The Leg.Up - Richmond Academy of Medicine
Transcription
The Leg.Up - Richmond Academy of Medicine
The Leg.Up Local, state and national news of interest to the physician community June 29, 2016 VCU Hospitals' Chief John Duval Steps Down, Deborah Davis Steps Up John Duval, Chief Executive Officer of VCU Hospitals and Clinics and vice president for clinical affairs, announced his retirement at the end of September, reports the TimesDispatch. His successor will be Deborah Davis, who has served as the organization's Chief Operating Officer for the past nine years. "The care that has been taken to groom her for this position results in a visionary and John Duval strategic leader who will accelerate our momentum toward a preeminent academic health center," wrote Dr. Marsha Rappley, CEO of VCU Health System and Vice President, VCU Health Services. Among Davis' accomplishments cited by Dr. Rappley: "Superb financial management," oversight of the successful move into the new Critical Care Hospital and the successful design and occupancy of the Children's Pavilion. Davis told the TD yesterday that her proudest accomplishment has been the STAR service initiative to enhance the patient experience. She also noted the need "for community engagement, and to create different kinds of partnerships that may have never been thought about." Duval, a RAM member, will remain with the university through next March as a policy advisor during the 2017 General Assembly. During Duval's 13 years at the helm, VCU brought on several major facilities, including the Critical Care Hospital and the Children's Pavilion. He also led the health system's mergers with the Children's Hospital of Deborah Davis Richmond in 2010 and with Community Memorial Hospital in South Hill in 2014. Duval, 63, and his wife of 37 years, Valli Duval, are moving back to their hometown of Tucson, Ariz. "The west is home for me," said Duval, who worked at the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center for 16 years before coming to VCU. Dr. Walter Lawrence Writes Future Physicians Click here to read Dr. Walter Lawrence's column to future medical school students in the June/July "Discover Richmond" in the Richmond Times Dispatch. In "A seasoned doc shares a message," the TD notes the surgeon's participation in RAM for than 50 years: "At age 90, Dr. Walter Lawrence Jr. of Richmond who entered med school during World War II is still seeing patients. Through our friends at the Richmond Academy of Medicine, we asked him to write a letter to aspiring doctors today." Dr. Lawrence is professor of surgery emeritus and director Making the human connection! emeritus of the Massey (photo by Mary Beatty Cancer Center at the VCU Brooks/McGuire VA Medical Center) School of Medicine. He also treats fellow veterans at the McGuire Veterans Affairs Medical Center. "What is it about treating other human beings that's so fulfilling? It starts with that aspect of medicine that seems as powerful now as when I was a medical student: the patient," he writes. "Many call this the doctorpatient relationship, but I like to think of it as the human connection." Dr. Lawrence served for many years on the VCU School of Medicine Admissions Committee and said that was always a reminder that "even though medicine has greatly progressed over the years, we still need compassionate physicians, with a talent for science, who will both love and seek the opportunity to serve others in need." Dr. Lawrence's column is also posted on RAM's website, so click here for a good print version. Dinner (and family fun) on us! Please join your fellow Academy members at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden on Wednesday, July 13th for RAM's Annual Family Night. We'll have live music by River City Band, waterplay in the Children's Garden, face painting, balloon animals and a familyfriendly dinner! Drop by from 5:00 8:00 p.m. for a night of family fun! CLICK HERE to register, call Lara at 8046228137 or email her at [email protected] Be sure to let Lara know the number of adults and children attending and the ages of those children. We hope to see you there! Help Shape MSV/RAM's Legislative Agenda Do you have suggestions for new health care policy in the Commonwealth? Are there rules, laws, studies or other fair business practice issues that you would like to see the Medical Society of Virginia address? If so, RAM invites you to offer resolutions for the consideration of our 38 delegates who will represent Richmondarea physicians at the MSV Annual Meeting, October 1416, 2016. These resolutions may end up as proposed legislation for the 2018 Virginia General Assembly or as a part of the MSV legislative package for 2018. Please describe the problem, define the issue and propose a possible solution. Submit your work by fax to 7889987 or by email to [email protected]. All resolutions must be received by WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2016 to be considered. Please consider serving as a delegate to the MSV Annual Meeting. If interested, contact Lara Knowles at 6228137 or [email protected]. Goodbye Fan Free, Hello Health Brigade! After operating for nearly a half century as the Fan Free Clinic, the organization has rebranded itself as the Health Brigade, reports the TimesDispatch. Executive Director Karen Legato said the name better reflects what the organization provides to the community, including "this sense of a fighting spirit that we've always had, because we've been strong in our advocacy work and social justice for the people we serve." "We really took a look at who we've been and what our core values are to get to the essence of what Fan Free Clinic has been all these years and how we want to position ourselves moving forward," she said. Legato noted that the "free" part of the clinic's name may have limited the organization because it is considering implementing a slidingscale payment option that's tied to a patient's income. Click here to read how the rebranding occurred. The name change name should be completed by December, with temporary signage already in place. When Fan Free was founded in 1968, it was the first free clinic in Virginia and one of the first in the country, Legato said. Bon Secours Taps Virtual App Bon