One Step Forward
on Quality Improvement, One Step Back on Access
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
May 1, 2012
You may already
know that heart disease is the
top cause of death for both men and women
and is responsible for one in four deaths in the
United States. It also costs more than $400
billion each year in health care services,
drugs, and other expenses.
But here’s good
news: Patients with heart disease are getting
better quality of care. Better care has led to
fewer hospital admissions and deaths.
A new set of
reports from the Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality (AHRQ) show that fewer patients go
to the hospital with congestive heart failure
and that fewer patients die from heart attacks
in the hospital. Patients who have heart attacks
are getting faster access to angioplasty, a
procedure to open blocked arteries.
These findings
come from AHRQ’s
2011 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities
Reports, released last month. Since 2003,
these reports have helped track our progress and
identify where we need more work to build the
best possible health care system for all
Americans.
Not only do the
reports show that quality of care for heart
disease is getting better, they also found that
some outcomes for blacks with this condition are
better than for whites.
For example,
blacks had a lower rate of hospital deaths from
heart attacks than whites. And blacks with
congestive heart failure were more likely than
whites to receive an angiotensin-converting
enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, a medication to help
heart function, when they left the hospital. For
other conditions, such as cancer and diabetes,
blacks typically had worse outcomes than whites.
Access to health
care did not improve for most racial and ethnic
groups. Half of the measures that tracked
disparities in health care showed no
improvement, and 40 percent of those measures
got worse.
And health care
quality, while getting better, is improving at a
slow rate (2.5 percent) each year. We’ve learned
a lot in the past decade about how to improve
health care quality. But much work remains to
close the gap between what we know and what we
practice.
Of course, each
of us has a big role to play in staying healthy
and preventing disease. Lifestyle factors, which
include exercise, not smoking, a healthy diet,
and regular exercise, account for more than 40
percent of the differences in an individual’s
health.
Lifestyle factors
also affect obesity, which can cause or worsen
many diseases. Today, about one-third of adults
are obese and 17 percent of children and teens
are obese.
Health care
providers are learning they need to help educate
parents and children about obesity and how to
prevent it. Nearly half of health care providers
said they offered advice to parents about why
their child should follow a healthy diet, the
reports found. About the same percentage of
adults said they got advice from a health care
provider about their own eating habits.
Slightly more
than half (57 percent) of obese adults got
advice from a health provider about exercise.
About one-third (34 percent) of parents got this
information for their child or teen.
You can play an
important role in staying healthy by educating
yourself and your family members about lifestyle
choices. Another thing you can do is
ask
your health care provider questions so you
can address your concerns together.
We have a long
way to go before our health care system works as
well as we want it to work for all Americans. As
we reach toward that goal, let’s put into action
the things we know can make a difference right
now.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my advice on how to navigate
the health care system.
Resources
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
2011 National Healthcare Quality &
Disparities Reports
http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/qrdr11.htm
Questions are
the Answer
http://www.ahrq.gov/questions/
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
Heart Disease Facts
http://www.cdc.gov/heartdisease/facts.htm
Current as of May 2012
Internet Citation:
One Step Forward on Quality Improvement, One
Step Back on Access. Navigating the Health
Care System: Advice Columns from Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, May 1, 2012. Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc050112.htm
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