Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Book
  • Careers
  • Podcast
  • Recommended
  • Speaking
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
    • All
    • Physician
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • Video
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Recommended
    • Speaking

5 health care wishes for the New Year

Suneel Dhand, MD
Physician
January 11, 2015
Share
Tweet
Share

Happy 2015! Health care in the United States continues to change faster than any of us can keep pace with and this shows no signs of slowing down. Having written a lot in 2014 on a variety of different topics, I wanted to focus on my own 5 wishes for hospital care this New Year. A lot of you may think that what you’re about to read sounds like wishful thinking, but remember this is a wish list:

1.Health care information technology. Hopefully, hospitals will start working towards optimizing health care IT with frontline clinical workflow. What we have right now (and I speak as someone who has worked in several different hospitals) is for the most part slow, inefficient and cumbersome to use. It takes time away from patients and causes great frustration for both doctors and nurses, who are spending less and less time with their patients. For the sake of good medicine and also pleasing our patients, we need to design better IT systems, move away from “click box medicine”, and ensure that health care IT does more than just satisfy administrative requirements. Even the most hardened technophobe will agree that information technology is the way of the future, so let’s make it better.

2. Patient safety and health care quality. Great strides have been made in this area in 2014, but we need to make sure that the efforts are both effective and meaningful. Many of the same unsolved problems still exist as last year (and indeed 10 years ago), such as improving medication reconciliation and the discharge process.

3. Patient satisfaction and improving the hospital experience. Ask any patient what they really want from their hospital stay, and the answers are usually extremely simple. Things like increased face time and better communication with their doctors and nurses, clarity on wait times, and the ability to get a good rest while in the hospital. Hospital administration across the country needs to focus on the real fundamentals of good hospital care, and move away from “patient satisfaction” being a bumper sticker. Get these things right, and huge rewards are to be had.

4. Direction of health care consolidation and private doctors. I first came to the United States to start my residency in 2005, at a time when the current crop of changes to health care was just beginning. I did my residency training in Baltimore and have since worked up and down the East Coast.

Having come from a very different system (the United Kingdom) one of the first positive things that struck me about the U.S. system was the dynamism of U.S. physicians who were in private practice, and the choice and flexibility this gave to patients. Over the last decade, there has been a relentless push towards consolidation and employed doctors. Solo and small practices are finding it increasingly difficult to thrive. I sincerely hope that the pendulum begins to swing back the other way in 2015, because I feel this will be better for both patients and physicians. The question is: Can we do this with the added need to also control costs? I hope so.

5.Health care costs. Sticking with the last point, I don’t believe that the need to control costs necessarily means that there has to be a stark choice between the traditional U.S. model of health care or moving towards a more centralized system that exists in European countries — with all of the restrictions, control and rationing that goes with that. There are several hybrid models that exist, like in countries such as Australia (where I’ve worked too and seen excellent care being delivered). My hope is that we can reconcile the need to control costs without adopting a more controlled system where physicians and patients feel their choices and freedom are limited.

There we go, my wish list for 2015. The best people to make health care choices will always be the patient and their doctor, and this relationship always needs to remain front and center of any care system. Whatever the New Year holds in store, physicians need to work together to ensure we move in the right direction and make health care better.

Suneel Dhand is an internal medicine physician and author of Thomas Jefferson: Lessons from a Secret Buddha and High Percentage Wellness Steps: Natural, Proven, Everyday Steps to Improve Your Health & Well-being.  He blogs at his self-titled site, Suneel Dhand.

Prev

How health IT fails transgender patients

January 11, 2015 Kevin 0
…
Next

Blessed to be alive after a gunshot wound

January 11, 2015 Kevin 0
…

Tagged as: Health IT, Hospital-Based Medicine

Post navigation

< Previous Post
How health IT fails transgender patients
Next Post >
Blessed to be alive after a gunshot wound

ADVERTISEMENT

More by Suneel Dhand, MD

  • The dream patient that makes a doctor very happy

    Suneel Dhand, MD
  • When the family wants to speak to the doctor

    Suneel Dhand, MD
  • 3 reasons why patients are unhappy

    Suneel Dhand, MD

More in Physician

  • The unspoken contract between doctors and patients explained

    Matthew G. Checketts, DO
  • The truth in medicine: Why connection matters most

    Ryan Nadelson, MD
  • New student loan caps could shut low-income students out of medicine

    Tom Phan, MD
  • Why “the best physicians” risk burnout and isolation

    Scott Abramson, MD
  • Why real medicine is more than quick labels

    Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA
  • Limiting beliefs are holding your career back

    Sanj Katyal, MD
  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Why primary care doctors are drowning in debt despite saving lives

      John Wei, MD | Physician
    • New student loan caps could shut low-income students out of medicine

      Tom Phan, MD | Physician
    • How federal actions threaten vaccine policy and trust

      American College of Physicians | Conditions
    • Are we repeating the statin playbook with lipoprotein(a)?

