotter/>
b. Call for Root Cause Analysis in Health Systems Auditing Szostek, J. et al. 2010. A Systems Approach to Morbidity and Mortality Conference. Am J Med.
Alexander Krengel Cand: MPH, Ashley Landicho Cand: MD, MBA, Andrew Sheridan MBA, Viren Doshi, Cand: JD/MPH, Anthony Magdalinski Cand: JD, Yolande Greene Cand: MPH
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