Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Strategy vs Tactic: Synonymous? No. Complementary? Absolutely!



Many of us (myself included) have undoubtedly used the words strategy and tactic interchangeably at some point in our lives.  Whether it’s in an intense game of Monopoly, on the soccer pitch, or while ironing out the most successful business model, strategies and tactics are crucial components.  These words, however, are not synonymous; they are complementary! Strategies and tactics are meant to work in tandem in order to achieve one’s goals (whether it be driving your opponent to bankruptcy in Monopoly or becoming the top sports medicine clinic in the area) and one cannot work effectively without the other.  So let’s hash out those differences…


Strategy, is identifying clear, broad goals that advance the person or organization. Tactics are the specific methods a person or organization will employ in order to achieve that strategy. Going back to the Monopoly example (because, let’s face it, it’s a GREAT game), if the goal (and therefore strategy) is to force the opponent into bankruptcy, a tactic might be to buy all of the orange properties because it’s been found that players land on those most often and generate the most revenue for their opponent.   

To help clarify the distinction, here are a few other examples:
Strategy
Corresponding Tactic
Invade Normandy 
Tanks, Infantry, Battle Plan
Get out of Debt
Budget, Pay off Credit Cards
Exercise More
Hire Personal Trainer
Eat Better
Work with Dietician
Spend more time with my children
Commit to getting out of office by 5:30 pm
Be more mindful
Meditate for 30 minutes before bedtime

Choosing to look at a more relevant example that we see here often at Lake Washington Sports & Spine is the common strategy to “lose weight”.  Losing weight is the overall goal for the person, but unless specific tactics are designed to achieve that strategy, there will be disorder and ultimately failure in achieving weight loss.  If the strategy is to lose weight, one might say a tactic is to hire a personal trainer, commit to seeing them twice a week and cutting out sweets from his/her diet.  On the flip side, it is important to note that one cannot have tactics without strategies.  If this were the case, the person would have no big picture, no goal to strive toward. 

The reason why this important to us here at LWSS is because all of our patients’ treatment plans are based on the balanced relationship between strategies and tactics.  Patients often come into our office with a strategy, a larger goal they wish to achieve.  Dr. Hyman and Dr. Chimes are the ones who advise and prescribe different tactics that will help the patient reach his/her goals.

To help make an even stronger point is the realization that when patients fail to reach their goals, it’s usually because of tactical errors, rather than strategic errors. To use a parallel example, why do people hire accountants?   Is it because they need help with strategy or tactics?  Certainly the accountant can offer strategic advice (like lowering the total amount that you pay in taxes every year), but the main benefit of an accountant is helping on the nitty-gritty tactical details, such as taking advantage of certain deductions, or making purchases before after January 1 because of changes in the tax code.

Similarly, patients benefit from physicians the most when they utilize physicians for tactical advice.  As Lisa Huynh noted in her Meet the Expert interview, the thing that separates the good doctors from the great doctors is their ability to give specific, deliberate, and actionable advice on tactics to achieve your goals.  That is what we strive to do here at Lake Washington Sports & Spine, and we think it’s part of the “secret sauce” that makes for a better patient experience.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Dead Pro Wrestlers- finding the best comp

The great FiveThirtyEight blog has an interesting link today about professional wrestlers dying at a young age, inspired in part by the death of the Ultimate Warrior, Jim Helwig, at age 54.

As the blog posts notes, professional wrestlers have been known to be dying young for quite a while.  The Ultimate Warrior's death was startling because he had just been inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as part of the Wrestlemania 30 tribute a few days earlier, and that he had given a speech about legacy that in retrospect was prescient of his upcoming death.


The observation of wrestlers dying young has been documented for years.  Deadspin has a Dead Wrestler blog, and there is a decent (not great) book about dead wrestlers written by the author of the blog called The Squared Circle: Life, Death, and Professional Wrestling.

There is not much disputing that professional wrestlers die at a young age.  The big question is why.

I have a unique insight since, as far I know, I am the only practicing MD/PhD in the world who seriously contemplated a career as a professional wrestler.  When I was a junior in college at the University of Wisconsin, I was trying to decide which pathway to pursue.  I wanted to be a pro-wrestler, but I realized that while I was big by normal human being standards (at that time, I was 6'2.5" and 215 lbs), I was small for a pro-wrestler, so I gave my 6 months to learn how to perform a moonsault.  For the uninitiated, a moonsault is a standing back flip off of a 5 foot platform.  Even after 6 months working into a gymnastics pit, I kept landing on the back of my neck, so at the urging of my gymnastics coach I gave up my dream as a wrestler and went to med school.

