. Page 1 . >>PENNY ROYAL Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Welcome. I'm Penny Royal (phonetic). I think some of you saw me yesterday morning. I'm from the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. Welcome to the second day of a great summit about prevention and being well, healthy and active. Yesterday morning Denise Austin got us going. This morning we have Reggie Freeman. Reggie is a certified fitness instructor. He runs TOROBICS in Washington D.C. where he leads by example. That is Reggie's message to all of us. We not only want to talk the talk, we want to walk the walk. I don't know if Reggie is going to have us doing much walking, but he is going to get us moving today. So let's welcome Reggie Freeman to get us started today.(Applause) >>REGGIE FREEMAN Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. Good morning! >>AUDIENCE Good morning. >>REGGIE FREEMAN Good morning. That's what I'm talking about. My name is Reggie and I'm so happy to be here. The main reason I wanted to speak with you to get bodies moving, the one . Page 2 . thing I haven't heard us doing at this summit is we're not talking about self love. And before we can even do anything to improve ourselves, improve our bodies, improve our health, you have to love yourself so much to want to do it. And that is so very important. And I want us to live that message so that we can bring the message to everyone else. I have a quick question. Just by show of hands just let me know if you know the answer. At 3,000 miles, what do we do? If you know the answer, raise your hand. 3,000 miles. (off mic) Everybody say it. Oil change. Everybody knows the answer, right?. By show of hands, do you know what your resting heart rate is? Good. Do you know what your cholesterol level is? Good. Do you know what your body weight is? Percentage of fat? Very good. By the show of hands, that proves to me that you are starting to live by example. And this is the same type of message that we need to pass onto everybody. Because everyone knows what we do at 3,000 miles. And even if you don't have the cash in your wallet, what will you do? You will use a what to pay for it? A what? Credit card. But if you're feeling bad and need to go to the doctor on a regular basis, what do we do? A lot of us make excuses and don't go. So we take care of material things like automobiles and really treat those with the highest respect . Page 3 . to keep them running, but we don't do it for ourselves. And that's why I want you to live by example. So now, this is called step to a healthier U.S. When I saw that. I thought of step to healthier us to help the U.S. So that is my thinking on this message. So to start that I want to get us all up and we're going to start moving. And I want everybody up. And if you have on a tie, men, loosen that tie a little bit. If you have on a jacket and you want to take that jacket off, that's fine. Excellent. Maestro, please. [ music playing ] Inhale, exhale. One more time. Deep inhale, exhale. Press it up, up, up, up. Reach, two. One other side and reach. Good. Up, up, reach. Two. One. Arms up. Now I want you to just stretch. Come on, come on, come on. Step it up, step it up, step it up. Come on. Keep it going, keep it going. Four, three, two, one. Now press it up. Come on. Keep it going, keep it going now. Four, three, two, one. Now march it wide, wide, come on, come on. Volume, please. Come on. Here we go, here we go. Come on, come on. You got it. Now one thing I do in my class. I don't just stand up front. Because everybody that's in the back always thinks that I'm not looking at you. But in my class there is no back of the class. And I'm going to show you why. Come on. Come on. Here we go. Here is four, three, two. Arms up, let's go. Come on, come on, come on. . Page 4 . Make sure you breathe, make sure you're breathing. Inhale, exhale, inhale, exhale. Four, three, two, one. Now press it. Come on. Keep it going, keep it going. Four, three, two, one. Begin inhale. Come on. Exhale. Now lien to the left. Left, right. Come on. You got it. Keep it going, keep it going. Lean into it. Lean into it. Lean into it. Come on. Lean into it. Now press it. Yes. Come on. Press, press, press, press. Come on. Now whenever I say how you feeling? I want you to reply "feeling good." Are you ready? How you feeling? >>AUDIENCE Feeling good. >>REGGIE FREEMAN How you feeling? Reggie. Come on. You can do better than that. Everybody say "Reggie, you're crazy." "Reggie, I'm lazy." Come on four. Three more. You got it. Come on, come on. Now press it up. Press, press. Lift up with that heel. I want you to squeeze the buttocks. Every time you lift the heels, squeeze that bun. You know why I want to you squeeze it, because every time you squeeze, there's a dimple that forms right there. So if you're not smiling at me right here, I want you to smile at me right now. Come on. Press, press, press, press. Now hold it. Every time when I point, I just want you to freeze. Are you ready? Whenever I point, I want . Page 5 . you to freeze. Let me see you. Hold it right there. Now on this side, I want you to freeze. Hold it right there. Now this side -- you follow direction good. This time I want to you freeze right here. Come on. Oh my goodness. I love it, I love it. Both arms up. Hang in there. Come on. Here we go. Four, three, arms up in the air. Let's party, you all. Hey, hey, hey, hey. Come on, come on, come on. Keep going, breathe. Breathe. Come on, come on, come on. Hey, hey. Keep breathing, keep breathing, come on, come on. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. Come on. How many? You all can't count? Here we go. Here we go. Eight. How many? Eight more. How many is that? Come on, louder. Everybody, everybody. Come on, come on. You got it, you got it. Hang in there, you all. Yes, yes. To the right. One, two, three and four. One, two, three and four. One, two, three, and four. You got it. Let me see you. Let me see you. Come on, come on. Now you know what, this is called the basic move. But in my class we don't do it the basic way. I want to you move those shoulders. Come on. Hey, hey. Come on, come on. Hey, come on. Get busy you all. Pump it up, pump, pump, pump it up. Come on. Pump, pump, pump it up. Come on. Pump, pump, pump, pump it up. Come on. Pump, pump, pump it up. Keep it going. Eight. How . Page 6 . many is that? Come on, come on. Come on, come on. Come on, come on. How many is it? How many is it? How many is it? March it out, everybody turn to the rear. Everybody back here didn't think I was going to mess with you, did you? This is the front of the class, you all. Everybody give them a hand. Press, press, press, press. Come on. Come on. Dig deep. Dig deep. Dig deep. Dig deep. Keep breathing. Come on, come on, come on. Volume, please, volume, please. Oh my goodness, I got a stage up here too. Lord, have mercy. Come on, come on, come on. Let me see it. Sweat. Give me those elbows. Press. Press. Keep it going now. Come on. Eight. How many is that? How many is that? How many is that? Oh louder, please. I don't hear it. I don't hear it. I don't hear it. Big inhale. Come on. Exhale. Inhale. Exhale. Right leg is up. Lift that heel. Bring it down. Good. Stretch it. Bring it out. Stretch. Bring it around. Heel is up. Stretch it. Hold it. Bring it out. Stretch it. Last inhale. Exhale it out. Big inhale. Exhale it out. Big old one, smile. Have a wonderful day y'all. Good job. Give yourselves a hand. Yes. (Applause) >>PENNY ROYAL Good morning. Thank you, Reggie, for starting our day with such fun. Good morning, everyone. Thank you all . Page 7 . for coming back to the Secretary's summit. Second day Steps To A Healthier U.S: Putting Prevention First. We hope yesterday was informative for you and you all had a pleasant evening. This morning it gives me great pleasure to introduce to you Deputy Secretary of Health And Human Services, Dr. Claude Allen. Unwavering commitment to addressing the health concerns of this country. Not the least, which is as constant and passionate devotion to eliminate health disparities among racial and ethnic minorities across our nation. The Deputy Secretary is also concerned with what we ought to be doing with prevention first, which is the use of our country, assuring we continue to promote healthy life-styles and make them available for opportunities for healthy choices as he did while he was the Secretary of Health And Human Services in the Commonwealth of Virginia. Secretary Deputy Allen helping young people avoid alcohol, drugs, sex, tobacco and violence. To address the youth and assure they have prevention agenda on their plate, in this way we help them now that is the best foundation to prevention we can do. It is an honor and privilege for me to work with our Deputy Secretary Allen but with formal introduction Dr. Allen confirmed Secretary for Department of Health and Human Services twenty-sixth of May in year 2001. He . Page 8 . worked closely with Secretary Tommy Thompson on all policy and management issues as he served as department's Chief Operating Officer. Prior to joining Dr. Allen was Secretary of Health And Human Services for the commonwealth of Virginia, leading 13 agencies and 15,000 employees. He led Governor Gilmore's initiative new patient's Bill of Rights passed in 1989. Patients appeal for coverage decisions made by health plans and direct access to physician specialists. Dr. Allen spearheaded reform initiative and provided leadership to overhaul the state's mental health community services. He was responsible for implementing the governor's insurance program for families offering lower health coverage for Virginians. He holds degrees from University of Law school. I present to you unique human being, Dr. Claude Allen. (Applause) >>CLAUDE ALLEN I would! You guys had a great start this morning. Privilege and honor to be here this evening. Thank you, Christina, for the very generous and kind introduction. It is an honor to come before you today and for me to talk with you a little bit about prevention and the need in this country for people to invest in themselves and take time to make healthy decisions for their lives. Reggie Freeman certainly gave you a workout this morning. I kind of wish . Page 9 . we had gotten here earlier to participate in that ourselves, but I had my workout before coming to work at 5:30 this morning. It is important that little 15 minutes, 20 minutes of exercise can have tremendous impact on one's life-style, one's longevity in that sense. And so I am sure that you can tell from yesterday Secretary Thompson is passionate about the issue. He's a tremendous leader and example for all of us at the department. He keeps all of us on our toes, to eat right, exercise and have regular medical checkups. In fact, those of you who work in the department know that when you come downtown to the Humphrey building we have a little group that oftentimes goes out in front of the building and they will smoke. And the Secretary when he comes out of the elevator he sees them out there, you see them all kind of scramble. Well, just the other day I was coming downstairs to the first floor and coming out of the elevator, and there were a group of women out there. And I looked at them and I just went -- kind of scurried away to deal with that. The Secretary set a great example for us at the department in terms of eating right, in terms of exercising, making sure we take care of our own health. When you consider the diseases and conditions we're looking at during this conference, diabetes, obesity, asthma, heart disease and stroke and cancer, the incidences can many times be . Page 10 . prevented by simple choices in life-styles. We have the tendency in this country to focus on treatment and services instead of focusing on prevention. In fact, when you look at our budget, it is way out of whack in terms of how much we spend on prevention versus how much we spend on treatment and care. I heard Secretary Thompson mention oftentimes it is like waiting for your car to breakdown before you take it in for maintenance. Just as each of us probably takes our cars in for an oil change every few thousand miles or so, we need to make sure we're taking care of ourselves. The human body needs preventative maintenance as well, just as our automobiles need preventative maintenance. Steps to a Healthier U.S. is how we deal with healthcare in America, by dealing with causes of disease, we can focus our resources, our time and our energy towards preventing them before they ever have a chance to occur. Much of my time is spent at looking at this whole area of health disparities among minorities and how we can help use to make healthy choices in their own lives. Communities of color across this nation are being devastated by diseases we have been discussing. You've probably heard the statistics, I'll share a few more with you today. African American men under 65 years of age suffer from prostate cancer at nearly twice the rate as . Page 11 . white men. While it is not comfortable, a simple test every year or so can detect this disease and treat it with high success rates. American Indians suffer from diabetes at nearly three times the average rate with prevalence among some American Indian Alaska native tribes, as high as 50%. Just a few weeks ago I was visiting tribes in Arizona and I could see differences very clearly Indians of the same tribe, depending which side of the border they lived. The Indian tribal members on the U.S. side of the border have buried traditional diet and exercise and experiencing high rates of diabetes and obesity. Just across the border members of the same tribe from the Mexican side of the border, however, have maintained a healthier diet and more physical activity as a result of their life-styles. It is incredible when you look at these communities and see that the very same group because of what side of the border they live on, because of their diet and exercise habits have very different prospects for health outcomes. When we look at Asian American community, recent study from C.D.C., Centers For Disease Control And Prevention, suggests that native Hawaiians are two and a half more likely to have been diagnosed with diabetes than white residents of Hawaii of similar age. Again, many native Hawaiians have substituted traditional diets and customs for fast food and . Page 12 . sedentary life-styles. Among African American women, 49% reported that they did not participate in leisure time physical activity. This is one of the main reasons African American women are at high risk for obesity, heart disease and diabetes. While cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death within the U.S., Hispanics experiencing a rise in the prevalence of risk factors for coronary heart disease, including hypertension. Again, African American women have the highest mortality rate from heart disease. That's 147.6% 100,000 of all American women. Of this population 34% have elevated blood pressure in contrast to 19% for Caucasian women. In a few minutes Dr. Julie Gerberding will be discussing some of the thing at H.H.S. to discuss heart disease and stroke prevention in particular. Rest assured we're looking at all diseases in coming up with real solutions of how to end the disparities we see in health today. All of these disease categories can be reduced significantly and prevented if we take a strong message to communities of color that exercise is important, good diet is essential and regular medical checkups are a necessity. As a father of a ten-year-old, a six-year-old and soon to be three-year-old, positive youth development is something that is very important to me. Just this last week we had the privilege, we have some of my great nephews and . Page 13 . nieces who live in the city, live in neighborhoods where they can't go and enjoy the outdoors and exercise. Whenever we have an opportunity, we invite them to come over, just across