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TRANSFORMING PATHOLOGY: The Ingredients for Change A Chef’s Husband’s View. Jared N. Schwartz, MD, PhD President, College of American Pathologists. Transforming Pathology: The Ingredients for Change A Chef’s Husband’s View. Jared N. Schwartz, MD, PhD
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TRANSFORMING PATHOLOGY:The Ingredients for ChangeA Chef’s Husband’s View Jared N. Schwartz, MD, PhD President, College of American Pathologists
Transforming Pathology:The Ingredients for ChangeA Chef’s Husband’s View Jared N. Schwartz, MD, PhD President, College of American Pathologists
What’s changing that will require pathologists to transform? • Patients • Primary Care Physicians • How Care is Delivered & By Whom • Technology
What does the consumer want? • High quality • Convenience • Fast & accurate information • Trust & confidence
What does the patient’s treating physician want? Help! • Fast and accurate results • Understandable and useful information • Direction on therapy
…and sometimes that primary care provider isn’t a physician “Nurse practitioners with master’s degrees are already filling the primary care shortages and providing quality, cost-effective care, many times in places that physicians are unwilling to practice.” Wendy Vogel Nurse Practitioner, Oncology Blue Ridge Medical Specialists, TN WSJ, April 2, 2008
Patients & physicians want a full course meal, not just the appetizer Surveillance Treatment Monitoring Has my cancer come back? Treatment Selection Is my therapy working with acceptable toxicity? Prognosis & Staging What are the most effective & safe therapies for me? Differential Diagnosis Has my cancer spread and how aggressive is it? Screening Risk Assessment Do I have cancer today and what type is it? Is there a chance I have cancer today? Am I at risk of developing cancer?
Are we defining our contribution to patient care too narrowly? “…but all I know how to do are liver biopsies!”
What barriers exist? • Payment • Information • Technology (e.g., gene patents) • Lack of agreement on integrating role • Education • Lack of interoperability; software issues, security issues • Mindsets
Are we responsible for the appetizer or the whole enchilada?
Pathologists have the opportunity to fulfill many roles • Innovator • Test Provider • Interpreter • Data Integrator • Clinical Consultant
Pathologists have the necessary ingredients to provide answers, but…
The Perfect Dish requires the right mindset • Have an open mind to new ideas, technologies, and ways of practice • Acknowledge market forces driving changes in your practice • Engage the change • Be life long learners • Develop new skills and leverage core knowledge
Interact with patients and other clinicians • Broaden your sphere of influence • Expand beyond the tissue on the slide—all diagnostic tools are available to you • Market your services for consults • Expand value by influencing prognosis and treatment …be a part of the treatment team
“Students need to learn how to think critically, how to argue opposing ideas. It is important for them to learn how to think. You can always cook.” ~ Charlie Trotter
Futurescape 2008 offers ingredients to spice up your practice with new ideas and opportunities
Futurescape is providing you a taste of the future… • Jose Costa, MD • Mara Aspinall • Jennifer Hunt, MD, MEd • James Versalovic, MD, PhD • John Tomaszewski, MD … from pathology’s ‘Top Chefs’
New technology and applications expand the opportunity menu • Michael W. Vannier, MD • Carl Jaffe, MD • Bruce Friedman, MD • Robert Brown, MD • Ron Weinstein, MD • King Li, MD
… and how some are making the recipes work in their practice • Ronnie Garner, MD • Liron Pantanowitz, MD • Richard Friedberg, MD, PhD • Erin Grimm, MD • Rodney Schmidt, MD • Eric Walk, MD
“I keep coming back to the question: When is food good? And the answer always begins with proud cooks. People who take pride in performing what really amounts to alchemy.” ~ Anthony Bourdain
“I was 32 when I started cooking; up until then, I just ate.” ~ Julia Child
TRANSFORMING PATHOLOGY:Emerging technology driving practice innovation