But I kept following wrestling, and kept seeing my childhood heroes die young.  I read the stories about how they were linked to steroid usage- NY Post columnist Phil Mushnik has made a career of pushing this theory- and assumed it was true.

However, now that I am practicing physician who treats athletes, I am pretty sure this conventional line of thinking is not true.  I do not think anabolic steroid usage is the main reason wrestlers are dying young.

In the specific case of the Ultimate Warrior, Jim Helwig, he died of cardiovascular disease.  It is certainly possible that he developed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy from anabolic steroid usage, but that was not specifically listed as his cause of death, which would provide a more direct linkage.

There are a few key things that I think will help understand why wrestlers die young- pro wrestlers have the combined lifestyle of two groups- bodybuilders, and stand-up comedians.

What pro wrestlers have in common with bodybuilders:
- anabolic steroid usage
- weight lift a lot
- large, muscular physiques

What pro wrestlers have in common with stand-up comedians:
- on the road all the time
- shift of the natural body clock (staying up late, getting up late, with frequent time shifts)
- frequent alcohol use
- frequent use of downers
- frequent substance abuse
- extreme personality types

What I would love to see the author of the FiveThirtyEight blog is run a similar data set with both body builders and stand up comedians.  I think he will find that stand up comedians die at a young age, in a way that is comparable to Pro Wrestlers, while bodybuilders do not.

Just as a quick comparison:
The FiveThirtyEight blog used Wrestlemania 6 as a starting point, which took place in 1990, and found that 12 of 36 participants are now dead.  Of note, three are women, who likely didn't use anabolic steroids (Miss Elizabeth may have- she was living with Lex Luger at the time, who used all sorts of drug cocktails).

Let's compare that to comparable events for both bodybuilders and stand up comedians in 1990.

The pinnacle of body building is the Mr Olympia show.  Wikipedia has a list of the top 14 for the 1990 Mr Olympia show, won by Lee Haney.
- Frank Hillebrand died of a heart attack at age 45
- Andreas Munzer died of multi-organ failure at age 32
- I cannot find data on Mike Christian.  For the purposes of this discussion, I will presume he is dead.

There obviously may be some measurement error related to reliable reporting, but that is 3 out of 14 bodybuilders dead, or 21%, as compared to 33% of the wrestlers from the same time frame.  I'll admit that that is more bodybuilder deaths than I was anticipating, but still not quite comparable to wrestlers.

Looking at stand-up comedians- I am struggling to find a comparable Wrestlemania or Mr Olympia type event that would make a good comp.  If any readers have a good comparable event, I would love their feedback.  I've looked for a comprehensive list of comedians who appeared on HBO Comedy Specials in 1990, but couldn't find such a list.

Just as an example, though, here is a brief list of contemporary comedians who died young:
- Richard Jeni
- Mitch Hedberg
- Bill Hicks
- Greg Giraldo
- Bernie Mack
- Chris Farley
- Sam Kinison
- Patrice O'Neil
- John Candy
- Phil Hartman
- John Ritter

My impression, semi- quantitatively, is that the list of stand-up comedians is more similar to the pro wrestler list than are the list of bodybuilders.

A few years ago, I heard an interview with Craig Shoemaker, discussing the suicide of his close friend Richard Jeni.  Shoemaker's theory was that Jeni's body was messed up from years of never having a normal sleep schedule.  That is consistent with my clinical experience- one of the worse prognostic signs for patients is an abnormal sleep schedule, and lifestyle factors (particularly drug usage).

So what do I think is going on clinically?

I think we are dramatically over-estimating the risk of anabolic steroid usage, and dramatically underrating the risk of things like alcohol, muscle relaxants, abnormal sleep schedules, frequent travel, and hanging out with people who have similar lifestyle habits.

I hope we are focusing on the right issue.

Finding a great match!

One of my favorite movie scenes is from Miracle on 34th Street, where Kris Kringle let's a customer shopping for Christmas presents know that if they can't find something at Macy, he'd recommend a competitor (this link is grainy at off-sync a bit, but you get the idea).



I think one of the clear messages is no service provider can be all things to everyone, and so if you are not able to provide the service requested, often times the best customer service is no service.

The relationship between a patient and their doctor is first and foremost a relationship.  Much like dating, there are subtleties that make a relationship work, but also times the fit isn't ideal.  When that is the case, it's best to recognize the lack of fit, so that the patient can find someone who fits their needs and style.

