As online physician rating sites become more and more prevalent, some doctors are asking their patients to sign waivers (provided by a NC based company – Medical Justice) to prevent them from providing online feedback without prior consent from the physician.
change:healthcare CEO Christopher Parks, shared his opinion on the matter with Getahn Ward of the Tennessean. Here are some of the highlights:
Parks says, “”It’s never worked in our society to try to constrain or restrain perceptions or feedback,” he said. “The more you tell people to be quiet, the louder they want to yell.” He, however, believes that physicians should be allowed to offer their perspectives and that the ratings sites have a responsibility to filter out comments that are libelous.
Doctors, he added, should encourage all of their patients to rate their experiences. “As a general consumer, I won’t let one horrible rating sway my perception or cause me to devalue that provider,” he said. “It’s the trend — what’s the majority of the ratings.”
To view the complete article visit the Tennessean website or download the PDF here
Posted by
Katrina on March 18th, 2009
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“New consumer index analyzes care costs
Nashville-based change:healthcare inc. has started a Healthcare Consumerism Index, a product to help companies and consumers judge the cost-effectiveness of their health-care purchases.
The index analyzes a company’s inpatient and outpatient care and prescriptions to identify the highest and lowest prices paid for comparable products and services within an employee population.”
See the article on the Tennessean website.
Posted by
Katrina on August 27th, 2008
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“The doctors said he’s comin’, but you’ gotta pay in cash”
-The Eagles
We’ve enjoyed a bit of a free ride for the past several decades when it comes to healthcare. Employers and the government have picked up much of the tab. But now we are starting to pay the price literally. Increasingly we are asked to pay for medical services. Locally, The Tennessean just featured a piece on a doc who is going to charge his patients $1,500 annually to maintain access to him. We had best get used to it.
I have nightmares of other businesses becoming like our current healthcare system. In these night terrors, I go to buy groceries, pay a $20 co-pay and then get the bill 30-45 days later, can’t understand what it is I got, have already consumed the product and am expected to pay far more than I would ever have dreamed it might cost.
Predictable costs in healthcare will have to become more the norm. Concierge healthcare is becoming more popular. Just ask Jay Parkinson, M.D. who has had a concierge practice in NYC and is starting Hello Health. He uses REAL docs, not nurse practitioners like the retail based clinics (RBCs), but like the RBCs, Hello Health has [gasp] transparent pricing. You will actually know what you are paying at the time of service. Novel concept.
It’s a different way of thinking and doing business on the healthcare front, but it has tremendous merit.
Our unfettered access to the healthcare system has taken much of the responsibility for our health off of our hands. As partial proof of that, we can point to our obesity epidemic, overprescribing of drugs for any small ailment and overuse of the system (even I have kids who go to the doc at every sign of a sniffle, and then feel silly for being asked what I’ve done to treat it – I noticed it and brought them to the doc). Not only have we stopped being responsible for the cost, but we’ve also stoped being responsible as a society for understanding and managing our health. I’m guilty.
Now we are paying the price.
Check out this great story published in the Williamson A.M (Tennessean) about Christoper.
http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2008804290319
You can also download a PDF of the article.
Posted by
Katrina on April 29th, 2008
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