the border, into Virginia, northern Virginia and spend a few days with us. And so earlier part of this week and since last week, we have had seven kids in our household and they have enjoyed venturing behind the yard to go down to the creek or going up to the basketball court to get out and to exercise and to enjoy that. Well, we have a tendency in this country to dwell on the negative things some youth may be doing. I don't think we give youth as much credit they deserve. If we give them the very best information for them to make healthy choices, they will make those choices and make right and healthy decisions for themselves with the support of family and friends. Majority of youth today in America are making good choices, making healthy choices. We just need to affirm them and back them up. I know it is hard to believe sometimes, but children do listen to their parents. That is why it is so important for parents to talk with their children not only about good eating habits, good exercise habits, but also about avoiding risky behavior such as alcohol, drugs, sex, tobacco and violence. We need to realize each of these risk behaviors is connected and that when youth are . Page 14 . involved in one behavior, there's increase likelihood they will be involved in multiple behaviors. They're inner connected. This is indeed a paradigm shift. Risk reduction messages have met with very mixed results. When you have a clear message of risk avoidance, reduction is not necessary because you prevented the problem again before it even has a chance to begin. And again, we're talking about preventative maintenance, talking about life-style changes. In this case we're talking about good habits to protect young people into their adult hood. We have to realize most important connection that youth have is that child's connection with his or her family, with peers, with school and with community. These variables determine how youth respond to risk behaviors. When children feel connected to their families, they're less likely to smoke, less likely to use alcohol or drugs, less likely to engage in early sexual intercourse or less likely to engage in act of violence, experience emotional distress or even have thoughts of suicide. Again, we're talking about prevention. We need to create communities where youth can thrive and be involved in activities that promote positive life-styles away from televisions, away from computer games and away from junk food. You heard yesterday of the Secretary's commitment of heart disease and stroke prevention. When he launched action plan to . Page 15 . prevent heart disease and stroke. It will chart a course national goals preventing heart disease and stroke over the next two decades and beyond. This is incredible opportunity for all of us in the public health community to work towards reducing the burden of these leading causes of death. The problem with getting America healthy, however, cannot be solved alone by government. We need partners. It will take provider community, all communities, it will take the safe community churches, mosques, synagogues and government and all facets of daily lives making it a success. Today you have an opportunity to continue meeting many of our partners here in this audience. I hope that you will find your time here very informative and that you gain many of the tools that you will need to make prevention a part of what they do each day. I want to thank you again for being here and look forward to working with you and making America a healthy place. Thank you. And have a good conference. (Applause) >>PENNY ROYAL Thank you, Claude, for your dedication and commitment to healthy Americans. Thank you. And now I would like to introduce to you on your packets -- on your table you have our plan. Secretary got so caught up in his passionate speech that he forgot to introduce this to you . Page 16 . formally. But this is our plan for cardiovascular disease and stroke. It is a prevention plan. It was collaborated by many, many parties, including the American Heart Association who joins us here today, but it is a collaborative effort between C.D.C. and I.H., different within the department, as well as many organizations, advocacy groups and other partners. We hope that you will find it educative, as well as instructional. This is incredible effort and many, many people worked very hard to get this. And we believe it is an excellent beginning to start strategic plan to address cardiovascular disease in our country, which happens to be the number one killer of women. So as you can see, these are concrete steps to deal with real problems. I would like to introduce to you a colleague of mine. She has been quite famous in the news lately with SARS. I know it is not all that she likes to do. Her passion is prevention. The director of our Centers For Disease Control Julie Gerberding, we're going to give you a chance to talk about something else than SARS. Welcome. (Applause) >>JULIE GERBERDING Good morning. It is really a great location to talk about something besides SARS or terrorism. I'm delighted to be here. I'm very delighted to be able to introduce a little bit more information about the plan, public health action . Page 17 . plan to prevent heart disease and stroke. Let me first say why we need such a plan. Heart disease and stroke are epidemic in this country. Every 29 seconds somebody suffers a heart attack. And every 45 seconds somebody has a stroke. So these are phenomenally common health problems for us and problems we have to treat with the same urgency and the same attention there as we utilize the much more visible problems like anthrax or SARS or West Nile Virus infection. Truly constitute epidemics. These conditions represent the four most causes of death and disability in our nation. They cost more than $350 billion every year. More than 140 billion of this has been lost earnings from the people who are prematurely disabled or die from these illnesses. And I think importantly because of the excellence in our healthcare delivery system there are many survivors of these conditions, but survivors who are living with coronary heart disease, about 12.9 million of those people, 4.9 million people living with heart failure and 4.7 million people living in rehabilitation from stroke. So these are profound health issues. Health issues and issues for delivery system and we need a coordinated, integrated approach to addressing them with the public health model. This plan does that. This represents about 16 months of work. Very hard work with number of . Page 18 . partners from across the nation and various systems and federal agencies. I'm very proud of C.D.C.'s leadership in doing this. Although I can't take any credit myself. I think hard work and disease center part of a lot of people including Darleen Debarth (phonetic), taking approach of group of experts and agencies and something that's truly a first step. Every American will be called upon to take some action as a consequence of this plan. We'll need to make healthier choices, we'll need to do more to enjoy physical activity. We will need to get the health screenings that we need to identify -- identify problems early enough so we can do something about them. And really working in partnership with our health agencies and our healthcare delivery system taking the healthy steps to prevent not only heart disease and stroke, but also mitigate the consequences for those people who are already at risk or who have already developed the earlier stages of the disease. This first step is something that will be implemented through a variety of processes, but again, the actualization of the plan really does depend on the hard work and leadership of our state and local health departments and a number of federal agencies and professional organizations that have all come together to deal with this. So it is a big challenge. It is a great plan. I'm a little bit like Secretary Thompson. I think plans are . Page 19 . great, but I'm especially interested in action. So I really challenge all of you to become familiar with this plan, but then to actionize it by putting forward your ideas and working hard at whatever level in the plan you identify with to take the steps necessary to really develop a lasting chance that will make us healthier. And really bring this number one killer of Americans much further down the list. And I think that's an achievable goal. What we're going to be doing this morning is setting up a series of discussions and I'm very pleased this morning to have the honor of moderating this panel. I think what I'm likely to do is ask the panelists to come up to the stage so I can introduce you as you arrive. Good morning. We're having a slight technical glitch, having to do with the fact I was in a traffic jam this morning and don't have my talking points in front of me. While my speakers are getting nervous up here, I'll check the agenda to make sure you know how much time they're allotted to keep the session on time. I wasn't sure whether you were going to be 15 minutes or 45 minutes. Get my act together now. This panel is really representative of I think some of the hard work that went into creating this report. Dr. Bonow is individual who has shown enormous leadership through his direction of the American Heart Association. You notice that I'm wearing my Heart Association pin this . Page 20 . morning, as I've been indoctrinated into the organization. I'm likely to ask him to really provide a framework for the plan to probably give us more specificity why we need the plan and what's the scope and magnitude of what the problems are, but also what the American Heart Association is doing in support of this effort. So thank you. (Applause) >>ROBERT BONOW Thank you very much, Dr. Gerberding. Thank to Reggie also because Secretary Thompson will be happy to know I used 1/4 of my steps this morning, thanks to our effort. It is honor to me and on behalf of the American Heart Association not allowing me to participate in the panel but association playing a key partnership role with the department and all of you in developing this plan. Clearly we need to thank the extraordinary leadership of Dr. Gerberding and C.D.C. for making this happen. We're excited about moving this forward. We have a blueprint and key now as to move beyond the blueprint to the building. Dr. Gerberding told you, and as you know from your own experience, cardiovascular disease is leading cause of death in this country. Equal opportunity afflicter, including issue we need to bring preventative measures to bear on. As you can see, nearly 62 million Americans have one or more forms of cardiovascular disease. More . Page 21 . than 2600 Americans die from cardiovascular disease each day. That's an average of one death every 33 seconds. During the time this panel will take place, you can do the simple arithmetic to notice how many lives we're going to lose. This is not disease of old people. Half of 62 million individuals are under age 65 and 1/5 of the death, which is 500 per day, are under age -- as well. As Dr. Gerberding said, this is an annual cost of $300 million per year. Strictly speaking the American Heart Association has been at the fight against cardiovascular disease for many, many years. Our mission is to reduce the disability in death in cardiovascular disease and stroke. Stroke is very much part of the agenda. As a result, the American Heart Association created a subdivision the American Stroke Association which has been really quite active in the last two years in the area of prevention and recognition. Pushing the envelope for more research funding as well. And getting messages into the community to improve awareness and outcome of stroke survivors. The goal of the organization is by the year 2010 to reduce the risk of death and disability and risk by 25% for heart disease and stroke. We put a number on this thinking that a number could drive us toward very aggressive programs, really try to achieve meaningful outcomes. Rather than saying we want to . Page 22 . improve outcome, we thought 25% would allow us to put a target on this and measure outcome as well. But in doing so we realize that we have enormous challenges in front of us. Show you a few headlines. These are -- these have impact not only on healthcare community but also the citizens of the United States. Obesity in America. This results -- this is a headline related to the paper by coworkers from C.D.C. indicating 66%, roughly 66% of Americans are overweight, over 30% are frankly obese, 15% of children in teenage years are overweight or obese. That's equally of greater concern what our children are doing. In fact, what are our children doing? They're getting mixed messages. We tell them to eat healthy foods and yet in schools we have very poor nutritional programs. Have school systems that are not only contributing to the ill health of our children but giving them wrong healthcare messages. Of course, the obesity epidemic is fueling another major concern, the rise of diabetes. This is not just a New York situation, as suggested by the headline, but New York Times indicated that the average statistics in New York what we're seeing nationwide. 8% of New Yorkers have diabetes, 13% of Hispanics have diabetes, and roughly ten or 11% of African American citizens in New York have diabetes. We're seeing this nationwide. And this . Page 23 . also gets into the disparity issue as Secretary Allen indicated. Heart disease is a greater risk among African Americans. This headline comes from one of my hometown papers in Chicago. Illinois has third worst cardiovascular in any state. Major issues regarding access to care. Access to care issues we have two segments of population who are not getting access to preventative messages or preventative treatments. More over, even when access to care is not the issue, even when we look at populations that have equal access and equal insurance we find that the healthcare as to be inferior among minorities as indicated by this particular headline which is result of the Institute Of Medicine report a year or so ago followed by the Kaiser family report foundation last fall indicating the same finding. Issues regarding communication, regarding trust in the healthcare system and we need to really work on these particular issues. Behavioral issues as well as systems of care to break these wrongs. What do we do? As an organization we have historically organization that provides knowledge. Discovering new science, funds research, both basic, clinical and population science now. Transfer the science to our meetings and publications, and we try to guide application of science through statements advisories and guidelines. This is historically . Page 24 . what the American Heart Association has been about, but we realize this is not going to achieve our goals. Issues have occurred despite aspects of the organization but put numbers of 25 reduction by 2010 we need to be more aggressive. Therefore change the fabric of the American Heart Association, the goal now is to increase awareness. Change behaviors, change environment and change the healthcare system as necessary to achieve these goals. We are very excited about what we have been doing, and we're very excited about the ability to partner with many other organizations to achieve the goals. How can we provide credible information and changes in behavior to every community? We think we are a good partner to consider the opportunities to work with because we can reach many segments of the community. Through different means. Through churches, through schools, through workplaces, through universities and medical centers. Access to media, telephone, internet base systems as well. Put information in grocery stores. Now we're not all things to all people and certain communities, one or more of the particular means may work better and so therefore we can individualize what the opportunities may be to meet the given culture or system to be addressed. And we believe we have some opportunities to help in these ways because we have a . Page 25 . large organization. In addition to national center and 14 large reasons -- regional offices, we have volunteers and staff in the community. We have 1500 local divisions, 3,000 staff nationwide in every community. Scientific councils which is scientific leadership of the organization involved 30,000 scientists, physicians and nurses. And most important at the local level we have lay and science volunteers, numbering anywhere from 7 million to 20 million, depending whether you count more dedicated individuals or the high school kids who do Jump Rope For Heart. As an example at our Emergency Cardiac Care Committee meeting last week I learned that our organization has trained 260,000 trainers to teach C.P.R. throughout the country. 