National meeting to highlight Colorado Beacon’s success Patrick Gordon to share CBC’s past, pres

CBC Issue Brief Issue 3 Volume 1

Robert Frost was right when he wrote “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.”1 Walls mos

No dead sharks: CBC’s transformation efforts keep practices moving forward

Alvy Singer–Woody Allen’s alter ego in Annie Hall–famously said, “A relation

 

May 16, 2013 in CBC News, Featured, Stories, Successes by Joseph Graham

National meeting to highlight Colorado Beacon’s success
Patrick Gordon to share CBC’s past, present and future at May 22 meeting in D.C.

Grand Junction, Colo., May 15, 2013—The success of the Colorado Beacon Consortium (CBC) represents one leg of an ongoing journey–a journey that began before the three-year Beacon project and will continue well into the future. CBC Director Patrick Gordon will deliver this message to a national audience during a May 22, 2013 meeting, “The Beacon Community Experience: Illuminating the Path Forward–Lessons from the field.”

At this event, sponsored by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC), Gordon will share lessons learned; specifically, he will talk about how local leadership within the community leveraged technology infrastructure to move toward better value in health care.

Joining Gordon on the stage will be the following thought leaders:
• Farzad Mostashari, MD, ScM, National Coordinator for Health IT.
• Carol Beasley, MPPM, vice president, business development, Institute for Healthcare Improvement
• Asaf Bitton, MD, MPH, FACP, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School Center for Primary Care
• Susan Dentzer, senior policy advisor at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and health policy analyst, PBS NewsHour
• Mark McClellan, MD, PhD, director, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform; senior fellow, Brookings Institution

Gordon will provide the “boots-on-the-ground” perspective, describing how Western Colorado is moving toward establishment of an accountable community in which health care providers adopt advanced practice-based tools and develop new skills that allow them to account for the health of the community as a whole and fundamentally change the ways they practice medicine.

Addressing past, present and future experience in Colorado, Gordon will explain how the Beacon work has helped build a bridge to population health accountability, payment reform and patient activation–within a single strategy.

“Resources developed during the Beacon demonstration–including the health information infrastructure, workforce development for practice transformation, data collection and measurement–provide ongoing support as care teams work to redesign physician practices. Beacon helped us build a more effective framework for whole-person care,” he explained.

CBC’s practice transformation resources support the deployment of tools and the development of skills required to deliver comprehensive primary care. This, in turn, creates a viable foundation for value-based payment and accountability for the total cost of care. CBC’s approach has emphasized person-centered care, patient self-management and integration of behavioral health.

CBC’s 2012 annual report and accompanying video describe how CBC fosters better health by meaningfully using health IT to transform care delivery.

CBC has earned national recognition for its efforts on several fronts. It received a Healthcare Informatics Innovator Award, and a profile appeared in the February 2013 Healthcare Informatics. In addition, The Commonwealth Fund recently released a case study describing how CBC managed to build the capacity needed to exchange health data and transform clinical care, and how CBC uses health IT for quality improvement.

The ONC meeting will be videocast; the link is available here. For more information about this videocast or the Beacon Community Program, please contact the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT at http://www.healthit.gov/newsroom/contact-us.

About the Colorado Beacon Consortium
The Colorado Beacon Consortium is made up of executive-level representation from four mission-driven, not-for-profit, Western Colorado-based organizations, all of which have nationally acknowledged track records of coordination to achieve superior outcomes. They are Mesa County Independent Physicians’ Practice Association, Quality Health Network, Rocky Mountain Health Plans and St. Mary’s Regional Medical Center. The Colorado Beacon Consortium’s mission is to optimize the efficiency, quality and performance of our health care system, and integrate the delivery of care and use of clinical information to improve community health. The geographic focus of the Consortium’s activities includes the Colorado counties of Mesa, Delta, Montrose, Garfield, Gunnison, Pitkin and Rio Blanco. To learn more, visit www.coloradobeaconconsortium.org.

CBC Issue Brief Issue 3 Volume 1

March 29, 2013 in CBC News, Featured by Joseph Graham


Robert Frost was right when he wrote “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.”1 Walls most certainly do not make good neighbors. To connect with neighbors, we must tear down walls: That’s one of the key health care lessons to emerge from the last decade, and it’s the concept underlying the patientcentered medical neighborhood. M. Carol Greenlee, MD, FACP, FACE, a solo endocrinologist in Grand Junction, Colo., has a vision of the medical neighborhood she’s shared around the country. She is lead author of “The Patient-Centered Medical Home Neighbor: the Interface of the Patient-Centered Medical Home with Specialty/Subspecialty Practices.”2 The 2010 position paper from the American College of Physicians (ACP) defines the concept of the medical neighbor and lays out a framework for fostering improved collaboration   Read More of the CBC issue brief Greenlee.

Avatar of admin

by admin

No dead sharks: CBC’s transformation efforts keep practices moving forward

January 21, 2013 in Uncategorized by admin

Alvy Singer–Woody Allen’s alter ego in Annie Hall–famously said, “A relationship, I think, is like a shark… It has to constantly move forward or it dies.” He could have been talking about 21st century health care. Practices must keep pace or they are dead in the water. Read more…

CBC 2012 Annual Report

January 18, 2013 in CBC News, Featured, Uncategorized by Nicole Konkoly

2012_CBC_Report

Avatar of admin

by admin

No dead sharks: CBC’s transformation efforts keep practices moving forward

January 16, 2013 in Uncategorized by admin

Alvy Singer–Woody Allen’s alter ego in Annie Hall–famously said, “A relationship, I think, is like a shark… It has to constantly move forward or it dies.” He could have been talking about 21st century health care. Practices must keep pace or they are dead in the water. Click here to view the article…

Avatar of admin

by admin

The Office of the National Coordinator congratulates CBC

January 14, 2013 in Uncategorized by admin

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology takes a few minutes to congratulate the Colorado Beacon Consortium on their success.

Click here to view… 

Avatar of admin

by admin

The Colorado Beacon Consortium story

January 14, 2013 in Uncategorized by admin

The Story of the Colorado Beacon Consortium

Click here to view the story…

 

Avatar of admin

by admin

CBC physicians share their perspectives

January 14, 2013 in Uncategorized by admin

Colorado Beacon Consortium: Doctors’ Perspectives

Click here to view video…

Avatar of admin

by admin

2012 Annual Report

January 14, 2013 in Uncategorized by admin

Colorado Beacon Consortium

On the Western Slope of Colorado, in a seven-county community with 320,000 residents across 17,500 square miles, a group of health care leaders—including 51 medical practices—is collaborating to make health care better—not by tinkering around the edges of the status quo, but by rejecting it in favor of a better model. Click here to read more…

Getting By With a Little Help From Friends

October 3, 2012 in CBC News, Featured, Uncategorized by Tammy Tway

Sometimes everyone, healthcare organizations included, needs a coach to achieve transformation

 

Everyone from time to time needs some help. A more-experience hand to help us along, be it in our personal lives, like a piano teacher, a basketball coach, a life coach. Others may need some assistance in their professional lives, perhaps in a work mentor or a skills trainer. What I’ve realized in my personal live, as well as what I’ve been hearing from those I’ve interviewed, is that at one point we all need a little help to move forward on our particular brand of  transformation. Read More….

 

 

 

Highslide for Wordpress Plugin