Another analogy is the world of burritos. In our area, you can get a great burrito at Chipotle, Baja Fresh, Qdobo, and a myriad of other places.  Chipotle is my personal favorite, but I am glad that I have a choice.  I'd hate to have a system that mandated uniformity.  Variation is good.

In healthcare, that is true as well.  I have some colleagues I respect greatly who have different practice styles.  My practice style could be summarized as a musculoskeletal root-cause analysis, but with dogs in the office, and a graduation ceremony with maracas when you get better.  It's not the right choice for everyone, and I am ok with that.  I don't want to be good for anyone- I want to be great for a subset of patients, and help other people find a great fit with someone who meets their style.

One of the things that helps an efficient market is choice and transparency.  As my partner Garrett Hyman noted, the recently released Medicare billing data doesn't really add transparency- it mostly adds a lot of noise to true signal.  On the other hand, I think this blog provides transparency.  One of the main reasons I like to blog is that it offers patients a free "test drive" to my style and way of thinking.  For example, my personal diagnostic approach is rooted in thinking through a differential diagnosis, and my blog post on Differential Diagnosis explains how I think.

An additional part of this transparency and choice is freedom of choice for referral sources.  As I continue to work with colleagues, they start to develop familiarity with what I do well and what I don't do well, and that can help coordinate a good fit for the patient.

For example, many referral sources like to refer to me because they know I do a very thorough biomechanical assessment, give feedback on exercise, have expertise in diagnostic musculoskeletal ultrasound, and that I am skilled with both ultrasound-guided and fluoroscopically-guided injections.  For patients looking for that approach, I am a great fit.

Conversely, I do not prescribe oral medications for musculoskeletal conditions.  I don't think they work in the long term, and I think their usage gets in the way of more effective treatment approaches.  I have evidence-based and experience-based reasons for this philosophy, and this not a negotiable part of my practice style.  For patients looking for oral medications as part of their treatment, I am a horrible fit.  My preference is that patients understand this as early in the process as possible, preferably before the first encounter even.

Bottom line- great care starts with a great match!  Sometimes that great match is going to Gimbels instead of Macy's.  Patients should have the right to have a choice

Monday, April 14, 2014

Why physicians also need patients to be OUR adovcates

This recent blog post at the Daily Beast does a really nice job summarizing the challenges to being a physician.

I don't find my job as a physician miserable, but I used to.  To be more accurate, I used to find being a physician a mix of both the incredibly rewarding and completely unsatisfying, and I suspect that is true of most physicians.

In order to optimize my happiness, I had to make a dramatic shift, and that was leave my former job and large corporate medicine in general, and join a great partner, Garrett Hyman, who is invested in our mutual happiness as a tool to improve patient care.  The Daily Beast above highlights how that this is not the norm- physicians feel increasingly obligated to join large corporations as employees because of the burden of compliance with regulations.

Unfortunately, I know some friends and colleagues who are resigning mid-career because of the misery of being a physician in the current climate, and that is both unfortunate and expensive.

The Daily Beast article touches on some of the burdensome frustrations of being a doctor and how this hurts patients, but I'll give another specific one- Meaningful Use.

Meaningful Use is a requirement of CMS (the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) that verifies that not only are we using an electronic medical record (EMR, or EHR for electronic health record), but that we are using it in a "Meaningful" way.  To get physicians to comply, they withhold part of our payment, and then give it back if we jump through the appropriate hoops.

Last year, I lost $8000 because of Meaningful Use penalties.  I actually met all of the criteria, but because I switched jobs last year, I was not able to present the data to CMS in the format they required.  It was basically an $8000 tax because of a logistical quirk of switching employers.  Very frustrating and expensive, but it is what it is.  These days, it is not uncommon for physicians to just have to "suck it up" and take on these kinds of costs as part of the cost of doing business.

One of the criteria this year is that we have secured communications with patients via our EMR.  Now this is where the logistics of CMS becomes super annoying.  I am very clearly in the upper 1% of physicians in terms of electronic communication.  For most visits,  I send patients a secured-email summary of their visit, along with pertinent articles and links to our blog on related topics (e.g., this article on the use of suspension straps, where I have photos and instructions on how to perform the exercises).  This very clearly meets the intent of the requirement, BUT because I am sending this information outside of my electronic medical record, it doesn't count.

So I have a choice- use an inferior alternative that pays me more, or take the penalty and communicate in a way that I know patients prefer.  I choose to take the penalty.  But it comes with a cost- $8000 this year, and the costs escalate over time.