260,000. Either training the trainers -- now trainers are going to go out according to our plan and train 20 million people to actually perform C.P.R. to deal with some of the issues. This is kind of work force that we have potential to develop. But even with the work force we realize quite clearly that we need to leverage our work. We cannot do this alone as an organization. This is why the partnership with the Healthy People 2010 community has been so important. Our goal are in line with 2010 goals and we feel very proud of the relationship that we have developed thanks to Dr. Rosemary Robinson, past president and officer who . Page 26 . made it happen. Have a strong partnership with the Department of Health and Human Services, including Office Of Disease Prevention And Health Promotion. N.I.H. agencies, C.D.C., Centers For Disease Control in prevention, Centers for Medicare, Medicaid Services and Health Services. As a result we do see the final outcome of the partnership to date in the public health action plan, copy of which you have before you. We are very eager to move this forward. In addition we have other strategic partners who nongovernmental. American Department of Cardiology, sister to sister, campaigns, growing relationship at the state level with affiliate relationships within each state with the American Heart Association. What can we try to bring to bear as an asset in partnership? First of all, we have a large advocacy staff and work force. Something we can do that federal agencies cannot do is to go to Congress and urge greater awareness, greater funding, two key issues each year have been greater research funding for N.I.H., greater funding for C.D.C. to support the state base programs and that fight continues. In addition as you see on this slide, number of other specific items that we have been dealing with, all of which focus on prevention that I'll go through very quickly. First of all, get with guideline of hospital base program for patients in coronary care unit . Page 27 . with secondary guidelines. We're all aware we have a major gap between the healthcare that we should have and the healthcare that we do have. Patients are not getting effective secondary prevention measures after cardio infarction. This program allows it to be implemented and is rolling out nationwide and will address some of the gender issues as one sees in care as well as some of the minority and ethnic disparities, help to level the playing field. Program based on acute coronary care is also being modified to involve stroke, acute stroke care, and ultimately also heart failure. In addition, you can see that what this allows to us do is go from developing guidelines which winds up on a book shelf to actually implementing them at the patient level within the community. In addition we have program called Heart Profilers. Individuals with disease or risk for disease can log on, get specific tailored information that is specific to his or her own individual characteristics based on sidelines to allow them to understand the disease process, understand the importance of prevention, ask the right questions of healthcare providers and seek healthcare provider that has not already occurred. Problem with this, of course, is some of the people who need this information the most do not have access to a computer or internet. So we need something else. One thing we're . Page 28 . doing is This Is Your Heart. It's a community based program in primarily in inner cities for the under-served and minority populations. 5,000 churches enrolled nationwide and through this particular program we hope to be able to begin to address some of the disparity issues in cardiac prevention. This Is Your Heart has modules that teaches trainers to talk to members of congregations about stroke, about the importance of checking blood pressure, high risk for stroke, especially among African Americans and Hispanics and as Secretary Allen indicated, highest risk groups for obesity and metabolic syndrome tend to be women in minority, African American women and Hispanic women, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, it has tailored activities, healthy life-styles and healthy diet. Another program is called Choose To Move. I-village picked it up and had it on their internet site. Hoping to move it in the community as well and maybe Reggie can help us do that because he got us moving so well this morning. Finally, beginning to address the disparity issues, wish to frame the agenda for our organization that we can use in partnership for others regarding the scientific agenda as well as the community based issues, advocacy issues with conference in Atlanta first of October pulling together member of partnership organizations to help address this issue. Finally I'd like to . Page 29 . recognize Dr. Tom Pearson (phonetic) who was one of the working member chairs of the Public Health Action plan who also chaired a task force within the American Heart Association dealing with community level prevention. Of all prevention guidelines that we have published, I believe it is the most important one in the last decade or two. Copy is out on the booth. If you haven't seen it, you can pick it up at our booth or find it at Americanheart.org web site. Telling individuals that they need to have cholesterol checked, blood pressure checked for doing healthy activities. Most communities are not able to provide ability or information to and therefore need to become more active in the communities. Many of us have taken the particular document to the town halls and shown it to our local legislatures about things that need to be doing. For example, advocating for screening for cardiovascular disease, risk factors and stroke, same risk factors. Need to be emphasizing communities with bicycle paths and walkways. Is it safe at night for adults and children? Public schools with exercise facilities, why are they used at night and should be open weekends as well. Physical education at school. We feel these needs to be prime agenda on the list. Healthy choices in school lunch programs. These are two things we need to be doing for . Page 30 . our children to improve future cardiovascular health. Finally, I'd like to again acknowledge our great appreciation and admiration for the individuals who pulled this document together. In fact, David Goff chaired this. He's very active in the American Heart Association as volunteer. Look forward to continuing with all the partners to move this forward beyond the blueprint stage and implementation. Thank you very much for your attention. (Applause) >>JULIE GERBERDING Thank you. That is a pretty impressive panel play of activities. I don't think I really had a full appreciation of the Heart Association with C.D.C. until visiting a few months ago and peek view and really appreciate all that you're doing. There are many partners -- actually more than 60 partners who have contributed to the development of the action plan and they obviously Heart Association has played a major lead in this. But we couldn't have a plan or wouldn't be able to implement a plan without the full coordination of the health officials for state and local health agencies. And the association office has been critical component of that. Dr. Garcia, our next panelist is someone who is the President Elect of the Association of the State and Territory Health Officers but also the Health Commissioner in the State of . Page 31 . Connecticut. I want to just make a very personal statement to him because throughout the past several months as we have come to grips with public health preparedness at the State level, Dr. Garcia has been one of the most rational contributors and supportive contributors in good sense. We're pleased to have him a part of this panel and he's going to tell you what some of the partnerships that have gone through the states that are helping to address the issues of cardiovascular disease and stroke. Dr. Garcia. (Applause) >>JOXEL GARCIA First time someone said I'm rational, that was a joke by the way. What I want to do this morning is very simple. I want to present three things. One briefly to present to you take me one minute. After that what do we think and how we can use the action plan to change health in the United States. Then third, example of three states that are implementing plans. So you can actually benchmark what those states are doing or actually use that as a model and then modify that within your own state. So with that in mind -- let me see if I can work this. Yes. Association of State and Territories health officials, represent all the states, 50 states, territories and D.C. and headquarters are in D.C. as well. And the mission is right there, formulate and influence sound, national policy, kind . Page 32 . of policy we're not going to be promoting but sound. And we are with the departments working to create change at the state level. So what we think this is doing, action plan is doing. I think we're going to be able to promote better health, prevent chronic diseases and help some of the factors. Someone think we have to work -- physical activity dealing with tobacco. That way we can eliminate some of the cardiovascular disease and stroke issues affecting all our states, all our communities. Actually been doing for a long time. That's why we're so excited with the document, with this action plan because it provides partners to opportunities with the federal and state government but also with our community in the private sector. Essentially that's where we're looking, federal, state, local, private industry, healthcare system, communities getting it. Using as action plan that can be used to change all the communities. I think one of the things that we have to do is yesterday I like one of the lines of the Secretary used, he said there's lots of messengers. When we come back to our communities start to think what we have learned not only from listening to the different presentations but talking with the different partners and create new partnerships because sustain we have to be -- we cannot think single we have to work in partnerships with everybody. It has been long time since . Page 33 . we have energy boost from the federal government in terms to push for prevention. Because I know the message we had yesterday we should not be thinking in terms of health system or healthy health system. We should be looking at a health system. That's essentially what the plan is going to try to accomplish and that's essentially what it wants. These examples going to be giving, Texas, Rhode Island and of course my state of Connecticut. Texas, they create strategic plan for prevention of obesity. They have four goals. The first one is to increase awareness and they want to put in schools, communities to choose life-styles that can promote health. That way they think and they are -- data change cardiovascular affecting the states, communities and also the stroke affecting the communities. Promotes change that support healthy habits. Many, many policies can be pulled out, but if you don't give tools so change can happen, change cannot move forward. Then very important four goals -- four goals they have as to monitor. Because monitor the trends to see if the actions are there taking place are effective or not. I think this is -- not only going to be used like Texas but can be used by other states and also other communities. I have to say Dr. Sanchez (phonetic) who is part of the action plan, he's great leader in the state of Texas. Rhode Island . Page 34 . Department Of Health, they have a process which I like a lot. Sponsored by the Rhode Island Prevention Coalition, Department Of Public Health, American Heart Association of local business. Walking initiative. Sounds simple and actually I think significant change because communities, some towns, some cities and they have and marked them every half mile. So people can actually start walking and find out how much they're walking every day and then try to accomplish their goals. And so they can put some objectives and find out they have -- and measure the objectives and find out if they reach their goal or so. Yesterday the Secretary was talking about having a meter at your belt and interested in doing that in miles in state of Rhode Island. They even have spring walking conference which essentially actually providing the monitors to people so they can actually measure what they were doing. So it is a very proactive system that they have there. It is a simple process. Found a lot of partners and create change. Now, the good thing I'm presenting I can have the better slide of my state. As you can see. I also have M.B.A. so marketing, called social marketing. First thing I did when I came to my state was change the law. Connecticut light house officially illuminating in the state of Connecticut with public health. (Applause) And this slide I have here pertains to the three . Page 35 . states and rest of the nation. My state spent $3.6 billion in cardiovascular disease. 42% of all Connecticut deaths are associated with cardiovascular disease. 23% of hospitalization, just to give you some numbers, obesity rate, obesity rate in Texas and Rhode Island for adults is over 60%. In terms of children school-age over 30%. That essentially pertains to all the states of the nation. Other things happening in all states is the change of our predicted growth of our people. When I was in medical school, the data goes all the way to 65 years and older. Now the data is 85 years and older, and that's the fastest growing group in our state. 