by Scott McIntyre on Monday, May 17, 2010
Under the tab of “why didn’t we think of that” comes news that Dartmouth College is establishing the “Dartmouth Center for Health Care Delivery Science.” The center’s basic mission is to show how health care can be improved without increasing costs and how costs can be lowered without impacting quality.
Dartmouth is a natural for this sort of endeavor primarily because it is home to the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which have been studying variation in health care delivery and spending for a couple of decades. But while the Atlas gives Dartmouth the data, the college’s home state, New Hampshire, isn’t exactly a shining example of health care value.
At more than $7,800 per Medicare recipient per year, New Hampshire spends nearly 20 percent more than Iowa ($6,686). Of course, that’s not nearly as bad as nearby Massachusetts ($9,568) or New York ($9,995), both of which should provide convenient laboratories for what not to do for value-based health care delivery.
This is worth noting because of something Dartmouth’s president, Jim Yong Kim, mentioned when the center was announced over the weekend. According to Associated Press coverage of the story, Kim and state leaders have “discussed using the center to make New Hampshire a model for innovative health care.”
This brings one thought immediately to mind: Why not Iowa?
Obviously, Dartmouth has every right and reason to focus on its home state. But this deserves serious consideration in Iowa, where IHA has made “value” a health care watchword. Certainly, the tools and the people are there. The Iowa Healthcare Collaborative has united hospital and physician interests under the value flag and, like the Dartmouth Atlas, has become a vast data collector.
The University of Iowa (UI) and Des Moines University both offer excellent schools of health care administration and medicine with easy access to not only urban medical centers but also nearby rural referral centers and Critical Access Hospitals, many of which are on the cutting edge of innovative health care delivery models. The schools of engineering at UI and Iowa State, along with major businesses (including hospitals) that have adopted ideas like Lean and the Toyota model of process improvement, offer expertise and laboratories for systems analysis.
What Iowa doesn’t have is seed money, like the $35 million that was anonymously donated to fund the Dartmouth center. Perhaps if we can broaden our state leaders’ views on what drives a healthy economy (hint: it’s more than wind turbines and gambling halls) and quality of life (more than good schools and smooth roads) to realize the impact of high-value health care, some investment capital might emerge.











