Peer Review Matter Demonstrates that Health Care Reform Happens Best at the Grass Roots Level
I recently had the pleasure of hearing Atul Gawande, M.D. speak about his views on health care reform, including his simple but profound message that the yeoman’s share of healthcare reform work needs to be done at the community level, rather than at the national or corporate level. I have also recently been interviewing physicians, nurses and technicians who are witnesses in a peer review hearing about the quality of services being provided by one of their colleagues.
Because these physicians’ compensation amounts are determined, to some degree, by the physician’s ability to cut costs, rather than the more traditional fee-for-service model, there is little concern that the physician who is the subject of the peer review matter can allege competition or “turf” battles as a cause of witness bias. Further, to Dr. Gawande’s point, it is clear that this “community” of interventional radiologists, vascular surgeons, neurosurgeons and cardiologists, does a terrific job of deciding amongst them who can provide the most effective and economical care, in large part because they do not compete for those dollars.
This struck me as another example to illustrate Dr. Gawande’s conclusion that local communities and physicians are the ones to determine cost control and healthcare improvement, as he discusses in a recent New Yorker article.