77.9% for 85 years and older. Second group 65 years and older. Line in my state 100% correct for all the states but may have better data, but I said to my -- when I speak in public, I said if a lady is 65 years and older and healthy and she's in the audience here today, she's probably going to live to 100 years of age. For the guys in the audience if you're healthy at 65, you're still going to die when you're 70 so -- have to change. That's one of the things is cardiovascular disease. Another thing that is changing is demographics of our state. And that's happening across America and that's extremely important because American Heart Association already put presentations and C.D.C. put presentations, asked us, everybody put . Page 36 . presentations in terms of all the minority groups, different ethnic groups and affecting all of them. So we do two things in the state, one is house calls with seniors health tour and other one is urban healthy initiative which we call door to door. Very cost effective. Again, this is with support in part by the federal government through C.D.C. and sometimes we do it by ourselves. We got everybody involved. Hospital association, we got community action groups, we got the local health departments, we got the public health community, we got the private sector involved. I think essentially what we do we get partners, go, get data from my agency, go to the community, 30 to 60 people, do this three times a week. Essentially what we do is send data to them and ask them what do you think we should be doing to create change based in the notion that the communities know what is the best tools to work with them. So in our state it works. We're very Yankee state. Local and territorial things but may be replicated in other states as well have created change. Survey pre-event and survey postevent. Survey have any changes in the healthcare status, not only in the community but also have they accessed the healthcare system. So to finalize and as you can see, I talk very fast, one of the things we think we can accomplish is the states working together with all the partners. We have this -- . Page 37 . each one of the states in territory so we cannot only work with the federal government but all the private sectors and create significant change. So that's why we need partnerships deal with communities, organizations. This is with private sector and we have not only to educate the public, another thing we want to be able to do is change the healthcare system. Some of the data we have -- now I know talking from another perspective but state of Connecticut sometimes healthcare providers are not using the tools that they should be using to create change. For medications, processes that can be done after the patient has been diagnosed with the process. So what we're trying to do is facilitate that and that's why we're looking at action to create change from the leadership perspective but also in terms of action perspective. So essentially that's the brief presentation that we have and we're very thankful for the opportunity. (Applause) >>JULIE GERBERDING Thank you. I have a question for the audience. How many people in the audience are leaders or managers or supervisors of other employees? Raise your hand. Okay. How many of you who raised your hands have taken specific action steps to make your workplace heart happy or better, safer and healthier for your individuals? Not as many hands. I have a challenge to all of you, . Page 38 . because it is a challenge I'm taking very seriously for myself, and that is just as you heard about opportunities in the community or opportunities in the home, I think each of us can think of opportunities in our own workplace to take steps to promote a healthier life-style, healthier work style for people. At C.D.C., you know, we are the nation's lead public health agency for promoting healthier people. It's unconscionable as to put highest priority within our organization. When I started my role as Director of C.D.C. I thought I would walk the talk so I wanted to take the stairs up to the fifth floor. The building where my office is and the stairs were exactly where I didn't want to be. They were very unattractive and some what hideous actually. So I got on the stairwell and I did make it all the way up to the fifth floor without having any myocardial chest pain but I couldn't get out. So I had to call on my cell phone and say please, let me out of the staircase. So since that time in large part to the leadership of Dr. Jim Marks (phonetic) and Dr. Jackson who are interested in environmental factors in the workplace, we're initiating that in the workplace. Proof of principle of simple things that can be done to promote more exercise or more steps. We're engaged in the process at C.D.C. and C.D.C. has provided healthier stairwell at the Humphrey . Page 39 . Building so they can have a healthy staircase as well. I would challenge you to think of small things you can do in your own workplace. Have your staff meeting walking or turn off three of the four elevators. That will get them on the stairs. Anyway, I really thank my panelists for their contributions this morning and especially thank all the partners who contributed to the public health action plan. Really a terrific next step and we need your help and need your support and your commitment. It is now my pleasure to introduce the moderator of the next panel, Dr. Elizabeth Duke. She is a great colleague at H.H.S. and I think you probably latched onto the Secretary's comments yesterday and through the way the whole meeting is organized that we really are a much more integrated Department of Health and Human Services. That's the Secretary's dream, all one department, all H.H.S. and I think there's probably no person who better exemplifies that kind of integration and crossover between one agency and another than Dr. Duke. She has been effective leader, and from my standpoint huge energy in bridging the gap between the public health system and healthcare delivery system and making seamless within the department but also seamless in the real world. So Betty, welcome and I appreciate everything that you do to support public health. . Page 40 . (Applause) >>ELIZABETH DUKE Good morning. I am just delighted to be here today. I thank Julie for the gracious introduction. It is actually a marvelous opportunity to work in the Department of Health and Human Services today with such incredibly energetic colleagues, and with some superb program such as those that we have introduced here at this conference. They asked me to talk a little bit about the agency I have because it is the one of the lessor known agencies. I'll take a few minutes to introduce the agency, but not too many minutes because I want to get directly to the panelists. Health Resources And Services Administration is a big budget small agency. That is to say 7 billion-dollar agency with about 2000 employees. And our goal about which we're fairly passionate is to ensure that there is access to healthcare services for millions citizens who would not have healthcare were we not there. In fact, we're the agency that provides services for the medically under-served. We're the safety net and we work closely with the other elements of the department to ensure that we're providing quality service that is good healthcare for the poor in this nation. One of the key elements of that is the Community Health Center Network which is part of our program. The President . Page 41 . made a commitment in his first few months of service to expand that safety net. And his commitment is a five year program to increase that healthcare safety net from 3200 health centers at the beginning of his administration by 1200 new sites to 4400 over a five year period. That will mean access to health care for 6 million additional people over that five year period so that we will be serving 16 million people in 2006 and ultimately doubling to almost 22 million. In addition to that President has made a major presidential initiative. And that's absolutely common sense. Because if you're going to expand the health center network you're going to need physicians and doctors and nurses to run those centers. Over half of the health service corps is involved in our community health centers at this point. So that expansion is most welcome. The health centers actually are the health providers for most of the poor of the nation. 10% of the nations uninsured are cared for by our health centers and 30% of the nation's uninsured people of color, both adults and children are served through the health centers. We're very aware of those statistics that you have seen all yesterday and this morning. And then we are absolutely committed to ending the health disparities. And one of the ways we're attempting to do that is through our health disparities collaboratives. These approaches take a team . Page 42 . approach to treating chronic illness to ensure that patients are involved in their own care and they're organized specifically around the diseases we have been talking about for the last day and a half. Diabetes, asthma, cardiovascular disease, obesity, H.I.V./AIDS and cancer. We're working in 12 centers on cancer in a pilot and roll that out nationally over the next 12 months. As we're increasing the number of health centers we're also increasing those who are involved in this quality initiative, the healthcare collaborative. We believe that this is going to help us close that gap between the health outcomes of the population at large and minorities. That's a little bit about who we are. In one way we can look at it as we bring healthcare to those who need it. It is my real pleasure this morning to introduce a marvelous panel. I'm going to start by introducing Dr. Gerald Anderson, Director for Hospital Finance at Johns Hopkins, he's the Co Director for Medical Technology and Assessment. Director of Washington D.C. policy program, Professor and Associate Chair of John Hopkins Hygiene and Public Health. Professor of National and Health and Medicine at Johns Hopkins School Of Medicine. It is my great pleasure to introduce Doctor Gerald Anderson. (Applause) >>GERARD ANDERSON . Page 43 . Thank you. This morning I'm going to be really wearing three hats. One is professor at local public health school. I can tell you Johns Hopkins putting prevention first for almost 100 years ago now. I'm on the third floor and I've been walking up the stairs for all 20 years at Johns Hopkins. But as professor what I want to try to do is give you something new to consider today. That's what my first responsibility is. The second is that I'm a Director of a Robert Wood Johnson National program and the title of is Partnership For Solution. And tag line is better lives for people with chronic condition. Our goal is to improve lives of 25 million Americans who already have a chronic condition. What our challenge today is to make prevention relevant to them. And third, I have expertise in healthcare finance. So what I want in the ten minutes or so that I have is present something which I think is financially viable. The goal for me to talk about if people who already have chronic -- one chronic condition. As I said, that's 125 million Americans right now. The goal is to slow the growth to multiple chronic conditions. The first thing we have to do is define a chronic condition. What you heard about specific diseases. We wanted to be more encompassing, a broader definition. So what we did is we came up with three criteria for defining a chronic condition. Something . Page 44 . that lasts or expected to last a year or longer and limits what you can do and requires ongoing care. We're still working on this definition because people have suggested it fits other things as well. Somebody, for example, said that's a great definition for a chronic disease but works equally well for marriage. (Laughter) We gave the American public that definition. And we said do you have a chronic condition? Cross-section of Americans and four out of ten Americans raised their hand and said yes, I have a chronic condition. And that we found -- well, that work with numbers that we thought people had, but what I found slightly more surprising and, you know, where prevention comes into account really importantly is the people that did not have a chronic condition right now, 2/3 of them thought that they were going to develop a chronic condition sometime during our life. And that's even true for the 18-year-old boys who were concerned about chronic conditions. So it affects everyone. We ask the reincorporation how many people do you think have a chronic condition based upon C.D.C. and A.R.C. (phonetic) information and they told us in 2001 25 million Americans right now have a chronic condition using the definition. The number by 2010 will grow by 16 million to 141 million Americans. But what I want to talk about is people with multiple chronic conditions. Right now . Page 45 . what you have on -- on the slide is the five most common chronic conditions in children. And what you see fortunately is 2/3 of the children with a chronic disease have just that single chronic disease. But 1/3 of children with chronic disease has two or more chronic conditions. So we start seeing the idea of multiple chronic conditions. When we get to people our age, then what we see is the single chronic condition is not the norm. Only about 1/3 of the people who are -- have one chronic condition. 2/3 of them have two or more different chronic conditions. And then when we talk to the -- talk about seniors, people over the age of 65, you tell me one in ten seniors that just have a single chronic condition. If they have a chronic condition, nine out of ten of them have two or more chronic conditions. So designing programs that are just around single chronic conditions especially for the elderly does not make complete sense. What we see is the number of people with chronic conditions according to the corporation is going to grow. Right now we have 60 million Americans with two or more chronic conditions. By 2010 it is projected to grow to 70 million. Increase in 10 million. What we need to figure out is a way to reduce those numbers. It has -- having multiple chronic condition has many effects. I'll show new --- a minute a lot higher healthcare utilization but also affects . Page 46 . you and your ability to work, ability to go to school, ability to do a variety of things. One example ability, impacted on ability to do activities of daily living. By the time you have five or more chronic conditions, you have a 67% chance of having at least one activity of daily living limitation. What I talk -- said I was going to talk about though is a little bit of financing. And what we have is the more chronic conditions you have, the more expensive you are to the medical care system. So we don't all like to talk about dollars, we don't like to make financial arguments but this is the financial argument for prevention and especially prevention for people with multiple chronic conditions. By the time you have five or more chronic conditions, your cost is a little over $10,000 a year to a health insurer. If you stay at zero, it is $800. One, it is a little over $2,000. But what also we have to do is take a look -- it will switch in a minute. Look at specific programs like the Medicare program. And what we have is in the Medicare program it is -- you see that 67% of Medicare beneficiaries have two or more chronic conditions. If you look at the dollars associated with those individuals, it is 96% of Medicare's budget. Now not all of that is for care of chronic conditions, but those people with chronic conditions in the Medicare program are 96% of Medicare's budget. So if Tom Skulley was . Page 47 . here right now, what I would tell him is that Medicare is a program for people with multiple chronic conditions, but the way the system is designed today, he and the Congress just doesn't know it. I take a look at the Medicaid program as well. And what I see is 17% of the Medicaid beneficiaries have two or more chronic conditions, and they represent over 50% of Medicare/Medicaid spending in any given year. And these people tend to be the highest spenders year after year after year. So Medicaid is a program for people with multiple chronic conditions. But it doesn't know it. So Tom Skulley, Medicaid directors, you got to design your program, got to design your preventative package around people with multiple chronic conditions. So how do we design prevention with a multiple chronic condition focus? Well, we've got 125 million Americans already with a chronic condition. They understand the limitations of having a chronic condition. They don't want a second one. We got to design programs that attracts them, the 40% of our population. The financial argument, and I deal a lot with financing is the key is to prevent the second, the third, the fourth chronic condition from happening. Because that is a lot where the cost savings are going to be generated. We have designed our programs around the first and that's critically important. . Page 48 . And I don't want to minimize that at all. But if we're going to look for cost savings, going to make a case to private industry and other places, it is the second, third and fourth that are the most expensive, especially in the Medicare program. Now, one of the areas is care