Part 5: Replicating the healthcare model of Grand Junction

February 25, 2010
By Bill Scanlon
Part 5: Replicating the healthcare model of Grand Junction

Can other communities copy the Grand Junction model of low-cost, high-quality, near-universal healthcare?

Some doctors in this Colorado city of just over 53,000 say yes, others no. But clearly, some parts could be replicated elsewhere.

The House of Representatives has included in its version of healthcare reform a provision allowing the creation of nonprofit, consumer-operated insurance cooperatives as an alternative to the ballyhooed and cursed public option.

“This says they want to create a potential place in the world for systems like (this),” says Dr. Michael Pramenko, a leading advocate who practices with Primary Care Partners in Grand Junction. “It says that if you don’t like the public option, and want another way, here is your opportunity.”

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Just how much less expensive?

February 25, 2010
By CPN Staff

Grand Junction’s heavily non-profit system of health care:

-Saved Colorado $2 million a year in Medicaid reimbursements between 2003 and 2005
-Saved the federal government $13.2 million on Medicare from 2000 to 2002
-Is the most cost-effective deliverer of services for chronic diseases in the nation
-Hospitalized patients one-third as many days as the national average
-Saved $5,150 per person who died in hospice care, compared to national average

Sources:

Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing
The Chatfield Consulting Group
The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, cost disparities
The Dartmouth Atlas
The Dartmouth Atlas

Part 4: Opting for exercise over surgery in Grand Junction

February 24, 2010
By Ann Imse
Part 4: Opting for exercise over surgery in Grand Junction

Phil Smith had to return home to Grand Junction to find a health care system that could ease his back pain with a simple 30-second exercise — after physicians elsewhere proposed killing a nerve or surgical fusing of bones in his spine.

His experience is a example of how the Grand Junction healthcare system provides some of America’s best quality healthcare, at the lowest cost, according to Medicare and the Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare.
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Grand Junction, McAllen contrasted: Better health brings lower costs

February 24, 2010
By CPN Staff

While Grand Junction has some of the highest-quality and lowest-cost heathcare in the nation, McAllen, Tex., has some of the lowest-quality and highest-cost. According to disease rates calculated by Daniel Gilden in “The Health Care Blog,” McAllen is twice as unhealthy as Grand Junction.

That raises a question: Is Grand Junction merely lucky in a healthier population, or is its emphasis on prevention and coverage of the poor actually having a major effect on preventing these illnesses? Read more »

Part 3 (Video): Collaboration is key to low-cost, high-quality healthcare

February 23, 2010
By Sonya Doctorian

Part 3 (Video): Collaboration is key to low-cost, high-quality healthcare

In this 3.5-minute video by videojournalist Sonya Doctorian, Dr. Michael Pramenko explains how Grand Junction has built its health care delivery system. Cooperation, coordination and a high level of communication is essential.

RELATED: Key components of the Grand Junction system.