[January 17, 2017] |
|
NEJM Catalyst Announces Live Web Event on The Future of Care Delivery: Relentless Redesign
Care redesign is occurring across the U.S. as provider organizations
respond to the rapidly changing shift in the design and performance of
their current systems of care. But despite these improvements, barriers
still stand in the way of the transformation of health care delivery.
In order to survive and succeed in a value-based world, providers need
to strategically rethink how they approach and respond to changes in
technology, patient demands, and reimbursements.
On Thursday, January 19, from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. PT, NEJM Catalyst and
Providence St. Joseph Health will produce and host a live web event, The
Future of Care Delivery: Relentless Redesign. In this free
event, several of the nation's leading experts in health care delivery
will reflect on the ongoing nature of care redesign.
"The arc of healthcare redesign is long, but it leads towards value,"
said event chair Amy Compton-Phillips, M.D., Executive Vice President
and Chief Clinical Officer of Providence St. Joseph Health. "Innovative
practices, entrepreneurial thinking, and big data are combining to
iterate our way into the future. Clinicians, clinical leaders, and
executives must be nimble and adapt, or cede the ability to lead the
way."
The event will include three separate sessions, with attendees
encouraged to submit questions online for the Q&A portion of each
session. The sessions are:
-
Technology Disruption: What Matters - Health care is awash in
new technologies that could transform care delivery or turn out to be
nonproductive time sinks - or, worse, undermne patient care. How do
we deploy technology, improve care, and achieve value without
burdening the patient or the provider team? An innovation executive
from within health care and a leading researcher on how patients and
providers evaluate new knowledge share their insights.
-
Lessons Learned: Failed Experiments in Care Redesign - Medicine
advances through trial and error, research, and learning. Some things
we believed in the past turned out to be just plain wrong. As science
and practice advances, what norms and practices that are followed
today will be rejected in the future, and what should we learn from
them? Hear from a leader in health care policy and the president of
one of the nation's largest health systems.
-
Meaningful Data: Meeting Patient Needs - Health care
organizations went from having too little data to having too much. How
do they filter what's important, what's not, and how can they
integrate data in a more meaningful way? One of the nation's leading
scientists will join with an innovator in using data to inform what
patients and providers want and need.
Participants will come away from the event with approaches to
cost-effectively deploy new technology, insights on why providers and
researchers have encountered barriers in care redesign and the lessons
learned, strategies to filter out important health care data from the
unimportant, and processes for integrating good data in a more
meaningful way.
To participate in The Future of Care Delivery: Relentless Redesign,
register
online at NEJM Catalyst. On Twitter (News - Alert), use #caredesign17.
About NEJM Catalyst NEJM Catalyst offers a combination of
multimedia content, web events, expert panels, and new research. NEJM
Catalyst connects health care executives, clinical leaders, and
clinicians with practical approaches and actionable steps to implement
changes in their organizations that improve the value of health care
delivery and patient care. For more information, visit http://catalyst.nejm.org.
About NEJM Group NEJM Group creates high-quality medical
resources for research, learning, practice, and professional
development. Designed to meet the demand for essential medical knowledge
and innovation among academic researchers and teachers, physicians,
clinicians, executives, and others in health care, NEJM Group products
include The New England Journal of Medicine, NEJM Journal Watch, NEJM
Knowledge+, and NEJM Catalyst. NEJM Group is a division of the
Massachusetts Medical Society. For more information, visit http://nejmgroup.org.
View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170117005089/en/
[ Back To TMCnet.com's Homepage ]
|