coordination. What we know is that the more doctors a person sees, the greater probability they're going to have of getting conflicting advice. And people with multiple chronic conditions see an average of ten doctors a year. And they're getting different advice from each one of those doctors. And what advice are they getting? Well, there's a number of adverse effects that occur when you do not have good care coordination among the doctors and home health agencies and others. You get unnecessary hospitalization. When you have five or more chronic conditions, you have a 25% chance of having unnecessary hospitalization. You also have a much higher probability of having drug interactions. You have a much higher probability of being sent for duplicate tests. But what does it mean for prevention? Well, when we've looked at preventative guidelines, what we see is once you see more than four doctors, you're working with prevention guidelines starts going down. People get conflicting advice. And so what do we need? Well, one of the things we might want to consider is to -- to identify . Page 49 . and to pay one clinician to try to coordinate all the preventative care services that people receive. Get one person in charge. It does not have to be a doctor. But get one person in charge. So that not everybody is telling you different things to do. The area that we're talking about in insurance right now key word is disease management. And one of the key and beneficial thing of disease management right now is that they promote good preventative care. The problem as I see it most of the disease management programs are focused on a single disease. And so if you focused on one disease and the person has four different chronic conditions, who do they listen to and so what we need is case management or care management, not disease management in a lot of these programs that we're working with these days. So the person with two, three, four chronic conditions get one set of advice, not multiple advices. And so my final message is prevention may be most important for people who already have one chronic condition. And what do we -- what's the challenge for the near future is what do we do for the 125 million Americans who already have a chronic condition. Thank you. (Applause) >>ELIZABETH DUKE Thank you very much, Dr. Anderson. I will be sure to take your message to Tom Skulley about the nature of his . Page 50 . program. (Laughter) I would bring to your attention actually in Tom's behalf that he and the Secretary and entire Department of Health and Human Services have been working very hard in recent months around strengthening Medicaid and reforming Medicare and in both of those packages there is a tendency to issue of prevention which is linked again to financing. So -- in the spirit of this panel, which is addressing problems and solutions, we'll continue to work on those and appreciate your help and guidance. Now I'd like to introduce Dr. Ralph Snyderman, President and C.E.O. of Duke University Health Systems, Chancellor of Health Affairs and James B. Duke Professor of Medicine. I assure you there's no relation. Dr. Snyderman, please. (Applause) >>RALPH SNYDERMAN Thank you. I see Reggie Freeman is still here. I'm impressed and he started this morning by trying to get us to be involved in movement. And I'm going to try to follow that same thing and talk about development of a movement to change the basic nature of healthcare delivery. This is the first public health conference I've ever talked at. And I am really so impressed alignment what we're trying to do, at least in some schools of medicine fits in so well with what you know from what you see in the communities that if we join together we . Page 51 . could really get something special started. If we think about the practice of medicine -- see how this -- the practice of medicine has been identified as a profession since earliest recorded time. But it is important to note that the introduction of science into the practice of medicine didn't occur until the very early part of the last century. The accumulation of knowledge in a number different areas of science, biochemistry, very particularly microbiology, germ theory created tremendous opportunities for the care of people which at that time was very anecdotal and very unscientific. This did not occur until about 100 years ago. But the practice of medicine despite this robust creativity on the part of science was anecdotal, unscientific and regulated. What happened in the early part of the 20th Century is that the Carnegie Foundation identified that the practice of medicine was not being impacted by the potential which was being created for it by the scientific fields. Now this created a revolution in healthcare. It began and Johns Hopkins was one of the models it used in appropriate School Of Medicine at that time putting research into the practice of medicine. One of the consequences, however, was the understanding of the disease process. And the very heavy focus of the medical basis of treating disease by understanding the pathophysiology of disease. . Page 52 . This created a disease oriented approach to the teaching and practice of medicine. Since World War II there has been an investment in the part of the federal government and industry of almost $1 trillion in biomedical research. This has given us tremendous understanding of human biology, the pathogensis of disease. We heard yesterday or two days ago that the human genome project is just about complete. 99.9% accurate sequencing of the human genome. The argument that I want to make is that similar to 100 years ago there is accumulation of knowledge which we are not using in the practice of medicine. And in the practice of medicine today, as many speakers have already said, we have invested $1.5 trillion for healthcare, and I believe everybody in this audience and everybody in this country will agree that we're not getting our money's worth. And if we really think about it, we could design a better system. That's what I want to talk about today. One of the most important impacts of the genomic revolution will be the development of our ability to understand an individual susceptibility to disease before it occurs. The focus of this meeting and the focus of Secretary Thompson and others in H.H.S. is prevention. One can think of prevention generically. But the capability that we're developing now is to think of prevention specifically as it . Page 53 . relates to any given individual. And the ability to do that requires the ability to predict risk or to understand risk and to predict disease before it occurs. And that is going to be a major impact of understanding the human genome. But there are many other ways of understanding risk. Within the next ten years most scientists working in the area believe that we will develop a risk profile analysis for the major common human diseases from Alzheimer's disease, all the way to schizophrenia. Some people are talking about the evolution or the development of genomic medicine. And that is from the time of birth if one understands genetic susceptibility, one could start thinking of an individuals risk compared to a normal population of developing again, for example, Alzheimer's disease, all the way through prostate cancer. That is a very different way of thinking about the practice of medicine. However, even without genomics, even without anymore information about genetics, look at how far we have come along in being able to determine risk for the major killer of Americans today. And that is cardiovascular disease. When I was an intern a number of years ago, we had a visiting professor at Duke leading expert at cardiovascular disease. When we asked him how does one predict risk for cardiovascular disease, state-of-the-art in the late '60s was hair baldness . Page 54 . patterns, body type, thickness of the wrist, various other almost nonsensical factors such as that. But now look where we are, generation and a half or so. Family history, lipids, stress test, imaging and angiography and this is the beginning, all the interest in C.R.P. and tremendous ability to prevent. Diet, exercise, aspirin, if necessary statins, beta blockers. We are capable of practicing a type of medicine that is prospective. This is new. For the first time in our history we're capable of doing this seriously from the individual on out. Medicine can be pro-active. We can predict, we can prevent and fiction if we have to. We have on the threshold of being able to develop healthcare planning, a healthcare system that is interactive with the patient and integrated similar to what we heard from the previous speaker so that there is a point of care. So that the system is integrated. But that's not what we're doing. Sometimes I may ask what is wrong with the healthcare system today? I say there's only two things wrong with the healthcare system today. How it is delivered, and how it is paid for. So if we could figure out together how we solve those two issues, we could turn the delivery of healthcare on its head. And I believe we actually have a lot of understanding as to how we could begin together to do this. How it is delivered and how it is paid for. Now, the practice of . Page 55 . medicine today, speaking from the physician, I can tell you it is reactive, we are still in most medical schools having our students think that for every disease there's a basic molecular defect or physical defect and the job of the doctor is to find it and fix it. The intervention is sporadic, still heavily directed by the physician. Our system is highly fractionated and is incredibly expensive, very wasteful. Patients face dilemma, array of choices whether they do or do not have insurance. As to whether they see primary care, urgent care, complimentary, specialists, internet, etc., etc. The current medical record, any physician in the audience knows that this is what a physician does when you come to see him or her. The first question that they are asking themselves when you walk into the room is what is your chief complaint, why are you there? What is your chief complaint, what are you going to be bothering me with today? That is the initial approach from physician to patient. Illness to differential diagnosis and plan. Now that is a very good way to analyze a root cause analysis of failure. That is what you do when a failure occurs. And that is the way we practice medicine. Now I would bet that everybody in this audience is beginning to think of a plan for their retirement. A plan for their estate. Planning for virtually every aspect of their lives. But how many people in this . Page 56 . audience have a five year plan for their health based on what they are most likely to be susceptible to. I would say probably none because most physicians don't practice this way. But getting to the point of my talk today, the practice of medicine, healthcare system has to be directed to the futuristic approach. I believe that every American ought to be able to have, and we ought to be able to deliver this within years, individualized health risk assessment and health plan. This is not beyond the reach of what we can do today. A future health medical evaluation should have a health profile, current health status but a health risk analysis based on genetic background, what we know, environment risks, life-style, and then a one and five year plan. Now where are we today? Well, we have tools and we're getting increasingly better tools for risk assessment. We are increasingly capable of developing early detection for coronary artery disease, diabetes, even certain forms of cancer. And we are increasingly developing means for better prevention and early intervention when a disease occurs. What we don't have yet is a delivery system that creates an individual health plan. We don't have effective delivery systems so an individual with a plan knows how to fulfill that plan. And we certainly don't have effective reimbursement systems. Tom Skulley who was a very . Page 57 . close personal friend of mine, he and I talk a lot about it. And to some degree he is handcuffed, but he is fortunate -- we're fortunate to be within a leadership system that recognizes the problem and knows that we need to move from a reimbursement system, then in sense rewards intensive care, acute intervention chronic disease to a reimbursement system that rewards good outcomes and prevention. And that is something that needs to be worked on. Now you have already heard we have 125 million people with chronic disease, many with multiple chronic diseases. Every chronic disease, pick one in your own mind and think about it. Whether it is coronary artery disease, whether it is diabetes leading to renal failure, develops overtime. Coronary artery disease we know from many studies while heart attacks may occur in the 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, coronary artery disease starts developing 20 years before. Our healthcare system today is currently focused far on the right-hand side of that curve. Where symptoms have already appeared, reversibility is low and cost is very high. We are currently capable of intervening at the very earliest onset. We are capable of doing that now. We're not doing it. And with genomics in the future, we're going to push the curve to the left. Now what do we need to do this? This is the bottom line. Punch line and fits very, very well with what . Page 58 . I heard here already. I believe we need to start with the individual. We can start with the community and work in, but we also need to work with the individual and work out. With good risk assessment tools which are being developed, we need to provide a risk assessment personalized health plan and then assign people -- according to their risk those with low risk need to be -- need to have available to them the best way of becoming educated about their own health and learning and getting motivated towards wellness. The real focus, I believe, needs to be on those individuals that are very high risk for developing a major chronic disease or those individuals with early chronic disease in which intervention can prevent worsening of symptoms, signs and cost. The elements for prospective care are primarily risk assessment tools. I've already talked about many of these things. Prospective medical record. We need insurance and reimbursement and delivery system that's capable of doing this. Prospective healthcare works primarily in forms of cancer, diabetes, and problem is system is not designed to do it, and the reimbursement system punishes it. So in order to effect this, my mission and one of the reasons I am so honored to talk here as to try to recruit the interested parties to be 20 begin the development a healthcare system on prospective care . Page 59 . and I am going to close by saying that we have all the elements to do it right now starting from inefficiency of the current systems, negative factors and enabling factors and focusing well meaning people who have capability of delivering prospectus healthcare. Thank you very much.(Applause) >>ELIZABETH DUKE Thank you, Dr. Snyderman focusing on pro-active medicine and thinking of ourself as individuals in need of individual health plan as well as focusing on system overhaul and integration of our systems. We appreciate your insights. Our third presenter on this pan and I have something in common, other than Dr. Snyderman share the name Duke a little bit. Dr. Bob Harmon is in administration for Health Resources and Services. Now he is the President of the American College Of Preventative Medicine and he's Vice President and National Medical Director for Optum/UnitedHealth Group company, which is based in McLean, Virginia. It is my real pleasure to introduce Dr. Bob Harmon. Thank you. (Applause) >>ROBERT HARMON Thank you, Betty. Preventative medicine is hot topic these days. It was mentioned by President Bush and the State Of The Union Message and mentioned by one of . Page 60 . the Generals at Centcom in Kuwait. I'm pleased about all the publicity but I need your help. I have a request. I need 1,000 messengers. Please help me to eliminate the extra "ta" in preventative medicine. (Laughter)(Applause) I admit it is in the dictionary, alternative spelling but we don't -- it. Let's streamline at preventative. It is my specialty, as more than 7,000 physicians in the U.S. We're happy by the way to be the coordinating point by services recommended by Dr. Anderson. My day job at Optum involves overseeing care of 23 million people. 