Several years ago, Clark told you about how
Geisinger Health System infuriated insurance and medicine people alike with a very innovative idea.
This Pennsylvania medical provider decided they would offer a 90-day warranty on elective heart surgery procedures. If anything went wrong during that period, the patient's return visits would be free.
Clark was ecstatic when Geisinger announced their policy. Now several years later, it's clear that their idea worked. Heart patients are doing much better at Geisinger, and the provider has been able to cut costs at its surgery centers by 15%.
How did they achieve that 15% drop in surgery costs? They took a cue from airline pilots. Before a flight, pilots in the cockpit go through an extensive pre-flight checklist to make sure every system is functioning and all procedures are being followed. They treat the airplane as a system.
Medicine, however, operates as a fiefdom, where things are non-systematized and everyone does their own thing. Geisinger's innovation involved coming up with a set of 40 procedural steps.
Their system, called Proven Care, has to be run through and check-marked before any patient can undergo heart surgery. It even includes steps to deal with the trouble-prone arena of making sure that medication is properly administered after the operation.
But the fact that this is revolutionary in medicine is just silly. This kind of systemization is what well-run businesses routinely have in place.
For example, the fatality rate on U.S. aircrafts is so low because of the emphasis on systematic safety. In the recent Buffalo crash, investigators are focusing on whether or not pilot safety procedures were properly followed. Therein they expect to find the likely leading cause of the crash.
Geisinger has reduced the fatality rate to zero -- not a single in-hospital death -- since implementing Proven Care. When they started, only 59% of patients were getting good systematic treatment. Now it's 100%.
According to
The Washington Post, Proven Care has been so successful that Geisinger is now extending the 90-day warranty to other procedures, such as hip replacements and cataract surgery.
We all have a right to expect accountability from our medical providers.