Showing posts with label physicians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label physicians. Show all posts

Monday, October 8, 2012

IOM - Connected coverage — selected articles on trends, challenges and controversies in the changing world of medicine.

OPINION


IOM’s landmark reports over the years

Connected coverage — selected articles on trends, challenges and controversies in the changing world of medicine.

Connected Coverage. Posted Oct. 8, 2012.
 
When the Institute of Medicine says something, people throughout the health system listen. The IOM, founded in 1970 as the health care arm of the National Academy of Sciences, functions to provide nonpartisan, practical reform advice to policymakers. The institute’s reports often are described as groundbreaking, seminal events in the world of health policy.

American Medical News regularly follows the work of the IOM and the specific impact the institute has on debates about physician issues. Some of the systemic problems the IOM has identified over the years include a prevalence of medical errors that cost patient lives, delivery system shortcomings that interfere with quality improvement, and wasteful utilization of health system resources that rob from patient care. The good news in these reports, however, is that the IOM thinks there are plenty of things that doctors and others can do about it.

IOM: Physicians play key role in stopping health system waste

Will a “silent exodus” from medicine worsen doctor shortage?

Many physicians, nervous about the impact of health system reform and dispirited by trends in medicine, are exploring career options that involve treating fewer patients.


By Kevin B. O'Reilly, amednews staff. Posted Oct. 8, 2012.
Frustrated by mounting regulation, declining pay, loss of autonomy and uncertainty about the effect of health system reform, doctors are cutting back the number of hours they work and how many patients they see.

Between 2008 and 2012, the average number of hours physicians worked fell by 5.9%, from 57 hours a week to 53, and doctors saw 16.6% fewer patients, according to a survey of nearly 14,000 doctors released in September. If the trend continues through 2016, it would equate to the loss of 44,250 full-time physicians, said the report, conducted by the doctor-recruiting firm Merritt Hawkins & Associates for the Physicians Foundation. The foundation was started in 2003 with more than $30 million from class-action settlements that 22 state and county medical societies made with health plans.

“This is a silent exodus,” said Mark Smith, president of Merritt Hawkins. “Physicians are feeling extremely overtaxed, overrun and overburdened.”

for complete AMA article:
http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2012/10/08/prl11008.htm