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HEALTHCARE REFORM

A Performance Gap

International physician survey finds even though United States spends the most, it lags in access and quality of healthcare.
“The study underscores the pressing need for national reforms to close the performance gap to improve outcomes and reduce costs.”

An 11-country survey of physicians finds that healthcare in the United States lags behind other nations in terms of access, quality and the use of information technology. Some 58 percent of primary care doctors in the United States report their patients often have difficulty paying for medications and care, and half of U.S. doctors spend substantial time dealing with restrictions insurance companies place on their patients’ care, according to findings from the 2009 Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Survey published online in the journal Health Affairs.
 
The survey found a total of 69 percent of U.S. doctors report that their practices do not have provisions for after-hours care, forcing patients to seek care in emergency departments. U.S. doctors also were far less likely to use health information technology that helps reduce errors and improve care—only 46 percent of U.S. doctors use electronic medical records compared to 99 percent of doctors in the Netherlands and 97 percent of doctors in New Zealand and Norway.
 
“We spend far more than any of the other countries in the survey, yet a majority of U.S. primary care doctors say their patients often can’t afford care, and a wide majority of primary care physicians don’t have advanced computer systems to access patient test results, anticipate and avoid medication errors, or support care for chronically ill patients,” says Commonwealth Fund Senior Vice President Cathy Schoen, lead author of the article. “The patient-centered chronic care model originated in the United States, yet other countries are moving forward faster to support care teams including nurses, spending time with patients, and assuring access to after-hours. The study underscores the pressing need for national reforms to close the performance gap to improve outcomes and reduce costs.”
 
The survey of more than 10,000 primary care physicians in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States describes a U.S. primary care system that is under stress and highlights areas where the United States can learn from other countries. Notably, the United States could look to improve by using financial incentives to improve quality and efficiency, expanding access to health care and simplifying insurance, expanding the use of health information technology to prevent medical errors, and using a medical home approach to primary care where patients have options for care at any time of day or night, teams of health care providers to manage conditions, and continuity of care.
 
“Access barriers, lack of information, and inadequate financial support for preventive and chronic care undermine primary care doctors' efforts to provide timely, high quality care and put the U.S. far behind what many other countries are able to achieve," says Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation focused on improving healthcare access, quality, and efficiency. "Our weak primary care system puts patients at risk, and results in poorer health outcomes, and higher costs. The survey provides yet another reminder of the urgent need for reforms that make accessible, high-quality primary care a national priority."
 

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