Friday, January 13, 2012

New Blogs

It's been a while since I posted anything on here, but whatevs. Check out the two "new" running blogs of mine:

sub15minutes.blogspot.com

and

marathonatrois.blogspot.com

The former is a video blog chronicling the quest to break 15 minutes this coming summer with friend Steve Hicks. The latter was started last year as a forum for friends Gordon and Ross (and me) to stay in touch as we trained for the Boston marathon. It's mostly devolved into a general keep-in-touch blog among Cornell friends, but what's wrong with that?

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Dr. Bottles on Quality Reporting

Link is here.

This is a good read that gets at some of the common arguments physicians give against quality reporting. Many of these can be found in the comments section.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

The Secrecy of Cost and Quality

While normally a forum for all things exercise science- and Central New York track and field-related, as I'm just back from the AMA conference in San Diego, I thought it would be therapeutic to throw some health policy opinion up on the proverbial running blog. As a full disclaimer, I am by no means an expert in health policy or much else for that matter. I merely hold the belief that patient empowerment and health care improvement shouldn't have to wait in line behind fear of failure. Let me explain.

A medical student section-sponsored resolution was brought forth before the AMA encouraging physicians to make practice-related data publicly available. Presumably, this would spur three major changes:

1) Patients would have more information about the doctors they choose to go see.
2) Physicians would have more information about the doctors they refer patients to.
3) Quality improvements could be realized through measurement of short-comings and process-oriented changes related to such.

Sounds simple enough, right?

Wrong. Some legitimate concerns were raised, namely, the "attribution problem," which relates to the burdensome task of divvying up responsibility for a given patient among the multiple doctors that the patient might see. Other concerns fell on the accuracy front, in that claims data may not reflect the true performance of a physician. Finally, the conventional "I see sicker patients" argument was raised several times, as if the concept of normalization had yet to be invented.

With the belief that the perfect and complicated shouldn't stand in the way of the good and simple, why not start with reporting data where attribution is clear-cut? What percent of at-risk patients were counseled about their weight? Does your practice use an e-prescription system? As far as accuracy is concerned, let's use smart EHR's that enable physicians to collect, analyze, and present the data themselves. Insurance companies are eventually going to do it anyway, but shouldn't doctors be interested in taking a peek at their practice habits over a larger sample size and see how they compare to the practice habits of others? (Believe it or not, while such internal review is nice, making that information public has been shown to be a critical step in seeing that change really is affected.)

There are data beyond outcomes that could be but are currently not reported on consumer websites such as healthgrades.com or insurance search engines. And attribution be damned, why NOT report outcomes data when patient's case is clear-cut? The notion that we don't have the metrics is just plain false, and the belief that patients wouldn't know what to do with quality information is frankly insulting.

On the expense side, cost profiling of physicians is being done whether docs like it or not. Basically, patients get the choice of seeing a "high performance" (i.e. "lower cost") physician, and if they do, they're rewarded by lower co-pays. Doctors hate this idea, but objectively, with the cost of health care soaring in this country, you get the feel that most people think it makes a good bit of sense. Two separate resolutions from Georgia and Florida asked the AMA to seek laws that would make cost-profiling illegal. I hate to say it, but keeping your prices secret from the prospective patient pool is not going to fly for long in our profession. And why should it? I can't think of another industry where the billing structure is so opaque from the moment the customer walks in the office.

A few years back, Andrew Cuomo got it right with his suit against UnitedHealthCare, and in doing so, showed that outlawing cost reporting is not a viable legislative reality. Cuomo's office called for accurate methods (let's move away from a tiered system and allow for some statistical error) of cost reporting in conjunction with quality reporting.

Cost and quality are two sides of the same coin, and both need to be made available to the patient before doctors can claim patient choice is anything more than a nice idea.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

USATF Study Damns Static Stretching

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/01/phys-ed-does-stretching-before-running-prevent-injuries/

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Monday, September 21, 2009

XC Kickoff

Top 30 of 190 from this weekend's Upstate Series XC race...

