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INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF CHICAGO

  • 5 Jan 2024 3:42 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The year begins with a number of challenges that have only intensified for U.S. healthcare providers.  

    Below are a dozen trends and issues that commanded our attention throughout 2023 and hold our curiosity in the year ahead. These patterns and shifts directly or indirectly influence how healthcare providers fare in 2024, and ultimately affect how Americans access, afford and receive care. [Becker's Hospital Review]

    1. Healthcare has a worsening numbers problem. The estimated 30,000 physicians who join the U.S. workforce will not be enough to meet the growing demand for care and number of doctors retiring, reducing clinical hours, or planning to exit the field each year. Keep in mind that an estimated 71,309 physicians left the workforce from 2021 through 2022 alone. These supply disruptions unfold as the nation as a whole continues to grow and age, intensifying demand for physicians even amid a growing pipeline of advanced practice providers. It's a fairly finite pool of doctors, APPs, nurses and all types therapists and techs to take care of a larger and older population. All in all, the U.S. faces an estimated shortage of between 37,800 and 124,000 primary care and specialist physicians by 2034.

    2. The payers have become massive. The largest payers are 10x the size of the largest health systems. The negotiating imbalance continues to grow in favor of the payers. One 2023 analysis found the market-leading insurer in the least competitive insurance markets pays 15 percent less to hospitals than the market-leading insurer in the most competitive markets, for example. Negotiated rates are just one part of the problem hospitals face amid growing payer power, along with denials and reimbursement policies that make a growing portion of payment slow, costly and inconsistent. At the same time, payers are finding the world more difficult in terms of profitability than they were. The most advantageous payers are a mix of payers and providers.

    3. The largest employer of physicians is one of the world's largest insurers. UnitedHealthCare with Optum has become the largest employer of doctors in the country. Optum added nearly 20,000 physicians in 2023, meaning it now has nearly 90,000 employed or affiliated physicians and another 40,000 advanced practice clinicians. Everyone else in the disruptor space is playing catch up and facing the same supply problems as legacy providers. There are not enough doctors and providers for each of the disruptors to be successful in providing and staffing clinics on a national level.

    4. Governmental healthcare payers, between Medicare and Medicaid, are now combined to be larger than commercial payer sources. This reliance on government-funded programs presents immediate business concerns for hospitals and health systems given that Medicaid fee-for-service payments for physician services are nearly 30% below Medicare payments, which are well below commercial rates. In the year of a presidential election, Medicare has long been seen as the third rail of politics due to the voting power of those 65 and up. Medicaid can now fall in that same category, given that it has even more enrollees than Medicare. 

    5. Technology is part of a solution, but not the entire solution. Artificial intelligence, automation, EHR optimization, virtual care programs and remote patient monitoring are increasingly important in helping to close some of the care gaps in our country and in making administrative efforts and clinician efforts a little less burdensome. But technology solutions without more doctor and provider solutions will not solve the problem of supply and demand.

    6. The movement to value-based care is still very much a work in process. In the fee-for-service reimbursement model, you see some challenges of overuse. Many value-based care models bring in the opposite: increased use of pre-authorization and efforts to avoid providing care. The right solution, as in most cases, is somewhere in between.

    7. Medicare Advantage now covers more than half of the Medicare population. Until recently, this has been a huge boon for payers and largely a debacle for providers. Medicare Advantage is one example of the power of political lobbying. Big payers have a lot of influence here, even as CMS overpaid Medicare Advantage organizations an estimated $16.6 billion in fiscal year 2023. 

    8. Mental and behavioral health in the U.S. has reached a critical stage with a worsening imbalance of needs and demands versus supply. It is estimated that 1 in 5 Americans already lived with a mental illness before the COVID-19 pandemic, which only exacerbated demand for this type of healthcare. Rates of depression among adults hit a high in 2023, suicides hit an all-time high in 2022, and emergency department visits for children's mental health conditions have surged over the past several years. At the same time, nearly half of the U.S. population resides in a mental health workforce shortage area. As it stands, the U.S. faces a shortage of 14,280 to 31,109 psychiatrists, and psychologists and social workers by 2050.

