Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Three questions with Aaron B. Caughey, MD


 

REPORTING FROM ACOG 2018

OB.GYN. NEWS: How can a busy obstetrician think about the work you’re doing and incorporate it into her practice on a day-to-day basis?

DR. CAUGHEY: As an economist, I want to step back from time to time and think about public health and allocation of scarce resources.

But as a busy practicing clinician, I don’t necessarily want you consciously to think about cost. There are people who will push back on this and say, “Oh no, we should always be cost conscious.” Actually, what I really want you to do is incorporate best practices into the care of the patient at that moment, and do the thing that improves her outcomes best at that moment.

What we want to do, instead, is design systems that will properly incentivize. Incentivize doesn’t mean you think, “Oh gosh, if I do this thing I’m going to get an extra dollar.” It means subconsciously that those incentives are there, and those incentives don’t have to just be about dollars. Often in our field, they’re about time – what takes less time and more time to do something. So if we provide little extra roadblocks, then you’re more likely to go the other way and do something else.

For example: the hard stop. We did all this research in the 2000s to show that you probably shouldn’t deliver babies just for fun before 39 weeks’ gestational age. There should be an indication. If we don’t allow any hard stop, if we don’t block the pathway, then patients are pushing us, they’re uncomfortable, they’re like, “Just deliver me.” So we said, “No, no, no, we’re going to block this. In fact, we’re actually going to provide a hard stop reimbursement-wise. And medical directors of hospitals are going to have to preapprove.” And so that provides a blockade, and makes it easier just not to do it.

So I think that’s what we want: At the bedside and in your office, we want clinicians to still just be really good doctors. But then, to get involved and help design systems to incentivize us to do the right things.

Aaron B. Caughey, MD, PhD, is professor and chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology and associate dean for Women’s Health Research and Policy at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, and is a member of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. He reported that he had no relevant financial disclosures.

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