The number of these criteria are not small.  For example- we do NOT get paid to counsel our patients about exercise.  Rather, we get paid to CLICK A BUTTON that says we did.  It's an important difference.

This button pushing is pretty miserable, so why do I refuse to give in and be miserable?  Because I perceive that I have a choice.  Garrett and I have decided we are going to live by our mission statement, which is KPA- Keep People Active.  If something helps patients KPA, we do it.  If it doesn't KPA, then we don't.  That choice is the difference between being happy and being miserable.

Now, what should a patient do?  The thing I'd recommend is become your physician's advocate.  It's all about the golden rule- treat others the way you'd want them to treat you.  If you want your physician to be free to listen to you, guide you along your journey of being more active, vote in ways that free us to be YOUR advocate.

Because good doctors are disappearing, and it's accelerating.  I'd hate to be having this same conversation in a few years when you can't find a doctor to take care of you.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

The fundamental hypocrisy of CMS, ACA and Big Data

There is a great blog post today at Five-Thirty-Eight about mammography.  In the post, they discuss the pros and cons of mammography, and I think it provides a fair and thoughtful balance.

There is one quote in the post I want to discuss:"One of the central assumptions of economics is that more information cannot generate worse decisions. Mammography clearly provides more information. The problem is that contrary to our typical economic assumptions, it seems hard for doctors and patients to ignore this information. Once a tumor is detected, we want to treat it."


I think this a great point the authors make - we should not assume that more data necessarily generates better decisions.  In particular, they are saying that sometimes both patients and physicians need to be protected from themselves, because they make poor decisions because they have too much data.

Simplifying it further- more data can lead to bad decisions, especially when people act on it inappropriately.

This then leads to the fundamental hypocrisy of the Affordable Care Act (the ACA, or Obamacare) and CMS (the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services).  They are very expensively creating a major shift in health care to create bigger and bigger data sets, with the idea that this "Big Data" will lead to better decisions. 

As a patient, this should feel condescending and infuriating.  Basically, the politicians and the administrators behind the ACA and CMS are saying that patients and physicians do not have the discipline or wisdom to use data appropriately, but they do.  They are willing to dramatically but how much money they are willing to spend on things like MRIs and mammograms, and shift that money toward making people collect data on behalf of CMS and the ACA.

So, how do you want your taxpayer money spent?  Would you rather your doctor and you come to a mutual discussion of whether you need a mammogram, or do you want that decision taken away from you, and have money spent forcing doctors to push buttons to collect data for use by the ACA and CMS.

As an example of how ludicrous this use of Big Data is seen by the shift to ICD-10.  ICD stands for the "International Classification of Disease", which is a list of diagnoses.  Every time we see a patient, doctors need to assign a diagnosis according to ICD.  The current version of ICD is called ICD-9, and the government has forced a very expensive shift to a newer, much larger system called ICD-10, that has a much longer list of diagnoses.

ICD-10 is ridiculous- it's overly complex and creates far more noise than signal.  This link gives a list of several of the stupider codes.  My favorite is that there are 3 different codes for health effects of walking into a lamp-post- whether it's the first time you walked into the lampost, a repeat encounter, or a secondary complication of walking into a lamp-post.

What the advocates of Big Data are proposing is that patients and physicians working together are not wise enough to use the data from mammography appropriately, but adminstrators and politicians will be able to make brilliant insights because they know which sub-type of injury you have from walking into a lamp-post.  Does that make any sense to you?

There is another word for this hypocrisy- arrogance.  There have NOT been any studies that have shown this shift to big data will help, and it's very expensive.  And it explains why doctors are increasingly literally pushing buttons instead of talking to their patients.

Patients- there is an alternative.  Think about who within the health care systems is most aligned with your interests.  Is it the politicians, the administrators, the insurers, or your physician?  We physicians do not like what is happening, but unfortunately we have not been successful lobbying to protect the interests of patients.  Patients need to speak up and protect those who are trying to protect you.

Help physicians help you.  Speak up.

Promoting Mediocrity through Medicare



By Garrett Hyman, MD, MPH

An article in today's NY Times applauds the public release of Medicare data on provider payments (http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/09/business/sliver-of-medicare-doctors-get-big-share-of-payouts.html).  The authors, Reed Abelson and Sarah Cohen, state, "While total Medicare spending - including hospitals, doctors and drugs - is approaching $600 billion a year, payments to doctors have long been shrouded in secrecy."  Sounds a lot like the start of a suspense novel.  One might imagine these journalists have uncovered a clue that might lead to the big arrest that makes our nation safer from the epidemic of corrupt and opportunistic physicians -- like an episode of "CSI: CDU (aka Corrupt Doctors Unit)" -- as if this group of highly motivated and intelligent, type-A, over-educated, devoted, hard-working, do-gooders is prone to acts of mal-intent.  Follow the money, and you will see the trail ends in your doctor's wallet -- is the obvious message of this article.     