    9. Washington, D.C., tends to make noise about the impact of private equity in healthcare. Lawmakers are currently pursuing scrutiny of private equity's involvement in healthcare, but the issue risks serving as a political red herring for an unproductive Congress. Nine percent of private hospitals and 30% of proprietary for-profit hospitals (which make up 36% of all U.S. hospitals) are private equity-owned hospitals. Pricing, competition and quality of care linked to private equity-backed organizations warrant scrutiny, but lawmakers' attention is also needed toward many additional pressing healthcare issues affecting larger pieces of the industry's pie. 

    10. Aging well/preventive health is seeing a growth in interest. Both aging well and preventive health are difficult to institutionalize but are super important and generally underutilized. In 2020, it was estimated that only 8% of Americans undergo routine preventive screenings. Missed prevention opportunities go toward an estimated  30 cents on every healthcare dollar. 

    11. The diabetes/obesity drugs can have a large positive long term impact on healthcare. The year begins with steady interest on the long-term effects of GLP-1 agonist drugs, for which demand is high — 9 million prescriptions issued the final months of 2022 alone — and poised to increase. This raises questions for insurers, employers and the government related to spending and questions for healthcare providers' services and surgeries if weight is lost at scale.

    12. Hospital margins largely improved in 2023, but hospitals face huge long-term financial challenges. The median hospital operating margin rose to 2% in November, with margins varying among institutions and markets. Greater labor and supply expenses and patient acuity will continue to challenge hospitals in the year ahead, and certain types of hospitals face outsized risks. Hundreds of rural hospitals, for one, are at immediate risk of closure because of the severity of their financial problems.

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  • 4 Jan 2024 2:27 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Wednesday named Heidi Mueller — a child welfare and juvenile justice expert — as head of the state’s embattled Department of Children and Family Services. [Chicago Sun-Times]

    Mueller, who has served as director of the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice since 2016, was selected after a national search. She will take the reins of the scandal-plagued agency beginning February 1, according to the governor’s office.

    Mueller will become the agency’s 13th director, either acting or interim, in 14 years. Since 1964, DCFS has had 29 directors.

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  • 3 Jan 2024 2:53 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The demand for mental health has increased significantly in the 2020s.

    Mental healthcare utilization grew 38.8 percent between 2019 and 2022 and spending on mental health jumped 53.7 percent in the same timeframe. The coronavirus pandemic was a key driver of these trends. It was disruptive and destructive to well-being, but it also opened many Americans’ eyes to their desperate need for mental health support. [Healthcare Executive Intelligence]

    As a result, in 2022 telemental health utilization had stabilized at around 1,068 percent of what it was pre-pandemic.

    In today’s episode of Industry Perspectives, Georgia Gaveras, DO, co-founder and chief medical officer at Talkiatry, discusses these trends and the state of telemental healthcare.

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  • 2 Jan 2024 12:20 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    With the worst of the COVID nightmare now behind us and the public health emergency ending in May, many of us hoped that the lessons of the pandemic would lead to positive changes in American healthcare -- which might ease the situation in the overrun emergency department (ED). That didn't materialize. [MedPage Today]

    I suppose that if I had to use one word to describe the tone of the modern American emergency department, it would have to be "despair."

    Our patients continue to despair for many reasons. No small number do so because they inhabit a nightmarish loop that goes from home or nursing home, to hospital, to rehab. Rinse, repeat. They are too sick for any urgent care or primary care office, so they come to the ED where we plug them back into the system as before, knowing their names and medical histories as soon as we see their exhausted faces on the EMS stretchers. Once admitted they end up in uncomfortable rooms in the ED with complex illnesses, but no free beds for inpatient admission.

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  • 29 Dec 2023 2:13 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Cognition was impaired for at least a year and a half after severe SARS-CoV-2 infection, but overall cognitive problems were like those seen in patients hospitalized for other severe diseases, a prospective study showed.

    Compared with healthy controls, people hospitalized for COVID-19 had significantly worse long-term overall cognition, measured by the Screen for Cognitive Impairment in Psychiatry (SCIP) and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), according to Michael Eriksen Benros, MD, PhD, of Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark, and co-authors.

