Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

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maiforpeace
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Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

Post by maiforpeace » Tue Jul 10, 2012 10:24 pm

Here's your chance to bash Obamacare. And Judge Roberts. Let's see what you got.

Community health centers compare well with private practices, researcher finds
BY MANDY ERICKSON

Randall Stafford

Government-funded community health centers, which serve low-income and uninsured patients, provide better care than do private practices, a researcher at the Stanford University School of Medicine has found.

Randall Stafford, MD, PhD, professor of medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center, and colleagues at University of California-San Francisco looked at the actions physicians took when patients visited private practices versus the actions that were taken at community health centers, also referred to as Federally Qualified Health Centers and FQHC Look-Alikes, both of which receive government support.

Their study was published online July 10 in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Stafford is the senior author.

The results of the study are particularly encouraging given that the Affordable Care Act, which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld June 28, depends on community health centers to provide services to previously uninsured patients.

“If community health centers are going to be taking up some of the new demand, we can be confident that they’re giving relatively good care,” Stafford said.

Stafford and his colleagues analyzed records of 73,074 visits to private practices, FQHCs and FQHC Look-Alikes. Both FQHCs and Look-Alikes receive enhanced Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement; FQHCs also receive government grants. The researchers acquired the records from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, which the National Center for Health Statistics gathered between 2006 and 2008.

They evaluated the physicians’ adherence to professional and federal guidelines for 18 measures, which included treatments for specific diseases, screening for certain conditions, and diet and lifestyle counseling. “We looked at fairly common conditions that are seen in primary care,” said lead author L. Elizabeth Goldman, MD, of UCSF.

The researchers found that community health center physicians performed as well as their private practice colleagues in 13 of the 18 measures. For the remaining five measures — use of ACE inhibitors for congestive heart failure, use of beta blockers, use of inhaled corticosteroids for adult asthmatics, blood pressure screening and avoidance of electrocardiograms in low-risk patients — the community physicians followed recommendations a higher percent of the time.

Given that patients at community health centers have more health and socioeconomic challenges and therefore take up more physician time, said Stafford, “The fact that community health centers look better is perhaps surprising.”

“On the other hand, having worked in community health centers, I can see how it makes sense,” he added. “These are centers where physicians are not as profit-driven and many have incentives more in line with providing quality care.”

Stafford added that the government has provided the centers with technology that helps manage patient care, which may explain their superior performance. And they are generally larger than private practices: “Having a number of colleagues helps you develop better practices. In a solo practice, you have rare opportunities to debate the best way to practice medicine.”

When the researchers adjusted the data so that the patients’ characteristics were statistically equal, the community health center physicians performed better on three additional measures: aspirin for congestive heart failure, statins for congestive heart failure, and avoidance of benzodiazepine, which has serious long-term side effects, for depression. (The statistical adjustment did not alter the balance in the other previous measures, and if anything, the magnitude of the difference increased in favor of the community physicians.)

The study was funded by awards from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. In addition to Stafford and Goldman, other researchers from UCSF and Johns Hopkins Medical School contributed to the study.

Information about Stanford’s Department of Medicine, which also supported this work, is available at http://med.stanford.edu/medicine.
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Re: Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

Post by maiforpeace » Wed Jul 11, 2012 2:03 pm

Considering Republicans have tried to overturn, at least 31 times since, the Affordable Care Act which the Supreme Court upheld at only the end of June, I'm wondering why all I still hear are crickets chirping so far....
Atheists have always argued that this world is all that we have, and that our duty is to one another to make the very most and best of it. ~Christopher Hitchens~
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Re: Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

Post by kiki5711 » Wed Jul 11, 2012 2:59 pm

I have good insurance from my husband and lately I have noticed (in the past few years) that every hospital I went to for tests or some procedure, are hiring worse and worse employees to work there.

One example, I had to get my blood drawn before some procedure in one of the hospitals here and this old lady came to draw my blood. I mean she looked about over 75 yrs old. I thought, well, maybe she's an experienced nurse so she really knows what she's doing. NOT!!! She could not find a vein and she stuck a needle in some certain way that my whole arm started to burn. Finally, another guy came along, I'm thinking ok, he KNOWS what he's doing, NOT, he couldn't do it either! I MEAN THIS IS SIMPLE BLOOD DRAWING.

Finally I asked for a head nurse. She came and did it right away. I swear I was pissed. :sulk: :sulk:

Then when I was in the hospital after I got my colon re attached, I coudn't move a muscle for the first three or so days. At night I had to go pee. I had that pee chair next to my bed but I couldn't get up so I called a nurse. Some younger girl came in, obviously to me NOT a nurse and she says, "you gotta get up and do it yourself"! I was like, I can't move my body! Finally another lady came in and helped me. :twisted: :twisted:

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Re: Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

Post by Coito ergo sum » Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:44 pm

I'll start with pointing out that the ACA doesn't expand community health centers. The ACA requires individuals to obtain health insurance coverage, whether through an employer or by purchasing it on the open market. So, why would this be a point in favor of the ACA? The ACA says that if I have no insurance now, I have to buy it. I might get some tax credit from the government after I've purchased it to help defray part of that cost, but that doesn't mean I'm going to community clinics. I just buy health insurance and go to a doctor.

So, I guess point number one is, so what? How is this a point in favor of Obamacare? Are people under the impression that ACA is government healthcare?

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Re: Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

Post by Coito ergo sum » Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:52 pm

Point 2 -- it's a clear overstatement to say that the study says that community health centers "provide better care." That isn't the conclusion of the study.

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Re: Community Health Centers do Better than Private Practice

Post by Coito ergo sum » Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:57 pm

The survey collected information on four categories of care: drug management of common chronic diseases, preventive counseling for smoking cessation, diet and exercise, appropriate use of common screening tests (like blood pressure tests and electrocardiograms), and appropriate writing of prescriptions for elderly patients
On six of 18 measures, the federally funded centers performed better; those measures were clustered in the drug management and appropriate use of screening test categories.
http://www.latimes.com/health/boostersh ... 4558.story

"appropriate use of screening test categories" for example entails whether the doctor is following "guidelines" as to under what circumstances to do a test, or not do a test. So, a private practice that adopts a practice of providing more testing than recommended would score lower in that category.

I can't seem to find the study itself. The website of the organization that did the study doesn't have it up.

This thread can be better addressed when we look at exactly what the study studied, and what its methodology was.

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