The implication is that this now open-source information about the Medicare earnings of your doctor will finally provide you with critical financial information that will allow you to make more informed healthcare choices.  Specifically, you learn what your doctor bills and what your doctor is paid, and the numbers of procedures your doctor performed in 2012 on Medicare patients.  Then with this data you decide whether or not, for you, your physician is the most appropriate.  So let's try it out....using my Medicare payment data as an example.....say you're a 35 year old male Microsoft employee and avid soccer player with knee pain....you search the database and find that I've performed 30 'Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection......large joint...including the knee' on 18 Medicare patients, for which I charged an average of $195 per procedure, and was reimbursed on average $57.  

Alright now, we have the data -- let's be deliberate, methodical and purposeful, and logically sort through these numbers to make an informed healthcare decision.  Can we relate this to healthcare quality?  No.  Outcomes?  No.   Efficiency?  No.  How can the healthcare consumer make use of this data?  I don't know.  Now, should you be a healthcare insurer looking to identify physicians that perform higher numbers of procedures so that you can refuse admission to, or drop a physician from your panel, well then this data may come in handy.  There's a way to increase corporate profits!  Never mind that, said physician, may be THE regional expert in restoring function to patients with chronic musculoskeletal problems with office-based and cost-effective approaches, specifically using targeted injection procedures, thereby helping these patients avoid a more costly surgery.  Where does the Medicare payments data tell you this important information?  It doesn't.

What should it cost to manage the knee pain of a 35 year old soccer player?  The answer -- it depends.  As you might expect, not all knees and not all persons are created equal.  I won't attempt herein to go into all of the potential causes of knee pain in an active 35 year old -- that's a treatise to itself -- but rest assured, there are many unique causes.  In fact, it is just this unique variation that creates the need for...you guessed it...dedicated, expert healthcare providers.    

I have no idea whatsoever how to make this data useful for either the 35 year old soccer athlete or the 80 year old masters tennis player with knee pain.  

I'm an experienced specialist physician, and I can't follow the logic.  Can you?  

Interestingly, the article authors did find a physician who can make use of this data; only he no longer practices medicine.  They quote a physician turned venture capitalist, Bob Kocher, who says "This is actually the most useful dataset that Medicare has ever released."  They also note that Dr. Kocher formally served in the Obama administration before parlaying his political influence into a plum job.  Now Dr. Kocher diagnoses more lucrative ways to make a living rather than treating patients.  What irony in the authors' choice to support their narrative of the corrupt physician (and to be clear, I do not, at all, fault any enterprising physician who elects to leave medicine to purposefully pursue a profit)!  Dr. Kocher is correct in one important respect -- this will be the most useful dataset ever released by Medicare for health insurers and for industry who can then use this data to select out specific physicians for their proclivity to perform procedures.  For example, the pharmaceutical company that makes a drug or device that is delivered via joint injection would love to know that I perform twice the number of joint injections compared to Dr. Smith down the street -- much easier to target their marketing directly to me!

NY Times columnists Abelson and Cohen paint a decidedly grim picture of the financial practices of American physicians who participate in Medicare.  They go on to relate, per a NY Times analysis of the data, that "about 2 percent of doctors account for about $15 billion in Medicare payments, roughly a quarter of the total."  The article notes that "the American Medical Association and others have blocked the release of information (for decades)."  How incredibly devious and unscrupulous of these medical-mafioso!  How the plot thickens as we see that it is not only individual doctors but also organized medicine is 'on-the-take.'

This, in truth, is a precautionary tale of misguided though perhaps well-intended persons of influence (i.e. government and the media) who have it all wrong, but have the influence to widely spread a fallacy and in so doing generate strong negative popular opinions about the individuals sworn to uphold our nation's health.  Go ahead, hate your doctor(s).  And when your doctor decides to turn in his stethoscope for a consulting job or a stockbroker license, be sure to ingratiate yourself with your new care provider, likely a physician assistant or nurse practitioner, because it's going to be hard to get an appointment , and they work on the clock!