2/3 covered by UnitedHealth Group. I'm speaking today, however, for the health plan sector which is represented by the American association of health plans. A.H.P. has more than 1,000 A.M.O. and P.P.O., covering more than 170 million U.S. residents. For several years I chaired A.H.P. public health committee which participated in several of the projects I'll be describing. Thanks for A.H.P. for the data I'll be using. Now if we can go to the first slide. Let's see. I have that here. Our target populations for preventative medicine health plans include health plan members, employers and employees such as for work site programs, clinicians such as through reminder programs and data sharing can. The general public through community initiatives around things like immunization as well as leaders, educators and policy . Page 61 . makers. At the local, state and national levels. Our tools are many and varied. We recommend national evidence based guidelines as well as coverage in health plans. For example, nearly all H.M.O.'s and many P.P.O.'s cover U.S. preventative services -- clinical preventative services guidelines as well as C.D.C. immunization schedule. I'll be talking about demand and disease management programs which are more and more prevalent. Health promotion program are popular, including health risk appraisal and work site interventions. Quality improvement measures programs such as mammography reminders and measurement programs. Financial and other incentives such as reducing or eliminate copays for services as well as point systems and team approaches to prevention. Cost effectiveness and R.O.I. studies such as one recently published by the partnership for prevention listing the priorities for clinical preventative services with immunization and smoking cessation at the top. It gets the attention of chief financial officers. E-mail and instant messaging and interactive voice response, automated telephone to get messages out and remind people about preventative services. I wanted to mention demand management. You can see the definition here. Self management, decision support to help people to improve health and make appropriate use of medical care. And . Page 62 . company I'm involved with uses multiple platforms and access points and channels such as telephone call centers. We have over 2 million calls a year through six call centers with telephone triage and health information and majority of health plan members now have this kind of service available. In person through employee assistance counseling and work site programs, print, prevention news letters, self care books, audio tapes available by telephone. As well as the internet which is the fastest growing area of self care and prevention messages that we deal with. Now what are some of the guidelines in over reaching everything is healthy 2010. Pay a lot of attention to that. Mentioned services through A.R.C. Guide community services is also very important. Taking program out into the community for diabetes, immunization, so forth. A.H.P. has endorsed this as the best approach. And the A.R.C. guidelines and smoking cessation and many others through its clearinghouse and very important the C.D.C. immunization schedule, A.H.P. has endorsed this, recommends it to member plans and most cover all of the C.D.C. immunization services for children, adolescence and adults as well. I'm pleased to say there are a number of ongoing programs at A.H.P. Around immunization we have several grants and put on an award program with some impressive gains reported . Page 63 . by health plans. There are news letters and there's a special effort to cooperate with immunization registries at the state and sometimes local level. Around tobacco control thanks to R.B.J. (phonetic) have grants to pass along to do research about best practices in tobacco control and smoking and tobacco cessation. There's an annual conference. There are awards that again highlight impressive gains being made in that area. Around maternal and child health, I'm pleased to say thanks to HRSA we have a grant and pursuing the promotion of bright futures guidelines and other best practices in M.C.H. Through the C.D.C. the association has over a dozen ongoing research projects such as into vaccine, adverse events and other important areas. Around disease management there are two major initiatives around diabetes and asthma which are at the state level, and involve broad partnerships. I have mentioned the preventative services guidelines. And around public health preparedness I'm pleased to say the association and Optum Harvard Pilgrim, Kaiser Colorado have bioterrorism syndromic surveillance grant from C.D.C. and begin reporting on these kinds of encounters at clinic and telephone call center by the end of the month. My time is short so I just want to get into statistics and wrap this up. I'll be using some data from the A.H.P. member . Page 64 . survey as well as N.C.Q.A, HEDIS, annual metrics. The kind of things that are growing in the health plan sectors are things like access to discount memberships and health clubs which wasn't even measured in '97 but 2000 up to 64%. Stress reductions program up to 76 by the year 2000. We'll have newer data on this in few months by the way. Exercise counseling up into the 86% range. Alcohol and substance abuse, prevention and treatment up to 70%. And then reminder programs I mentioned, by the year 2000 prenatal care was at 23%. I'm sure it will have grown a lot by '02. Well child exam 62%. Adolescent vaccinations 60% and childhood reminders for vaccine 93%. Other reminder programs flu vaccine, mostly for seniors, up to 92% of health plans had these kind of reminder programs. Cervical cancer screening 68. Colorectal only at 17%, but I think it is rapidly growing. Eye exams for diabetics, HEDIS measure well over 90% and mammograms for 50 and older over 98%. Now the disease management programs in 2000 survey that were two or more current programs reported by over 92% of commercial plans and 81% of Medicaid only plans, so a high prevalence. And the most prevalent program were diabetes, asthma, C.H.F., coronary heart disease and high risk pregnancy. So let's look at some of the results from '96 through 2002 and we're seeing good . Page 65 . progress on things like D.P.T. immunization up to 81%. Compliance. Varicella, chickenpox vaccine up now. Higher for M.M.R. for ages over ten at 89%. Hepatitis b had grown rapidly to over 80% in the health plans responding. Breast cancer screening up to 75% and footnote on breast cancer screening because that data is for '02, but for 2001 in Medicare plus choice H.M.O.'s for Medicare patients, mammography rate 75%, while comparative figure for Medicare fee for service only 60%. Showing being involved in organized system of care can give better rate of preventative services. We have a lot more work to do on other areas. Cervical cancer screenings doing well at 80% but chlamydia is only at 25%. And advising smokers to quit I believe being dropped as HEDIS measure. So what are our recommendations for health plans. We certainly recommend using national evidence based guidelines and association has endorsed the once I mentioned earlier. To start with those that have the best effectiveness and return and we thank the partnership for prevention for that great study ranking the priorities of the clinical preventative services with immunization and smoking cessation on top. Next partner with other organizations both public and private government, non-government, nonprofit, to get the best effect of the program, and use . Page 66 . the community as well as the clinical approach. Let's not stop at the clinic door. Let's get out into the community and reach everyone repeatedly with these messages. Measure our results, one of the best things happen in the health plan sector have been the HEDIS measure which measure H.M.O. Have long way to go to measure other sectors because P.P.O. usually not Secretary to HEDIS and P.P.O. -- P.P.O. is the largest and fastest type of health coverage these days and of course, fee for service not much measured, although it is gradually changing. Remember marketing and incentives. Big fan of that. Be patient, stick with it and share the cost and credit. And in closing, remember the words of Gertah (phonetic), knowing is not enough we must apply, willing is not enough, we must do. Thank you. (Applause) >>ELIZABETH DUKE Thank you, Dr. Harmon. It's helpful to see where the health plans are going and evidence on guide lines and emphasis on prevention progress through partnerships which is very helpful to us. I want to thank Dr. Harmon, Dr. Anderson and Dr. Snyderman on challenges and solutions. Working together we can make a difference. So I thank you very much for your help. And now it is my great pleasure to introduce a colleague, Dr. Carolyn Clancy who will moderate the next panel with her panel . Page 67 . members. Dr. Carolyn Clancy is the director of the Agency for Health Research and Quality. As Dr. Harmon was just pointing out, the author of evidence base guidelines that help us move this health system forward. I introduce Dr. Carolyn Clancy. (Applause) >>CAROLYN CLANCY Thank you and good morning. Looking out at everyone here I have to say I would for one moment. Incredible summit. No other word would suffice. I'm very happy to be here this morning and introduce you to two terrific speakers who will present on technology tools for prevention which builds very logically on the points that Bob Harmon made about making the most of information technology to get the messages out to variety of audiences. It is very significant at this conference that we're recognizing the potential of technologies for prevention, so I wanted to take a few minutes before introducing you to put this in context. I think there are slides coming up. No? Here we are. Bob Harmon just pointed out of course not all of prevention by any stretch of the imagination happens in clinical practice. At the same time clinician have very important window of opportunity with many individuals. So I thought I would start with a case. Woman named Dorothy. This is a made up name. The woman is real. Very obese . Page 68 . 32-year-old who came in for a suspected urinary tract infection and found to have diabetes. Her physician, that would be Dr. C, gave her information about diet and exercise, but was a little bit sill verdict by the challenge facing this woman who weighed close to 300 pounds. 10 months later Dorothy came back having lost almost 30 pounds and showed Dr. C how she was using customized application of the palm pilot to track progress with diet and exercise and changed Dr. C's with facing substantial challenges. We know patients are incredibly enthusiastic about prevention. If you were test most physicians, they're actually very up to date in evidence based recommendations. Not only that, they believe their routinely providing services to the patience. However, gaps in delivery of recommend services persist. Bob Harmon showed areas we have been making progress. We have known what's on the slide for 20 years. Now if you think about what are the barriers, there are a lot of barriers in typical offices. I'll get to remind myself of them again this evening. Big one delivery and follow-up for preventative services. What happens a lot on Wednesday evenings is the patient and I agree on what the next step is and we fall short in terms of making sure that that next step actually gets executed. And that's where information technology can help. So this is a . Page 69 . bumper sticker. If anyone wants one, please let me know, the wave of the future. As Secretary Thompson said we have wonderful technology but some grocery stores have better technology than some hospitals and clinics. Potential of information technology is fairly obvious. Decision support systems help overcome poor judgment, e-mail reinforce important communications to patients and the public and purchasers could become informed consumers by tapping onto web sites by performance information. Maybe know which doctors are doing best job in preventing. This slide gives you sense some of the power of clinical decision support for making informed care decisions to making the right choice easy in taking action, to making the right decision about what to do to making care better or in short making the right thing, the easy thing to do. We know that information technology can improve the quality and safety of healthcare and many, many studies demonstrating that the effectiveness of care can be enhanced by reminder systems that enhance the delivery of preventative services. In addition, it can enhance the timeliness of care as well as efficiency and equity of care and been a focus of this summit. However, potential is what you have when you haven't done it yet. This come from Darrell Royal, the Texas coach. So what we now . Page 70 . know ambulatory settings where a lot of preventative services occur, P.D.A.'s are widely used but E.M.R.'s are not widely adopted. E-prescribing not widely adopted. Now what I wanted to tell you about is one step that we're taking in the meantime, the department, which I find potentially exciting. This is not the only step we can possibly take, but it is a step to take right now. How many six you use Hippocrates? Good. I hope by time I'm done more of you may sign up. This is software for the palm pilot and other P.D.A.'s and essentially have network of 250,000 physicians and 700,000 health professionals in total. We have been making use of the network to send people out updated recommendations from the U.S. preventative services task force of Bob Harmon just mentioned. The reason people sync and get recommendations Hippocrates association has a lot of information and the information changes quite frequently that you can update. That's all well and good but quite recently we started a new project with Hippocrates so the Secretary can get out important information about bioterrorism, infections or symptom clusters where it is not clear at the outset where this is potential bioterrorist event or new type of infection. What we're doing is working with software vendor to figure out how to target the information and get it out. This person has a pilot if . Page 71 . anyone wants to see it or get information, please contact him. In this slide just makes the point that this is the kind of approach where we can actually use information from front line clinical providers to feed information to the public health infrastructure and back. Whether it is about bioterrorism or prevention or other important health issues. And I want to just close by quoting Secretary Thompson a couple weeks ago who said in modern era every century has had major advances brought giant steps forward and convinced the medical revolution of our children's lifetimes will be the application of information technology to healthcare. And I have every expectation personally that prevention will be one of the first frontiers where we begin to get this right. So now let me introduce you to Dr. Vic Strecher. Research on effectiveness of interactive media has been widely published. He founded HealthMedia in 1998 and serves as Chairman of the Board and Chief Science Officer and also professor at University of Michigan Public Health and speaking on tools for health behavior change. (Applause) >>VICTOR STRECHER Thank you. Thank you so much, Carolyn. I am so happy we're able to in this session drill deeper into the specific tools of health promotion disease prevention and . Page 72 . care management. 