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  • 28 Dec 2023 8:11 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The COVID-10 pandemic may no longer be a global public health emergency, but millions continue to struggle with the aftermath: Long COVID. New research and clinical anecdotes suggest that certain individuals are more likely to be afflicted by the condition, nearly 4 years after the virus emerged. [Medscape]

    People with a history of allergies, anxiety or depression, arthritis, and autoimmune diseases and women are among those who appear more vulnerable to developing long COVID, said doctors who specialize in treating the condition.

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  • 27 Dec 2023 5:03 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) today released the results of a statewide landscape scan that revealed that Illinois school districts are well on their way toward phasing in universal mental health screening for students. The report includes four recommendations to close gaps in access to mental health screening and to ensure districts of all different sizes and capacities have the tools they need to successfully implement mental health screening for all students. [ROE26]

    Similar to physical, dental, and vision screeners, mental health screeners aim to detect social-emotional and behavioral concerns early, so schools can connect students to the appropriate services and interventions before concerns become a crisis. 

    ... The landscape scan report includes four recommendations that recognize districts’ varying capacities and seek to address the most common barriers to implementing universal mental health screening:

    Illinois should undertake a phased approach to universal mental health screening of all K-12 students enrolled in public school districts. Universal mental health screening of all K-12 students means mental health screening of every student in every grade enrolled in a school district each year.

    ISBE, in consultation with relevant stakeholders, should compile and organize resources to support school districts in improving the mental health culture and climate in schools and reducing the stigma related to screening, referral, and participation in mental health services.

    ISBE, in consultation with relevant stakeholders, should release guidance about (1) mental health screening tools available for school districts to use with students and (2) associated training for school personnel.

    ISBE should oversee a process of model policy development with relevant stakeholders that supports school districts in implementing universal mental health screening of students.

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  • 22 Dec 2023 11:38 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    New campaign aims to turn the tide on maternal mortality in Chicago’s Black community | Shernita Hosey, 38, knows what it’s like to endure postpartum depression. The single mom of two daughters, ages 10 and 14, remembers the support she sought from family and friends after her children were born. That’s why the Humboldt Park resident can often be seen canvassing door to door in South Side neighborhoods as an outreach worker with EverThrive Illinois, a health equity advocacy group. [Chicago Tribune]



    The latest campaign centers on the Black maternal morbidity crisis, which encapsulates any health problems that result from being pregnant or giving birth. According to an October report on Illinois Maternal Morbidity and Mortality from the Illinois Department of Public Health, discrimination was 50% more likely to be a contributing factor in pregnancy-related deaths among Black women as compared with white women; Black women were three times as likely to die from pregnancy-related medical conditions as white women; and statewide maternal mortality review committees determined 91% of pregnancy-related deaths were potentially preventable due to clinical, systemic, social, community or patient factors. Such statistics have spurred numerous agencies and organizations to try to make inroads in their own ways, including with technology.

    More> https://lnkd.in/gtUu2KhT

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  • 21 Dec 2023 3:03 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    What are the most recent advancements in establishing AI safeguards for clinical practice? In what way does AI intersect with democracy and its preservation? And how are the frameworks for regulating AI progressing and aligning across the US, UK, and EU? As the technology advances at lightning speed, such questions surrounding AI become more critical. [JAMA Network]

    Alondra Nelson, PhD (Video), is focusing on effective guardrails that protect society from issues like data insecurity—but also encourage innovation in the laboratory and clinic. Nelson is the Harold F. Linder Professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where she studies the effects of scientific and technological advances on health and society. In 2023, she was included in TIME magazine’s 100 most influential people in AI.

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  • 20 Dec 2023 8:35 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    When Mayor Brandon Johnson took the wraps off his “People’s Plan for Community Safety,” it sounded more like a rebranded mix of plans championed by his predecessor, Lori Lightfoot, with violence prevention initiatives bankrolled by business leaders sprinkled in. [Sun Times] 

    But it turns out that Johnson does have at least the bones of his own plan to take the fight against the root causes of crime to a whole new level. [Photo: Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere /Sun-Times]

    It starts with programs in four Chicago neighborhoods that have long been plagued by violent crime — Englewood, Little Village, Austin and West Garfield Park — and in the “most violent blocks” within those four neighborhoods.

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