Secours Richmond is rolling out a new virtual app/telemedicine product, "Bon Secours 24/7." An ad in the July issue of Richmond magazine shows a woman in bed holding a tissue against her nose: "Don't 'Self' Diagnose," the ad declares. "Real Diagnosis. Real Time. Real Simple." It goes on to ask, "Is it just a cold or is it allergies? Now there's a whole new way to see the doctor* (or let the doctor see you). With the new Bon Secours 24/7 app you can video chat with one of our medical providers in real time, giving you the convenience and access you need to take charge of your health. And with virtual visits for only $49, you can get a real diagnosis, a prescription if needed, and get back to real life in record time." Click here to learn more! (The * in the ad notes: "Patients may see a doctor or nurse practitioner depending on availability.") Holy MACRA! One Doc's Take(down) On Medicare Payment Plan Even as the head of CMS recently sang the praises of the Medicare payment plan (MACRA) that replaced the bad old one (SGR), one doctor was singing the blues about what lies ahead. Blogging on KevinMD, Dr. Don Read says he was cheering last year when Congress passed the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA), which promised "to simplify and improve Medicare's costly and complex programs that purport to measure the quality of care we provide to our patients." Unfortunately, "It appears that the net results will be neither simplified nor improved." In particular, he says, it's "disappointing... to learn that CMS proposes to design a program that is stacked against solo physicians and small group practices in its first year of implementation." Despite promises by CMS Acting Administrator Andy Slavitt that MACRA will "put physicians back in control," Read has a number of concerns, from "costly reporting and compliance," to "arbitrary incentives to create massive changes in physician practice." Click here to read more about his concerns that run counter to the current messaging and massaging from Washington. Treating Pain w/out Rx Slow to Gain Acceptance Federal and state agencies & officials are urging docs to first treat pain without using opioids including some plans to restrict how many pain pills a doctor can prescribe. "But getting the millions of people with chronic pain to alternative treatments is a daunting task, one that must overcome inconsistent insurance coverage as well as some resistance from patients and their doctors, who know the ease and effectiveness of medications," reports The New York Times. Alternate pain relief regimens may include chiropractic and osteopathic manipulation, meditation, massage, acupuncture and cognitive behavioral therapy, "which helps people cope with pain by changing how they think about it." But many state Medicaid programs for the poor, while eager to reduce opioid use among their members, are just starting to grapple with whether or how to cover nondrug treatments for pain. One exception is physical therapy, which Medicaid is required to cover for members who gained coverage under the Affordable Care Act. But the coverage varies by state. Click here to read more about ongoing research. And click here to read how nearly 1 in 3 patients on Medicare some 12 million people "got at least one prescription for an opioid painkiller last year. The bill? $4.1 billion. One of the authors of the study said "this raises concerns about abuse. This is serious problem facing our country." Supreme Court Overturns Bob McDonnell's Convictions The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously reversed former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell's 11 corruption convictions this week. "Although there is a chance that federal prosecutors could seek to retry McDonnell, Monday's decision marked an end of a lengthy period of legal limbo for a man was once a rising star in the Republican party," reports The Washington Post. Gov. McDonnell and daughters after his conviction. Presumably, they're happier now! Click here for a statement by the former governor. And here for a list of who made donations to his legal defense fund. "Lawyers for Maureen McDonnell, whose separate appeal of her own conviction had been put on hold as her husband's case played out, said his victory means she should also be vindicated." For the former governor, it could be months or even next year before he learns whether or not he will be tried again in light of the high court's decision overturning his corruption convictions, reports the TimesDispatch, "Or if the government throws in the towel, he could find out much sooner." USA Today reports that "publiccorruption cases just got harder to prove" by "saying that helping a wealthy benefactor gain access to state officials, though 'distasteful,' does not necessarily prove illegal quid pro quo." Click here for another account from The New York Times. UVa political analyst Larry Sabato the keynote speaker at RAM's Sept. 13 General Membership meeting said the court's decision could magnify voter cynicism. "The elites are saying this is understandable behavior," he told RTD columnist Jeff Schapiro. "But average people were outraged by this. That's where the jury verdict came from." Click here to read more. UVa's Sabato: Average folks will be "outraged" What Can You Say When a Patient Asks About Dying? Click here for a thoughtful blog by a physician in KevinMD that explores how "the path to becoming a physician is not easy." As she reflects on her own growth over the years, Dr. Angella Woodman recalls her own quest to retain her humanity while controlling her emotions. "Love becomes blunted. Compassion is muted at best. In building that wall to escape the pain, you run the risk of closing yourself off from happiness as well." Her struggle came to a head one day when a family member of a dying patient asked her, "Why would God do this to her?" Dr. Woodman's response and its aftermath taught her, "I could not save their mother, and I could not take away the family's pain. But I could acknowledge it, I could speak, and I could be human." Click here to see what she said. "Alert Fatigue" Got You Down? While many people have set their smartphones with various reminders, it's a whole different story