Go ahead and make this government financial data transparent.  I'm very comfortable with financial transparency.  (I've cut and pasted my personal data below for all readers)

And so, while we know the villain, the heroes in this story include, "fraud investigators, health insurance plans, researchers," and of course, the NY Times -- they will "spend weeks poring over the information about how many tests were ordered and procedures performed for every provider who received Medicare payments under Part B."  They've clearly figured out the conundrum of skyrocketing healthcare costs.  It was the doctors all along!  Uh, no.  Physician earnings do represent a significant piece of total healthcare costs.  But this piece is approximately 8% of total healthcare costs in the USA (see http://lakewass.blogspot.mx/2014/02/meet-expert-brian-white-do-particular.html for a more detailed discussion) -- a significant sum of money, yet even if we eliminated all payments to physicians, clearly we would make little progress in controlling overall costs.

And think about how backwards it is that physician compensation makes up such a SMALL piece of healthcare spending.  We should pay our physicians handsomely, particularly those that provide exceptional care.  In many other areas of life we are more than willing to pay top dollar for the best services or items.  For example, Nordstrom's has built their business around providing the very best customer service experience in their industry -- their prices are higher than Macy's and JC Penny, yet discriminating customers are more than willing to pay extra because they trust in Nordstrom's satisfaction guarantee and fabulous return policy.  I know that when it comes to a dining, hotel, or other hospitality experience, I prize excellent service above all else.  I will pay a premium for excellent service.   

I just had the good fortune of spending several days at a resort in Mexico, Las Ventanas Al Paraiso (LVP).  The staff essentially redefined for me and my wife the notion of "5 Star Customer Service."  Our previous experiences with top notch hospitality service were at the hands of the Ritz Carlton and the Four Seasons.  But the LVP team sets the gold standard.  They are always professional, deliberate in their service, and they clearly take pride in everything they do, from setting your lounge chair in the shade, to expertly preparing your turn down service which includes, as you desire, a warm drawn jacuzzi bath.  The embody hospitality in its truest form.  The word, "no," seems not in their lexicon.  A frown may appear across the face of an LVP team member only in the event they cannot fulfill a promise or satisfy the whim of a guest.  When our romantic custom beach-side theater DVD movie event hit a glitch (the last 30 mins of the movie wouldn't play), the team worked hard to find an immediate solution, and when they couldn't, they apologized profusely for days, and then surprised us with an in-room theater with an HD projector, bottle of champagne, and all the popcorn, candy, and chocolates that one could wish for.  They constantly are checking in; for example, if you desire a shaded lounge chair, the pool attendant literally follows the sun for you, making regular adjustments to your shade-providing umbrella.  They run, not walk, to provide assistance when you make a solo attempt to adjust the angle of the head of your lounge chair.  The LVP staff, on the whole, behaves as if every team member is an owner of the business.

We need medical doctors who focus on patients, not healthcare systems.  

And so how does this freshly available Medicare financial data relate to your healthcare goals?  Now you know.

Results: 1 health care provider named “Hyman” in 98004
Garrett Hyman                                                                         tOTAL REIMBURSED
1632 116th Ave Ne, Bellevue, WA                                          BY MEDICARE IN 2012
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation                                        $61,801


SERVICE
PATIENTS
TIMES
PERFORMED
AVG.
BILLED
AVG.
REIMBURSED
18
30
$195
$57
27
34
$660
$111
23
30
$175
$25
26
93
$125
$57
18
19
$315
$77
39
39
$220
$90
73
73
$320
$136
61
80
$155
$60
91
170
$200
$89
26
147
$125
$51
20
31
$325
$180
19
21
$275
$110
Source: The information presented here is from a database released by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The database excluded, for privacy reasons, any procedures that a doctor performed on 11 or fewer patients. The total reimbursements for each doctor does not include those procedures either. Results shown above include only the individuals like doctors, nurses or technicians but not organizations like Walgreens. While some providers could have multiple offices, the address shown is the main address indicated in the database. Descriptions of the procedures are from the American Medical Association.© 2014 The New York Times Company

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Benefits of Owning a Dog!

There's a fantastic article in today's NY Times about the benefits of owning a dog:

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/04/07/life-with-a-dog-you-meet-people/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0

"Studies of the health ramifications have strongly suggested that pets, particularly dogs, can foster cardiovascular health, resistance to stress, social connectivity and enhanced longevity."

LWSS believes in the benefits of having a canine companion!  If you have been to our office, chances are you encountered Nala, Wynnie or saw Bucky's pictures in Dr. Chimes' exam rooms.  There's something about these furry friends that simply improves life :).