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Turning research into lower medical costs

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010


By: Taunya English
tenglish@whyy.org


Researchers at Penn Medicine say they've dusted off their science journals and found a way to bring the best medical evidence to the bedside more quickly.

The federal government is pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into comparison research to figure out which medicines and treatments work best.

While national health officials try to make those answers easily accessible for everyone, in Philadelphia, Penn Medicine already has an in-house group working.

Craig Umscheid leads Penn's Center for Evidence Based Practice.

Umscheid: Many people go to Consumer Reports for making decisions about what TV to buy, or what washer and dryer to buy, clinical leaders here at Penn come to our center to make decisions about what drug to put on formulary, what devices to purchase.

Comparative effectiveness research is part of the national push to drive down the cost of medical care. And during the health reform debate, the government's involvement in comparison research was sometimes villified as a bid to tell doctors how to treat their patients.

Penn's Chief Medical Officer P.J. Brennan.

Brennan: It's not a ploy it's an effort to rigorously assess evidence, and come to the best decision for patients and the organization.

When Penn doctors were deciding between two kinds of germ-killing soap to fight surgery-related infections, the center took the case.

Brennan: So even though the more commonly used soap cost pennies, and the more expensive one costs about $13 per case, there was a net savings per surgical procedure of more than $16 dollar by reducing the need for treatment of surgical infections, patients benefits and the care is less expensive.

The soap switch was easy, but Brennan, but in other cases, it's been harder to get doctors to change the way they practice.

Brennan: I thought that folks would be too embarrassed not to adopt such strong evidence and I found that it's very difficult to embarrass doctors.

Maybe it's the difficulty of teaching old docs new tricks, but Brennan's team has had to find other ways to nudge health professionals.

Guidance from the research center is now hardwired Penn's electronic medical records system — alerts and algorithms remind doctors of the best evidence each time they open a patient file.

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One Comment

  • jefferson says:

    You guys should stop complaining cuz one the health care we have now isnt as good as it was supposed to be. also the law has just been signed give it a try u guys are too hard on democrats they went to college and we voted for most of these people.so if u want to say u have the right to choose tell that to ur congress men or state official. as for obama people are just tryin to make it look like america made a mistake he has done things to help us and we had a full 8 years of a terrible president and i will be so as happy as ever when a obama fixes bush's mistakes. You can find full medical coverage at the lowest price from http://bit.ly/9sfoMb obama has to put up with the wo0rld judging his every move and trying to fix the mess we are in we are lucky anyone wants to be our president. STOP COMPLAINING AND GIVE HIM A BREAK. i wanna see one of yall do what he sas done. some people are just so ignorant.

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