 THE 2009 UPSTATE CROSS COUNTRY SERIES RACE #1
JAMESVILLE BEACH COUNTY PARK - SEPTEMBER 19, 2009

Results by Leone Timing & Results Services
www.leonetiming.com
Men's Results
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLACE NAME SEX AGE TEAM TIME PACE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Scott Shaw M 28 Syracuse Track Club 15:42.1 5:04
2 Kevin Collins M 38 Syracuse Track Club 15:47.9 5:06
3 Ryan Pauling M 33 Genesee Valley Harriers 15:48.6 5:06
4 Greg Stowell M OP Syracuse Track Club 16:14.4 5:14
5 Todd Halbig M 33 Syracuse Track Club 16:28.0 5:18
6 Chip Ohara M 28 Syracuse Track Club 16:28.9 5:19
7 Chad Byler M 26 Genesee Valley Harriers 16:32.3 5:20
8 Nick End M 25 Genesee Valley Harriers 16:36.0 5:21
9 Nicholas Scalfone M 24 High Noon AC 16:37.9 5:22
10 Juan Martinez M 31 Syracuse Track Club 16:41.3 5:23
11 Andrew Foxenberg M 25 Syracuse Track Club 16:51.0 5:26
12 Earl Steinbrecher M 45 Genesee Valley Harriers 17:00.2 5:29
13 George Young M 28 Junk Yard Dogs 17:03.0 5:30
14 Dave Bischoff M 47 Genesee Valley Harriers 17:13.3 5:33
15 Carl Johnston M 44 Genesee Valley Harriers 17:28.5 5:38
16 Christopher Compson M 27 Minoa 17:33.4 5:40
17 Randy Hadzor M 23 Syracuse Track Club 17:37.3 5:41
18 Jay Hubisz M 30 High Noon AC 17:39.1 5:41
19 Tom Meyer M 34 High Noon AC 17:44.3 5:43
20 John Van Kerkhove M 47 Genesee Valley Harriers 17:48.0 5:44
21 Adlai Wheeless M 49 Syracuse Track Club 17:49.2 5:45
22 Brian Lazzaro M 34 High Noon AC 17:55.0 5:46
23 Eric Maki M 47 High Noon AC 17:58.4 5:48
24 Tim Riccardi M 50+ Syracuse Track Club 17:58.7 5:48
25 Marty Maynard M 28 Genesee Valley Harriers 18:01.0 5:48
26 Kevin VanBoden M 41 Syracuse Track Club 18:01.7 5:49
27 Mark Rybinski M 54 Genesee Valley Harriers 18:02.0 5:49
28 Andrew Kress M 23 Syracuse Jackalopes 18:05.3 5:50
29 Tony Vodacek M 50 Genesee Valley Harriers 18:05.8 5:50
30 Jason Mintz M 29 Syracuse 18:09.8 5:51

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Lopez Takes 8th at Worlds

1 233 Yusuf Saad Kamel BRN 3:35.93
2 413 Deresse Mekonnen ETH 3:36.01
3 1196 Bernard Lagat USA 3:36.20
4 727 Asbel Kiprop KEN 3:36.47
5 721 Augustine Kiprono Choge KEN 3:36.53
6 811 Mohamed Moustaoui MAR 3:36.57
7 436 Mehdi Baala FRA 3:36.99
8 1198 Lopez Lomong USA 3:37.62
9 232 Belal Mansoor Ali BRN 3:37.72
10 810 Amine Laalou MAR 3:37.83
11 808 Abdalaati Iguider MAR 3:38.35
12 1203 Leonel Manzano USA 3:40.05

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Beer Mile


Sorry for no updates in a while. One's coming soon. In the meantime, here are the results from my first ever beer mile last Sunday.

Thanks to Mike for taking the splits.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Lore of Running References

For anyone interested, got a 100-page PDF of Noakes's Lore of Running references. I've had this document for a while and have found it to be a fairly comprehensive--if not a bit outdated--list of journal articles on the physiology of running. Most of these articles are accessible (at least in abstract form) on PubMed.