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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Nov 2011
ReviewQuality and safety in medical care: what does the future hold?
- Bryan A Liang and Tim Mackey.
- Institute of Health Law Studies, California Western School of Law, 350 Cedar St, San Diego, CA 92101, USA. baliang@alum.mit.edu
- Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. 2011 Nov 1;135(11):1425-31.
ContextThe rapid changes in health care policy, embracing quality and safety mandates, have culminated in programs and initiatives under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.ObjectiveTo review the context of, and anticipated quality and patient safety mandates for, delivery systems, incentives under health care reform, and models for future accountability for outcomes of care.DesignAssessment of the provisions of Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, other reform efforts, and reform initiatives focusing on future quality and safety provisions for health care providers.ResultsHealth care reform and other efforts focus on consumerism in the context of price. Quality and safety efforts will be structured using financial incentives, best-practices research, and new delivery models that focus on reaching benchmarks while reducing costs. In addition, patient experience will be a key component of reimbursement, and a move toward "retail" approaches directed at the individual patient may supplant traditional "wholesale" efforts at attracting employers.ConclusionsQuality and safety have always been of prime importance in medicine. However, in the future, under health care reform and associated initiatives, a shift in the paradigm of medicine will integrate quality and safety measurement with financial incentives and a new emphasis on consumerism.
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