2015 annual conference - morning day 1 - ecri institute · pdf file2015 annual conference...
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Welcome and AcknowledgementsJeffrey C. Lerner, PhD, President and Chief Executive Officer, ECRI Institute
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AcademyHealth
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Bipartisan Policy Center
Department of Veterans Affairs
ECRI Institute
Health Affairs
2015 Annual Conference Organizers
Jayne Koskinas Ted Giovanis Foundation for Health and Policy
Kaiser Permanente
Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics
National Cancer Institute
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
University of Pennsylvania Health System
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ECRI Institute is a nonprofit organization that has researched the best approaches to patient care nearly 50 years.
About ECRI Institute
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Over 5,000 providers, public and private payers, government agencies, ministries of health, voluntary sector organizations, associations, and accrediting agencies worldwide rely on ECRI Institute's expertise in:
About ECRI Institute
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About ECRI Institute
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ECRI Institute does not accept gifts, grants, or consulting contracts from the medical device or pharmaceutical industries, and accepts no advertising. Federal income tax returns for all employees are examined yearly to ensure there are no investments in these industries.
ECRI Institute’s Conflict of Interest Policy
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22 Years of Conferences2014: The “NEW” Complex Patient: The Shifting Locus of Care and Cost
2013: Data BIG and Small: What Healthcare Decision Makers are Using Now
2012: Creating "Systemness" within Healthcare Delivery: Can Success Be Proven and Shared?
2011: Patient-Centeredness in Policy and Practice: A Conference on Evidence, Programs, and Implications
2010: Comparative Effectiveness and Personalized Medicine: An Essential Interface
2008: How Effective is Value-Based Purchasing in the Public and Private Sectors?
2007: Comparative Effectiveness of Health Interventions: Strategies to Change Policy and Practice
2006: Confronting the Dilemmas of Risk in Healthcare: Emerging Trends and Practical Approaches
2005: Chronic Pain as a Health System Priority: How Evidence Could Inform Policy and Practice
2004: Preventing and Treating Overweight and Obesity: How Effective Are the Interventions?
2003: From Populations to Persons: Putting Evidence-based Medicine Research into Practice
2002: Making Coverage Decisions: Employment-based Coverage, Federal/State and State-Only Programs, and Medicare Carriers
2001: International Society of Technology Assessment in Health Care
2000: Beyond Medical Error: How the Healthcare Community Accepts New Technology as "Safe.“
1999: Conflict and Change: How Quality Enters the Coverage Decision
1998: Evidence-Based Medicine on Trial: The Impact of Health Services Research on Law and Regulation
1997: The Clash over Diagnostic and Screening Technology: Balancing Consumer Needs, Payer and Provider Constraints, and the Public Good
1996: Healthcare Technology Choices under Managed Care: Communicating Directly with Patients and Their Clinicians
1995: Healthcare Coverage Decision Making in the Public and Private Sectors
1994: Assessing Controversial Transplant Technologies: Pancreas Transplantation, Liver Transplantation, ABMT for Breast Cancer
1993: The New Era in Health Technology Assessment for Payers, Providers, and Manufacturers
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SPEAKER BIOSVisit the conference website to view
the bios of our speakers.
ly.ecri.org/ecri15
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IMPORTANT NOTICEWe have asked all of today’s speakers to express their personal views, where appropriate. Their doing so will provide all of us with a far richer intellectual experience.
If you wish to quote or paraphrase their perspectives outside of the conference venue, please be certain to obtain their permission and clarify which statements represent official policy and which are personal viewpoints.
Your cooperation will help preserve the ECRI Institute conference as an open forum.