11 years ago my daughter had a heart transplant. She is -- there was phenomenal -- there are phenomenal technologies that were used to save her life. As a result she now plays soccer, she's on the softball team that I coach, she's one of the smartest kids in her unbelievably expensive private school, and you know, I'm so happy that she's around. And it is because clinicians have enormously powerful tools to treat disease. They have enormously powerful drugs and enormously powerful medical instruments. If they didn't, doctors wouldn't be as enormously powerful as they are. But, you know, my colleagues in the medical school are continuing to develop very powerful tools to treat disease. When they are creating something, and it may be in some ugly powdery form that has to be injected intravenously but it works, there are 14 drug companies waiting in the wings for that person, and waiting to apply about $250 million to make that ugly powder into a swallowable pill and do the marketing necessary to get people -- to encourage clinicians to use the medication properly to go through all the randomized trials, get F.D.A. approval, etc. When my colleagues in the school of health create something cool, there are not 14 companies usually outside the office waiting for $250 million. As a result our number one tool I would argue in . Page 73 . the public health field continues to be the pamphlet. The pamphlet for 40 years has been chose not change behavior. 40 years. Yet we have warehouses of them. The federal government has warehouses and warehouses of these. I will certainly grant you pamphlets, videos, enhance information and knowledge but we also know and have known for 40 years, 4-0 knowledge does not predict behavior very well. We all know people have rotten health behaviors -- I'm beating. I hate technology. We know people who have behaviors. Behavior change is pretty complex to do. Difficult to do. We have pamphlets. People passing pamphlets to passing people. Frankly I just got bored over this and didn't want to die and have on my headstone Vic Strecher published 200 articles. Allen Case said the best way to predict the future is to create it. We didn't have everybody waiting to apply, we called HealthMedia to do this. Now the business is doing quite well and has over 100 customers and trying to disseminate some of the work -- some of the more powerful tools in this field. Other companies are doing the same thing. One of the subtext of my talk though is I certainly help -- you know, a lot are from the federal government. I hope we're getting much stronger federal government support for these tools so it is not just researched but it is disseminated in truly deep way . Page 74 . because we don't have drug companies out there, you know, ready to pay for all of this. Now Dr. Snyderman talked about H.R.A. Wonderful to learn about your risk, but we also know that is not the final step. That is the first step. First step to behavior change, learning about risk, wonderful but did not change behavior. Couple randomized trials that have shown this. Need other things to change behavior in addition to knowledge about your risk. Now public health tools are interesting. It is not like the Betty Ford clinic where you may have six people there, three people changing and go, great, we had 50% quit rate. If you're in a hospital have 500 cigarette smokers. If six people go to your clinical smoking cessation program and three quit, you don't have 50% quit rate. Three out of 500 who quit smoking. That's an important difference between medical model and public health model. We must have high reach, we must have palatable programs if we're to, you know, create powerful public health behavior change tools. Also have to be effective. In other words, pamphlets don't do it. They're high reach but in effective. Betty Ford clinic effective but doesn't get anybody there. That's a big issue. Conundrum, Rubik's cube we have to solve. One high reach, second effective, third better be low cost. I learned this from 25 years of experience. I would rather . Page 75 . not say that but if not low cost, throw it out the window. Completely irrelevant in public health domain. Has to be low cost, effective and high reach. I spent the last 15 years or so looking at idea of tailoring, interacting with a person or way interacting with people using computer technology. It is cold, ugly, gland, not human, can't touch you and hold your hand. Absolutely true. All of those are true. On the other hand people are far more likely to admit they're smokers, alcoholics, that they're engaging in anal intercourse if they're H.I.V. positive. In fact, seven to 12 times more likely to say those things to computer than to trained counselor. At Duke University Medical Center, I don't know if Snyderman is here anymore but switched out the candy salesperson in the front in the lobby at Duke with a candy machine. Candy sales doubled. People are more likely to admit they have the little candy issue with the machine than they are to the human being. In other words, computers may elicit more valid information and talk to them. Also available 24/7 which is a lot different than having to go to some care management or disease management group program that you have to drive to. So there are tremendous advantages to the web right now. 72% of individuals in the United States have access to the Worldwide Web. Now I'm going to talk about two programs and two . Page 76 . methodologies for looking at the web. So far what we have done is very clever. 20 years creating pamphlets and then internet came about and said oh, my gosh, the internet, this is great. We can reach a lot of people with this. What did we do, shoveled all our pamphlets onto the internet. Doctorcoop.com was the world's largest pamphlet rack. It was worth billion dollars. Sold last year for $180,000 in fire sale. Sold the pamphlet rack because no one cared about the pamphlet rack and it didn't work. Plus all these ads for the pamphlets. In other words, just shoveling pamphlets on line does the same thing than giving pamphlet does, enhances knowledge which is good, but in general it does not change behavior and known that for a long time. Two other ways of doing this that are quite popular now. Let's see if I can get this to move tailored online experiences that I can see be increasingly now. One is user navigated and second called expert system. And so let's start with a user navigated system. User navigated system means that a person goes to a site with a question and they go oh, boy I want to learn -- let's say this person wants to lose weight, manage their weight. So they say oh, you know -- this weight management site has information on their health status, be able to say here is your B.M.I. and result of your B.M.I. are health risks. Great. Let's learn more . Page 77 . about your nutrition. The person wants to learn more about nutrition -- get this forward. Physical activity, etc. and on the basis of that, educational experience is created for that individual. That's tailored but tailored by that individual. We have found in our research in the past in HealthMedia research lab at University of Michigan that people tend to often go to the wrong places. When -- we offered kiosk systems and kiosk we had a smoking channel. On the channel we put scare me channel that literally had the grim reaper on it, barriers to quitting smoking but if you want to be scared press this. Three times as many people pressed the scare me channel than any other. Not what the expert would have pressed but people pressing what we experts thought were the wrong thing. Maybe that's fine. Maybe we ought to be doing that. That's worthy of test -- by the way, this is an example of user navigated system. I'm not expecting you to read all this but certainly -- somebody signing. That's so cool. Are you keeping up? I talk so fast. You must be getting hand cramps. Sorry. (Laughter) Okay. In this program which is for KP online. Kaiser Permanente. 8 million members. KP Online reaches millions of people. People who go to manage their weight can pick and choose what they want. So they can literally go to different sections and identify what their needs are. So I . Page 78 . want tools for change, etc. so pick out whatever they want. This could be a very nice system and something we wanted to test against expert system. Expert system is similar to what expert does. First asks questions so collect information from a person. User data, v1, v2, variables. Collect things from people, like why do you want to change. Tell me about your motives for changing. Intrinsic, versus extrinsic motives. Do you want to do it for you, your kids, your doctor, what kind of health issues do you have, do you exercise I why do you, don't you, etc. Collect the information. On basis of that, human counselor, nutritionist, dietician, I can pick out from my brain, from my experience, research knowledge just what you need and generate a computer tailored, generate a program. Tailored in between my ears. So I use my knowledge and experience to build a program. That's tailoring. Humans are the best tailors. Try to put that into computer software and usually takes six months to build a piece of software that does something like this. And you bring in experts and you ask them what do you ask patients? How do you process the information in if 23 say this, what do you ask next? What kind of feedback do you give, what kind of plan. Talked to artist, talked to two Hollywood screen writers guild all the time in meaningful way. That's what I'm going to talk . Page 79 . about. In other words, expert system like person coming into your office with question and issue, ask them questions, get that information, you pull content, you build a plan for them, and you give that back. By the way, the American Heart Association has programs right now that are tailored to the individual. This is very rare and very cool that the Heart Association is doing this, because I don't know of other voluntaries who are doing something like this. Also by the way the Center for Disease Control in my mind should be the Disney World of tailored information. Kids should look to it to play games for injury prevention to get parents involved in something like this. I don't know why they don't yet. I mean I really -- I think this is an important area and love to see that. That's a subtext of mine -- my talk, I suppose. I give you just an example here of what we mean by tailored organize. This is just one paragraph. Use data that's on the left-hand side for weight management and say something like certain amount of body fat is fine, but because your B.M.I. crept above 30 it is essential to reduce health risk, this is true of your family history of heart disease and -- own history of diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. Smoking and obesity combined because we know this person is a smoker. Smoking and obesity combined increase risk of cardiovascular disease. Tell . Page 80 . them what they're doing well. This is a person by the way -- actually real paragraph that we send to individual who just in contemplation stage for managing their weight. Weren't totally ready so starting to sell them moderately on the idea of weight management. One paragraph create half million versions of on the basis of 30 questions we create -- generated from the individual. Take the person ten minutes to fill 24 out, half million of that one paragraph. Of the whole guide on weight management, create one times ten to one hundredth power versions. To the point now online versions of this program are getting people writing e-mail back, thanking the author of the guide. Even though the author was a computer. Okay. So I'm going to talk about this one program we built. Expert system called balance. And balance you don't have to read this the idea balance focusing on cognitive issues, barriers and motives, perception of risk, focusing on physical activity and focusing on food, diet, nutrition. Together it builds this in completely tailored manner. Nobody gets same guide online and completely based on the information you give us. We even warn you. If you lie to us about your weight or lie to us about what you like or whatever, we lie back because we're just a stupid computer. Okay. So this focus on motivation, prior weight loss attempts, weight loss . Page 81 . methods, tried weight history, etc., set goals with you, follow-up, look at performance, reset goals on the basis of performance. All of this we have known for 20 years works. All of this is part of what is called cognitive behavioral therapy and something that's very readily programmable into computer technology. So what we did was compare with Kaiser Permanente. We're working with Kaiser. Kaiser is the principal investigators on this study. For obvious conflict of interest reasons, led by Jody Joyce (phonetic) is running this randomized trial of 5,000 K.P. members where KP Online if you want to lose weight click this button. Once you click the button you're randomly assigned into expert system called balance, tailored programming or existing programming user navigated system. For purposes here call it untailored, following at three months, six months and 12 months to see if they lose weight and what they think about the program. We have three month data with first five -- first 900 individuals. Here is what we're -- by the way, to reiterate this is the user navigated program. And then that's compared against the expert program. Expert program called tailored here compared to user navigated program found three months later, 90 days later people more likely to have read informations are referred back to it, found it easier to understand, personally relevant, . Page 82 . they would recommend it to others and found material helpful. All of those are very statistically significant differences, very big. In addition we ask people to rate the plan. The dark blue bar is the user navigated untailored program, the light blue is the expert system. Term of satisfaction with this plan, people were much more likely to have rated -- to have highly rated the tailored weight management program 90 days later. Look at actual weight. Divided this by B.M.I. Three we're interested in 25 to 29, 30 to 34 and 35 and higher. 25 -- 29 by the way in study done by Quisenberry (phonetic) at K.P. with members found no difference in cost in that population. That's -- you know, overweight population. No difference in cost over normal weight population. The place that where cost started rising was in group started at B.M.I. of 30. 30 to 34 B.M.I. cost 25% more than normal weight. 35 plus cost 45% more. Here we find significant improvement as a result of the tailored program. In lower weight group didn't find any difference and didn't find much weight loss in general. In the higher B.M.I. groups we did. In fact, seems that in the sweet spot -- these data seem to be holding up. Sweet spot here is in this mild to moderately obese group of 30 to 34.9 B.M.I. Now one other question we ask people was whether they thought will power was an issue . Page 83 . in this. Asking do you think will power holding you back keeping you from losing weight. 