      Larry Kaskel, MD | Conditions
    • Why transgender health care needs urgent reform and inclusive practices

      Angela Rodriguez, MD | Conditions
    • mRNA post vaccination syndrome: Is it real?

      Harry Oken, MD | Conditions
  • Past 6 Months

    • COVID-19 was real: a doctor’s frontline account

      Randall S. Fong, MD | Conditions
    • Why primary care doctors are drowning in debt despite saving lives

      John Wei, MD | Physician
    • New student loan caps could shut low-income students out of medicine

      Tom Phan, MD | Physician
    • Confessions of a lipidologist in recovery: the infection we’ve ignored for 40 years

      Larry Kaskel, MD | Conditions
    • A physician employment agreement term that often tricks physicians

      Dennis Hursh, Esq | Finance
    • Why taxing remittances harms families and global health care

      Dalia Saha, MD | Finance
  • Recent Posts

    • How IMGs can find purpose in clinical research [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Why the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is essential to saving lives

      J. Leonard Lichtenfeld, MD | Policy
    • Medicaid lags behind on Alzheimer’s blood test coverage

      Amanda Matter | Conditions
    • The unspoken contract between doctors and patients explained

      Matthew G. Checketts, DO | Physician
    • AI isn’t hallucinating, it’s fabricating—and that’s a problem [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Brooklyn hepatitis C cluster reveals hidden dangers in outpatient clinics

      Don Weiss, MD, MPH | Policy

Subscribe to KevinMD and never miss a story!

Get free updates delivered free to your inbox.


Find jobs at
Careers by KevinMD.com

Search thousands of physician, PA, NP, and CRNA jobs now.

Learn more

View 1 Comments >

Founded in 2004 by Kevin Pho, MD, KevinMD.com is the web’s leading platform where physicians, advanced practitioners, nurses, medical students, and patients share their insight and tell their stories.

Social

  • Like on Facebook
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Connect on Linkedin
  • Subscribe on Youtube
  • Instagram

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Why primary care doctors are drowning in debt despite saving lives

      John Wei, MD | Physician
    • New student loan caps could shut low-income students out of medicine

      Tom Phan, MD | Physician
    • How federal actions threaten vaccine policy and trust

      American College of Physicians | Conditions
    • Are we repeating the statin playbook with lipoprotein(a)?

      Larry Kaskel, MD | Conditions
    • Why transgender health care needs urgent reform and inclusive practices

      Angela Rodriguez, MD | Conditions
    • mRNA post vaccination syndrome: Is it real?

      Harry Oken, MD | Conditions
  • Past 6 Months

    • COVID-19 was real: a doctor’s frontline account

      Randall S. Fong, MD | Conditions
    • Why primary care doctors are drowning in debt despite saving lives

      John Wei, MD | Physician
    • New student loan caps could shut low-income students out of medicine

      Tom Phan, MD | Physician
    • Confessions of a lipidologist in recovery: the infection we’ve ignored for 40 years

      Larry Kaskel, MD | Conditions
    • A physician employment agreement term that often tricks physicians

      Dennis Hursh, Esq | Finance
    • Why taxing remittances harms families and global health care

      Dalia Saha, MD | Finance
  • Recent Posts

    • How IMGs can find purpose in clinical research [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Why the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is essential to saving lives

      J. Leonard Lichtenfeld, MD | Policy
    • Medicaid lags behind on Alzheimer’s blood test coverage

      Amanda Matter | Conditions
    • The unspoken contract between doctors and patients explained

      Matthew G. Checketts, DO | Physician
    • AI isn’t hallucinating, it’s fabricating—and that’s a problem [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Brooklyn hepatitis C cluster reveals hidden dangers in outpatient clinics

      Don Weiss, MD, MPH | Policy

MedPage Today Professional

An Everyday Health Property Medpage Today
  • Terms of Use | Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
All Content © KevinMD, LLC
Site by Outthink Group

5 health care wishes for the New Year
1 comments

Comments are moderated before they are published. Please read the comment policy.

Loading Comments...