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PRINCIPAL CONTRIBUTORS TO THE CONFERENCE PLANNING• Robert Crane
ECRI Institute Board of Trustees
• Ann Geiger, MPH, Ph.D.National Cancer Institute
• Jane Reese-Coulbourne, MS, ChEReagan Udall Foundation
• Larry Norton, MDMemorial Sloane-Kettering Cancer Center
• Jeffrey Shuren, MD, JDCenter for Devices and Radiological Health, FDA
• Patrick Conway, MD, MScCenter for Medicare and Medicaid Services
• Larry Kaiser, MDTemple University Health System
• Susan Freeman, MD, MSTemple University Health System
• Gurvaneet Randhawa, MDAgency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Janet MarchibrodaBipartisan Policy Center
• Marian James, MA, Ph.D.Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Carolyn Clancy, MDDepartment of Veterans Affairs
• David Atkins, MD, MPHDepartment of Veterans Affairs
• Jean Slutsky, PA, MSPHPatient Centered Outcomes Research Institute
• Norbert Goldfield, MDThe Journal of Ambulatory Management
• Richard Schilsky, MD, FACP, FASCOAmerican Society of Clinical Oncologists
• Christine Cassel, MDNational Quality Forum
• Ted GiovanisJayne Koskinas Ted Giovanis Foundation for Health and Policy
• Joe Selby, MDPatient Centered Outcomes Research Institute
• Lisa Simpson, MB, B.CH, MPH, FAAPAcademyHealth
• Murray Ross, Ph.D.Kaiser Permanente Institute for Health Policy
• Ralph MullerUniversity of Pennsylvania Health Systems
• Rene Rothstein-Rubin, MDRittenhouse Hematology and Oncology
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SPECIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS• Dan Leonard National
Pharmaceutical Council
• Robert Dubois, MD, PhD National Pharmaceutical Council
• Richard Ricciardi, PhD, NP Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Kristie Kiser Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Alison Hunt Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Stephanie Chang Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Farah EnglertAgency for Healthcare Research and Quality
• Justin Bekelman, MD University of Pennsylvania Health System
• Tina Grande Healthcare Leadership Council
• Emily Wilson American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology
• Anne Hubbard American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology
• Andy Carter Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania
• Steve UblPast CEO, AdvaMed
• Richard Umbdenstock, MS, FACHEAmerican Hospital Association
• Richard Pollack, MPA American Hospital Association
• Marilyn Tavenner, MHA America’s Health Insurance Plans
• Fawn Lopez Modern Healthcare
• Steven Stack MD American Medical Association
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ECRI INSTITUTE AND NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE CONFERENCE PLANNING COMMITTEE
• Kristin Finger
• Tara Kolb
• Judith Kozloff
• Evan LeGault
• Kate McNeill
• Laurie Menyo
• Benjamin Pauldine
• Katie Senycz
• Russell Turco
• Stacey Turnbull
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CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS
Instructions for obtaining credits can be found in the CME/CLE/CEU handout that is available at the registration desk.
AMA Credit Designation StatementECRI Institute designates this live activity for a maximum of 10.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)tm. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. (6.25 for Day 1 and 4.0 for Day 2)
California Nursing Contact HoursThis activity has been approved for a total of 12 California State Nursing contact hours by the provider, Debora Simmons, who is approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number CEP 13677. (7.5 for Day 1 and 4.5 for Day 2)
Pennsylvania CLE CreditsThis program has been approved by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania’s Continuing Legal Education Board for up to a total of 10.5 substantive credits.
Certified Public Health CreditsCertified in Public Health (CPH) credits are awarded for attendance in the Cancer Care Delivery in a Rapidly Changing Healthcare System conference, located in Washington, DC on November 17 – November 18. You may allot 1 credit per 1 hour of participation, up to 8 credits per day.”
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NO-SOLICITATION POLICYECRI Institute has a no-solicitation policy covering our Annual Conference. In order to provide a distraction-free environment for our attendees, speakers, and sponsors and employees, and to comply with CME requirements, we do not allow solicitation at our conference by attendees or unauthorized parties without the express written permission of ECRI Institute.
This policy includes, but is not limited to the following unauthorized activities:• Unauthorized receptions & parties (including off-site events) • Unauthorized exhibits, mobile exhibits & hospitality suites • Unauthorized membership or employment recruitment activities • Unauthorized promotion of non-ECRI Institute events • Unwelcome advances toward event participants or the ECRI Institute staff • Unauthorized on-site distribution of printed or electronic materials including literature, signs, flyers, invitations,
tickets, forms, etc. (except business cards)• Any person and/or organization found to be violating this policy may be expelled from the event.
Egregious and/or multiple violations of this policy may result in disqualification from future events at the discretion of ECRI Institute.
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We thank our speakers for contributing their intellectual efforts. There is no commercial sponsorship for this conference, and the speakers are not paid honoraria.
We thank you, the participants in the audience, and we look forward to your questions and to your continuing contributions toward a better healthcare system.
www.ecri.org/2015conf
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IN DEDICATIONJohn Eisenberg
Robert Larsen Mary Alice Simpson
Howard Simpson
Arthur Malin
Jayne KoskinasNorrine Ross
Jessie Gruman
Ruth Kirschtein
Carol R. Lerner
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IN DEDICATIONAnita Campbell Pamela MurrayBryan Crocker Phyllis TordaCharlotte Davis Robert "Bobby" BondsDebbie Keating Robert BonsDon Schuler Theresa TurnbullErin Levitas Virginia HudsonJean Menyo Virginia KolesarLara Wong Virginia PinkettLeslie Taichman William MeyerNancy Archambeau Elizabeth Hunt
Session 1Our changing understanding of the biology of cancer.
Session 2What is the status of the technologies of “precision medicine”?
Session 3The complex,
intertwined role of patients in
research and care.
Session 4How is quality perceived and measured when cancer is a chronic condition?
Session 5How to make paying for value valuable.
Session 6How do various
integrated delivery systems provide
cancer care?
Session 7CEO perspectives on how their differing health systems deliver care now and are preparing for the future.
Session 8Looking to the future: legislative and policy perspectives.
Session 9Capstone Session:
perspectives on what we have learned and
what we can do.