Monday, 26 August 2019

For a research based on value. The failed model of antibiotics

Cristina Roure



As we have commented on some occasion in this blog, neither the price nor the volume of investment in R&D of the medicines corresponds to the value they provide. Antibiotics, along with vaccines, have saved millions of lives, have allowed to address challenges such as transplants and complex surgeries with guarantees of success and, if this were not enough, they also add enormous value to the productivity of the agricultural sector.

Monday, 19 August 2019

More time to generate quality conversations with patients?

Anna Sant



The fight of the click in the consultation

Two studies published last year in the Annals of Internal Medicine and Health Affairs compared the time that doctors spend with the patient in consultation with the time they spend with the computer. Jordi Varela analyzed these results in his post dedicated to Danielle Ofri, a Bellevue Hospital doctor and professor at the NYU School of Medicine, who said, referring to the electronic medical record (EHR), that "The beast is insatiable and every time it needs more and more food. It ends up claiming all the time I dedicate to human interaction and, given that I ought to, I have to stay late, just to satisfy its cravings.” Both studies concluded that the time spent on the screen is longer than that dedicated to the patient.

Monday, 12 August 2019

A Viktor Frankl for the healthcare system

Gustavo Tolchinsky


“For only to the extent to which man commits himself to the fulfilment of his life's meaning, to this extent he also actualizes himself.” 
Viktor Frankl

Recently, in a meeting about the health of physicians, Dr. Clare Gerada, responsible PHP caring program for NHS doctors, commented on something that had never crossed my mind... How is it that we continue accepting that the Declaration of Geneva, which emanates from the Hippocratic Oath and was ratified in 2005 by the World Medical Association in France, keeps stating that "we (doctors) promise to consecrate our lives to the service of humanity"? Such a load seems unaffordable in these terms, but seeing the conditions in which we work, gives us the feeling that sometimes we are paying with a large part of our lives practicing as doctors.

Monday, 5 August 2019

Migration and mental health: the risk of exclusion

Andrés Fontalba





The human being has managed to colonize all habitable regions of our planet thanks to migrations. Due to cultural, economic, political or geographic movements, the population has moved en masse from prehistory to the present day, these movements being in some cases spontaneous and others forced. It is, therefore, a process of mobility intimately linked to us as a species.

Monday, 29 July 2019

Measuring the effectiveness and value of clinical practice










In the "XIV Conference of the Sign Foundation", Jens Deerberg-Wittram, Director of the Boston Consulting Group, gave the inaugural lecture entitled "From volume to value". It was a very timely speech, at a time when the obsessive control of budgets and waiting lists prevents clinicians and managers from reflecting on what contributes so much care activity to society. The concept of value expressed by the German speaker is very new for healthcare managers, who tend to understand clinical effectiveness as a rhetorical concept more typical of epidemiological studies.

Monday, 22 July 2019

Let's finish with the phrase "This has always been done like this"

Mònica Almiñana



There are more and more voices defending that our current model of health care ought to improve and that, if we don’t change it, it will change us.

But, to achieve this change, we need foundations from which to build upon. In my opinion, undoubtedly, there are three essential levers for this transformation: data intelligence (big data), patient safety and patient experience. The three are increasingly interrelated, and if not, read the report presented this year by the ECRI Institute: "Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns for 2018".

Monday, 15 July 2019

It’s estimated that the waste in biomedical research reaches 85%








In 2014, following concerns over the poor quality of biomedical research, The Lancet published a series of 5 articles analysing the scope of the problem and proposing solutions and as a result of this Reward Alliance was born, a platform that aims to defend the value of the research, from which I have extracted the scandalous figure of 85% and, according to Paul Glasziou and Iain Chalmers, two of the leaders of the movement, the volume of money squandered by biomedical research could reach 170 billion dollars annually, an amount higher than Hungary's gross domestic product. The two authors, who already predicted this figure in 2009, argue that this amount comes from an accumulation of up to three times 50%.