The New Yorker Highlights Mayo Clinic in Health Reform Article

A featured article in the current issue of The New Yorker compares the health care costs and quality in McAllen, Texas with that of Mayo Clinic, and finds important lessons for health care reform. Here is a sampling:

Americans like to believe that, with most things, more is better. But research suggests that where medicine is concerned it may actually be worse. For example, Rochester, Minnesota, where the Mayo Clinic dominates the scene, has fantastically high levels of technological capability and quality, but its Medicare spending is in the lowest fifteen per cent of the country—$6,688 per enrollee in 2006, which is eight thousand dollars less than the figure for McAllen. Two economists working at Dartmouth, Katherine Baicker and Amitabh Chandra, found that the more money Medicare spent per person in a given state the lower that state’s quality ranking tended to be.

The author describes his experience in having visited Mayo Clinic:

I talked to Denis Cortese, the C.E.O. of the Mayo Clinic, which is among the highest-quality, lowest-cost health-care systems in the country. A couple of years ago, I spent several days there as a visiting surgeon. Among the things that stand out from that visit was how much time the doctors spent with patients. There was no churn—no shuttling patients in and out of rooms while the doctor bounces from one to the other. I accompanied a colleague while he saw patients. Most of the patients, like those in my clinic, required about twenty minutes. But one patient had colon cancer and a number of other complex issues, including heart disease. The physician spent an hour with her, sorting things out. He phoned a cardiologist with a question.

“I’ll be there,” the cardiologist said.

Fifteen minutes later, he was. They mulled over everything together. The cardiologist adjusted a medication, and said that no further testing was needed. He cleared the patient for surgery, and the operating room gave her a slot the next day.
The whole interaction was astonishing to me. Just having the cardiologist pop down to see the patient with the surgeon would be unimaginable at my hospital. The time required wouldn’t pay. The time required just to organize the system wouldn’t pay.

The article concludes:

As America struggles to extend health-care coverage while curbing health-care costs, we face a decision that is more important than whether we have a public-insurance option, more important than whether we will have a single-payer system in the long run or a mixture of public and private insurance, as we do now. The decision is whether we are going to reward the leaders who are trying to build a new generation of Mayos and Grand Junctions. If we don’t, McAllen won’t be an outlier. It will be our future.

Read the entire article here.

2 Comments

  1. BruceWMorlan
    Posted June 30, 2009 at 10:10 am | Permalink

    This article is very much worth reading. I found the discussions among the doctors in the McAllen environment to be very revealing. There was some irony in the paper copy as there was a multi-page ad for a show highlighting “concierge medicine” as the new great thing in medical care. It would be interesting to see how the articles cost-effectiveness analysis would rate concierge medicine.

  2. Posted July 1, 2009 at 2:11 pm | Permalink

    I think that all hospitals should follow the Mayo clinic’s lead.


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