for doctors and nurses who keep getting pings and popups on computers and iPhones. "The electronic patient records that the federal government has been pushing in an effort to coordinate health care and reduce mistakes come with a host of bells and whistles that may be doing the opposite in some cases," reports Kaiser Health News. "What's the problem? It's called alert fatigue." After Orlando Massacre, Many Confront a Long, Painful Recovery As the viewings, funerals and candlelight vigils tapered off after the June 12 massacre that killed 49 and wounded 53, "The reality is setting in that many people will be struggling emotionally, physically and, often, financially for a long time to come," reports The Wall Street Journal. Meanwhile, up to 1 in 5 people may be dying unnecessarily from car crashes, gunshots or other injuries, "a stark conclusion from government advisers who say where you live shouldn't determine if you survive," reports The Washington Post. "The findings take on new urgency amid the increasing threat of mass casualties like the massacre in Orlando." The Orlando massacre happened just blocks from a major trauma care hospital, "an accident of geography that undoubtedly saved lives," the Post reports. But the recent study "found that swaths of the country don't have fast access to top care, and it urges establishing a national system that puts the military's battlefield expertise to work at home." The ultimate goal: Zero preventable deaths after injury, and minimizing disability among survivors, said the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report. Click here to read it! There's no single organization in charge of trauma care in the U.S., but the study's authors said local and state improvements could begin immediately. "The meter is running on these preventable deaths," said Dr. Donald Berwick of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, who chaired the NAS committee. Trauma is the leading cause of death for Americans 45 and younger, killing nearly 148,000 people in 2014 alone, costing an estimated $670 billion in medical expenses and lost productivity. The biggest opportunity to save lives occurs well before reaching a doctor, with about half of deaths occurring at the scene of the injury or en route to the hospital. Here's an article about advances in stopping bleeding from traumatic injuries. Click here to read more from Kaiser Health News about promoting the lessons of the military to advance national trauma care. Zika Funding Squashed after Senate Spat Senate Democrats yesterday "blocked a federal bill that would have provided $1.1 billion to fight the mosquito borne Zika virus, saying Republicans had sabotaged the legislation with politically charged provisions," reports The New York Times. "The move raised the possibility that no new money would be available soon to fight the disease as Southern states brace for a summer outbreak." After Republicans added provisions to the spending bill "that would hinder access to contraception for women and weaken environmental restrictions on pesticide use," health officials worried that the infighting ignores "the urgency of this threat." Meanwhile, click here for a report on some promising research that could lead to vaccine to protect against the Zika virus. For Docs in Training, a Dose of Health Policy Can Help the Medicine Go Down We treasure RAM's medical students, residents and interns who get involved early in organized medicine! Click here to learn more about the special membership opportunities the Academy offers. Stay tuned for more info about upcoming summer socials for students, residents, interns and fellows. Learn to dig organized medicine in our Digital Age and how RAM helps you link in with our medical community! And click here to read how RAM's future leaders at the VCU School of Medicine are outpacing their peers around the country where "many are taught next to nothing about the workings of the health care system." Lit's Healing Power Click here to read about a Georgetown U. Medical School class that starts with an Emily Dickinson poem about the isolating power of sadness: I measure every Grief I meet With narrow, probing, eyes Poet with probing I wonder if It weighs like Mine eyes Or has an Easier size. "It's a strange sight," writes Daniel Marchalik, MD, in The New York Times. "...me, a surgical resident, reading poetry to 30 medical students on a Tuesday night. Some of us are in scrubs, others in jeans; there are no white coats." But over the past four years, this has become his routine, and a feature of medical education at Georgetown, reading books like Haruki Murakami's novel, "Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage." It's the story of a depressed middleaged man who's trying to retrace his past in order to understand how life became so empty. There are many other books and discussions in GU's literature and medicine track, all in an effort to "slow down and explore human lives and thoughts in a different, more complex way... Reading attentively and well, we hope, will become a sustaining part of our daily lives and practice." Happy summer reading! (If you're looking for a recent great novel, try "My Brilliant Friend" by Elena Ferrante, the first of her Neapololitan trilogy about two precocious girls growing up in Naples.) We Love to Hear from You! We draw from a wide range of print, online and medical journals to bring you information we hope is relevant to your practice of medicine. But as a former journalist and nonfiction author, I recognize that mistakes do happen. So please contact me if you have any concerns, complaints, or ideas/articles you'd like to share by clicking here or calling 6228136. Click here if you'd like to see some of my other writing. THANK YOU for being part of the Academy and its continuing conversation about the best practice of medicine. And please check out some back issues! Chip Jones RAM Communications & Marketing Director Seeking inspiration at the Temple of Confucius in Beijing The Richmond Academy of Medicine, 2821 Emerywood Pkwy, Ste 200, Richmond, VA 23294 SafeUnsubscribe™ {recipient's email} Forward this email | About our service provider Sent by [email protected] in collaboration with Try it free today