Hospitals go upscale to make patients feel better
By Jay
MacDonald Bankrate.com
When Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine,
established the first medical center overlooking the Aegean Sea
on the Greek island of Kos around 400 B.C., he had little science
and few tools with which to actually heal the sick. But his philosophy
was way ahead of its time: Surround patients with ample reason to
live and many will opt to do so.
Fast forward to your last visit to a hospital. Was
there anything about that experience that even remotely improved
your mood? Probably not.
But there soon will be.
A quiet revolution is taking place behind all the
doom-and-gloom headlines about health care today. Increasingly,
hospitals are transforming themselves into warmer, cozier places
that have more in common with upscale hotels than with the dreary,
impersonal wards of old.
Life-affirming colors, flat screen TVs and artwork
are brightening up those refrigerator-white hospital walls. Room
service is replacing sub-par cafeteria food. Bedside Internet access
is becoming standard. Even those drafty hospital gowns may soon
be gone with the wind.
In addition, many major medical centers also
offer patients the chance to upgrade to luxury
suites. Well-heeled patients are willing to pay whatever it
costs for the same four-star treatment they receive at a Four Seasons
or Ritz-Carlton hotel.
And the price for such pampering can be steep. Anything
above your health insurance's "usual and reasonable" coverage
limits will come out of your pocket. If your policy pays $500 a
day for a private room, but your medical center charges $1,500 for
a top-notch suite, you have to come up with the extra daily grand;
if you're only allowed insurance reimbursement for a semiprivate
room capped at $200 a day, the hospital will collect the excess
$1,300-per-day directly from you.
The boomer health-care revolution
Why the upgrade in patient accommodations? Hospitals are preparing
to battle for the richest patient base in history: the baby boomers.
Just look at the changes the peace-and-love generation
has already made to American hospitals, according to Randy Carter,
vice president of Planetree,
a nonprofit organization that advocates patient-centered health
care.
"Prior to the 1970s, the birthing experience
was vastly different. When the boomers came in contact with that,
it changed pretty radically. Our belief system, that people couldn't
be in the sterile environment of the birthing room and couldn't
handle that experience, all of a sudden changed. Now it's the norm,"
he says.
"When boomers' parents became impacted by the
need for hospice care, hospice was certainly changed. It doesn't
take a rocket scientist to see that those same changes are coming
to other areas of health care as soon as they come into contact
with this generation."
Case in point: The impending demise of the semiprivate
room.
"Single rooms have become the industry norm.
Almost everything being built now is single rooms," says Mike
Romano of Modern Healthcare magazine. "It's a matter of the
baby boomers aging. People have more choice now of where they go
for their care, and they want to go to a single."
Dennis Brimhall, president and CEO of Denver's new
University of Colorado Hospital, which has nothing but private rooms,
says it's a move that's long overdue.
"There is something fundamentally wrong with
being sick, one of life's most private and difficult moments, and
yet you're going to share that with someone in a semiprivate room.
We don't go to hotels and share rooms. People just aren't going
to put up with it anymore, and they shouldn't. They absolutely shouldn't."
Brimhall points out that a number of factors have
aligned to bring about a revolution in the look, feel and configuration
of today's hospitals, including:
- Infrastructure: Many
hospitals built in the '50s and '60s are woefully inadequate to
serve today's medical needs. Due to advances in medical technology,
it actually costs 30 percent more to remodel existing hospitals
than to build new ones, Brimhall says.
- Patient privacy: Federal
legislation such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) make it difficult to consult with a patient in a semiprivate
room.
- Medical technology:
Many ailments that once warranted a hospital stay are now treated
at home or on an outpatient basis. Brimhall estimates that the
University of Colorado Hospital treats 23 outpatients for every
one inpatient. Bottom line: If you're in a hospital today, you're
pretty sick.
- Infection control: New
contagious diseases such as SARS has hospitals acutely aware of
the liability involved with semiprivate rooms.
- Operational efficiencies:
Private rooms may seem to cut the number of beds (and hence
revenue), but they in fact make it easier to place and treat patients
without gender, infection control and dying patient issues.
- Patient choice:
The consumer generation that raised the bar on hotel accommodations
is about to do the same thing to acute care facilities.
"In the old days when hospitals were run by charitable
organizations, they weren't places to get better, they were basically
places to die," Brimhall says. "They were not focused
on the patient experience because the patient was never the driver;
the provider was the driver.
"Health care, I think, has been hurt by its fundamental
premise because it is designed from the provider out, not from the
patient back. That's contrary to what we do in any other part of
our society."
Mint-on-the-pillow approach
Brimhall's new facility was designed with the patient's experience
in mind, from the Mediterranean-inspired design to the new dignified
patient gowns. Patients order their meals from a room service menu,
check e-mail with a bedside keyboard patched into their flat-screen
TV and can be tested and treated in complete privacy.
The new perspective opened his eyes to just how insidious
the old mindset was.
"Most hospitals build the front door on the street
and all the signage and traffic flow all go up that front door,
including the information desk. Then they build a parking structure
in the back and 50 percent of all the people come into the hospital
through the back door, against the way-finding. That's how dumb
we are," he chuckles.
Brimhall says it's not enough to cater to patients
by providing amenities; hospital staffs must also learn to deliver
intangibles such as privacy, dignity and respect. Some hospitals
now put their orderlies through hospitality training at the Disney
Institute and even high-end hoteliers such as Ritz-Carlton to teach
them the first rule of the new reality: The customer comes first.
"It's little things like teaching your staff
to never go into a room without knocking. That is not your room,
it's their room; they're paying for it. Nobody in a hotel would
ever just barge in without knocking," he says.
"Before, we said none of the hospitality issues
matter, the only thing that matters here is health care. Well, that's
a little bit like telling an airline passenger, 'Look, it's only
important that the engines are maintained properly. It doesn't matter
what you sit in or how we treat you or if we lose your luggage.'"
Kaveh Safari, chief medical officer for Solucient,
an Evanston, Ill.-based health care database and information company,
says new patient-friendly hospitals such as Northwestern University
Medical Center in Chicago are raising the bar on the places we try
to avoid.
"They made their whole hospital an upscale hospital
because their market segment was insured upper-middle-class and
upper-class clientele from the Gold Coast north. They built that
as their standard hospital. Now some would describe that as going
for the hoteling aspect, but they were not charging outside of the
normal insurance payment strategy. The patient's cost out of pocket
was whatever their insurance would have covered," he says.
Randy Carter says the seeds planted by Planetree may
finally be bearing fruit, thanks in large part to the higher expectations
of today's patients.
"What we will see in the future is a greater
emphasis on personalizing care to the individual and their particular
needs. For one thing, the boomers are probably going to demand that
kind of experience as they come into the health care environment
in a different way. Hospitals will be radically different than the
hospitals of today. They will be fully integrated models of living,
more like malls or food stores. You won't have to check your life
at the door."
Somewhere Hippocrates is smiling.
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