Oct 8, 2019
The healthcare system is not designed to serve patients. It may have started out that way, but it’s best we confront or current reality.
That’s not to say that the people working inside of this industry are bad. Not at all. Some of the best, most generous, and caring people I’ve ever met work in healthcare. Unfortunately, they, like the patients they serve, are merely inputs to a complex national healthcare system that’s evolved to serve itself and its ever-growing appetite for trillions of American dollars.
I don’t blame anyone for this. If you look at the history of how the system evolved, it makes a ton of sense that we’ve ended up here. And I’m encouraged by some of the emerging trends in the industry to pay for value, coordinate care and address the social determinants of health (SDOH). We'll get better, but it’ll take time.
In the meantime, what will I do if I or one of my loved ones gets sick? Like really, chronically sick where we need tight coordination across teams of caregivers from many organizations right now?
The fact that ONC and CMS are driving patient access to data someday won’t help me secure a second opinion today. The important, but glacially slow move to value-based payment won’t ensure my doctors collaborate over the next month. And the various star-ratings systems won’t help me pick the right doctor right now. No one will come to our rescue. We’ll need to figure it out on our own.
That’s where today’s guest comes in. Grace Cordovano is a board-certified patient advocate. Grace, and the growing army of patient advocates like her, are available to help you navigate the healthcare system “in a manner that’s conscious of your health literacy and culture”. Grace specializes in Oncology and her clients are newly diagnosed cancer patients. She becomes their care partner and works with them from the “point of diagnosis through survivorship or end-of-life care planning”. She takes the time to understand their challenges and goals and connects them to the “information and the tools that they need to make educated empowered decisions about treatment and their healthcare trajectory”.
That includes acquiring medical records, assessing which physicians may be best for second opinions, identifying which facilities host clinical trials, and much more. None of these are easy tasks, and to be successful, you’ll need a lot of time and expertise. Two things the average patient lacks.
Patient advocates are directly hired and paid for by patients. And while no one needs additional healthcare expenditures, this puts the patient advocate completely in the patient’s corner. They’re likely to become your most trusted ally along your care journey.
In this interview, Grace helps us to understand why patient advocates are needed, how they add value, and how much work and expertise is really necessary to do this job effectively. Topics include:
Full show notes and links: https://thehcbiz.com/patient-advocate-grace-cordovano/