75% said yes. Will power is just very common. That's cognitive behavioral therapists crazy is because will power something you can't change, immutable and can't contribute to. Cognitive behavioral therapy spending a lot of time trying to recast the will power, matter of skill or skill power than will power. So our tailored program really focused on will power as issue. Here is what we find of 75% who said will power was issue. All sudden we see much bigger differential. We find the tailored program is really tailoring to the issue in helping people lose weight whereas untailored program did not do that. One other thing I wanted to show you and that's motivation and self efficacy. We're talking about building tool and how address those. Two psychosocial concepts in every model, whether stages of change, health belief model -- any of these models, self efficacy theory is motivation, how motivated am I to change and self efficacy which measure by different situations and see how did difficult would it be for you to -- how confident are you? You can manage your weight in this situation or in this situation? What we find by the way is if we just do a mapping of people, this is at K.P. I know this looks like a mess. On the x axis here, lower axis is motivation ranging from low . Page 84 . to high. Y axis is self efficacy ranging low to hide. Upper left hand quadrant is nobody. These people say I know I can do it, just don't want to. Don't get anybody in there. Duh. Makes sense. Top graphic map, which is what I created, vast majority lower return group. In other words, I want to do this but I can't and find vast majority of individuals. By the way, that's where this program worked the best and where we saw the greatest differential between the tailored and untailored programs. Look at it like actual mountain, actual same data but took airplane and flew over this mountain range would you see the vast majority of the mountain, in other words individuals fall in this I would like to change, like to lose weight but just can't. That's exactly the group we're hitting the most. This is the nice part about tailoring through the internet, through computer technology. Collecting data, follow people overtime, link this with cost data, link with other types of data, provide population feedback to individuals. I would just ask that we start thinking about these programs more on a national level rather than at a smaller business level. Thank you very much for your time. (Applause) >>CAROLYN CLANCY Thanks. Which was terrific. I want to introduce Fran Murphy. I suspect many of you physicians that trained . Page 85 . V.A. and know from firsthand experience how terrific the health information system is and read about it in newspaper and all true. She is Deputy for Health Policy Coordination for the Veterans Hhealth Administration in Department Of Veterans Affairs. Serves as leader for Health Policy and Interagency Program Developments and serves as principal liaison for issues related to public health and patient safety and coordination of federal healthcare benefits. It is pleasure to have the opportunity to work with her this past year. Dr. Murphy. (Applause) >>FRANCES MURPHY Good morning, everyone. It is really an honor to be here with you this morning. I have a confession to make. Although I do a lot of I.T. and e-help, I'm a technophobe, so for all of you in the audience who think you can't do this, let me tell you that you can. I'm the most enthusiastic supporter of the programs and these tools and I come to them with a lot of difficulty. So with that let me just reiterate some of the problems of American healthcare. The I.O.M. has pointed out we're really not good in prevention, secondary prevention or quality of care. We don't do well in preventing the complications of diabetes, we provide inadequate secondary prevention for acute M.I. and less than half of the adults who should be screened for colorectal cancer . Page 86 . are screened for that condition. So we have a lot of improvement that can happen. And let me tell you about some of the programs in the V.A. that could be disseminated across the country that may help get us closer to where we should be in prevention. We use electric health records and clinical reminders in the V.A. to improve prevention programs. We also have a new pilot program that we call community coordinative care services that was developed in our Florida regional healthcare system and just about to implement throughout the nation and V.A. So that will be the consent of my talk. Those of you who haven't interfaced with us in the past, I just wanted to give you a sense of the scope of the challenges that we face. We're largest integrated healthcare system in the country with full continuum of care and about 1300 sites of care across the country, 183,000 healthcare employees in our system. And we treat almost 4.5 million veterans every year. Our patient population is older than the U.S. population. About 45% of our patients are over the age of 65. In the next decade the number of veterans over age 85 in healthcare system will increase by 200%. Their incomes in general are less than $25,000 a year and about 1/3 of them have no other source of health insurance or healthcare. A lot of challenges in that population. Let's start by taking a look . Page 87 . at what we can do with the use of electronic health and reminders. V.A. has comprehensive electronic system which was described by Institute Of Medicine and leadership by example report last year as one of the best in the nation, including the imbedded clinical reminders awe and performance measures. This electronic health record is available at all sites of care, that includes smallest clinics and largest hospitals and nursing homes. It includes all of the things that you would expect to see in your paper record system, plus embedded images and diagnostic tests. These are just some of the components of the record system. For those things that require a patient's suggest that can't be entered electronically like advance directives, we scan them and available on the P.C. in every doctor -- P.C. in every doctor's clinic, provider's clinic. This is a screen shot of electronic health record. This is the gooey interface. It is a point and click system. And you can see at the right middlesex of your slide that there are a whole series of clinical reminders. Some of them say do now. And it is very simple during either a primary care visit or specialty care visit for the provider to identify which of the preventative measures have not been taken care of whether it is screening or immunizations and provide that during the visit. In addition, if you're tracking some health problems, like . Page 88 . hypertension, you also have ability to graphicly look at that information. The graph at the bottom of the screen has hematocrit but you can do the same thing with blood pressure or other measures that you're monitoring like white. You can see on the left-hand side of the screen there are some imbedded colonoscopy images and chest x-rays which you can make full screen by clicking on them. You can also view moving images like cardiac angiography on the desktop. In the clinic and use that as patient education tool. So what kind of results have we got went that? Well, I can tell you there V.A. was not concentrating on preventative medicine and preventative health programs back in the early '90s. But by providing a performance contract for all of our leadership that drove performance and by providing these tools as support to clinicians on the front line, we have made incredible progress. You can see the V.A. 2002 results compared to the next best reported results. And whether it is in cholesterol screening or diabetes care, or in cancer screening, we are in 16 of the 18 measures that we track the benchmark in the country. And it is all because we hold people accountable and we give them the tools to perform. This information can get fed back on a national level as I have done here with our national averages on regional healthcare level at the hospital level and to the . Page 89 . individual provider. We're all very competitive people and nobody wants to be at the bottom of the list in their hospital, and they all want to do the best for the patients and these tools allow them to do that. So what -- how do we get this performance? We make it easy for people. I showed you the clinical reminder system. If something says do now, you can double click on that so the prompt reminds you to get it done, and then by double clicking it enters the order and puts the documentation in the record. In two seconds you have got what used to take ten to 15 minutes to organize. When the order gets entered for any immunization, it gets electronically sent to the pharmacy and then it can be -- the immunization can be delivered on the same visit. It is incredibly efficient. It works well. And the clinicians and the patients love it. We have seen dramatic improvements in our performance over the period of time that we have focused on this. In various areas of prevention our performance has improved between 130 to 500% for the measures that we have been tracking. Our work isn't done. We need to focus on new areas. We need to expand what we're doing and this isn't just a paper exercise or something that I can come before you and brag about because I'm very proud of what we have done. But it makes a difference in the lives of patients. If . Page 90 . you use the most conservative estimates in the literature, we have saved with vaccination program alone, our immunization program about 4,000 veterans lives, and that's a significant accomplishment. Critical success factors. Record system was developed by clinicians. It is clinically relevant. It is efficient, provides support and improves prevention and care. It is flexible. Each individual can customize the way the screen looks for them. You can provide customized templates for recording in progress notes and it is integrated and fully functional and reliable. Very seldom goes down. The last panel was an excellent introduction to the next area that I'd like to concentrate on that's our telemedicine telehealth program. We moved out into veterans communities by increasing out-base clinics but address the needs of frail elderly population with multiple chronic conditions, we need to get further out. We need to get into their homes. We need to have continuous care, rather than episodic care, and we have done that in part through a pilot program that's called Community Care Coordination service. It is a program that has continued the shift out into the community. Disease management program so that individuals identified with diabetes, hypertension, depression, chronic -- chronic congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease and other chronic . Page 91 . conditions. It is a system where coordination is the key. Technology is a tool that allows us to manage these patients on a continuous basis and we use multiple different types of innovative technology. Used depending on the patient's needs and goals to improve care and healthcare utilization for the patients. Six sites in Florida participated in the program and they range from large urban tertiary medical centers as site to small row of hospitals. So it works in multiple different types of settings. The population is a population of frail elderly with multiple chronic conditions. It is a multiple --multidisciplinary team approach that is often either led by a nurse practitioner or in some cases a physician. After patients are identified as being eligible and needing this program, initial home assessment is done. We take the equipment out. It is installed, patient is trained to use it. Takes very little time to actually train the patients because the technology is very simple. And care coordination team interacts with the patient on a daily basis. The patient is questioned daily and responds using this technology. The technology is actually extremely simple to use. And it does not require internet access or internet service. It goes through routine good old telephone lines through eight hundred number and integrated. Enrollment, the monitoring, the scheduling, . Page 92 . and the education tools are integrated. Care team and patients again communicate quickly on a daily basis and flexible in customizable to address the individual veteran or patient's needs. The patients answer questions on daily basis, provided in multiple languages. Use Spanish and English. They are -- the patients are asked to monitor their disease symptoms. Their medication compliance, compliance with other monitors that have been set up. And they're asked to increase their knowledge and participate in education activities. The patients do have access to patient education materials through this system. And their responses to the providers are categorized according to risk based on a system that has been set up. This is what the -- one of the devices looks like. Has four buttons on the bottom. Question is asked, just need to press the button to give an answer. Also may have another device that has a keyboard if they want to type in a question. This is a more complicated device. You can see that this individual is measuring their blood pressure. There's a screen they can communicate with the provider. And it is a truly interactive process. The results, patients are extremely satisfied, they like the equipment, they find it simple to use, they like being able to have access to advice on a -- continuous basis. Quality of life as measured by S.F. 36v customized to . Page 93 . show either stable or immoving quality of life depending on the center. Lake Center is small rural hospital and Miami is large tertiary care center. Provider satisfaction is high. Described the program is excellent and improving their ability to manage their patients can chronic conditions, and if I look at the outcomes, there's reduction in hospital admissions, bad days of care. In prescription utilization and there are -- there are actually very, very good outcomes in just about any utilization measure that is included in this program. There are differences interestingly in how patients respond to the technology. You see that in Lake City the participation on a daily basis is over 1/3, 2/3 of the days they use the technology. Not so good if urban population. I'm not sure why that is. But as we learn more about this, we're looking at individual characteristics and now we can improve patient participation. So what are the lessons learned? This program does provide great continuous care coordination for patients with multiple chronic conditions. Patients like the system. It does reduce healthcare utilization and improve the quality of life for these patients. The providers like it and believe that it does help. We're about to roll this out nationwide. We have started four more regional pilots this year and we'll go nationwide in the next fiscal year. And it really has . Page 94 . changed our ability to give continuous care to patients with chronic conditions. So in conclusion, I just would like to say that technology really can improve not only the hospital care that we give but in fact can improve the home care and full continuum of care. It can allow us to provide better preventative services to patients, provide better working environment for our healthcare providers and improve their productivity and quality of care. We can no longer practice 20th Century medicine. We need to come into the twenty-first century. Healthcare needs to adopt technology that will help us address our patients' needs and help save lives. We must become more patient centers and the healthcare system needs to be more accessible and accountable. All of this can be accomplished in part by using technology as a tool. It is not the sole answer. The hearts and hands of providers are still important but we need to give them technology in order to let them accomplish the jobs they need to do. Thank you very much. I know which was a quick summary. (Applause) >>CAROLYN CLANCY We are now going into a break and you'll have to figure out the math here. I have about 10:53 and the concurrent session start at 11:00 and add steps to your pedometer (phonetic). If you're feeling as exited as I am about the . Page 95 . past two presentations I wish the leaders of the sessions good luck, and please join me again in thanking our two presenters. (Applause) . . .