Issue: January 2018
December 29, 2017
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Second value-based orthopedic care meeting to be held Feb. 9-11

The conference aims to transform how value-based care is implemented, organizers said.

Issue: January 2018
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Orthopedic surgeons, nurses, anesthesiologists and health care executives will meet Feb. 9 to Feb. 11 in Newport Beach, California, for the second Interdisciplinary Conference on Orthopedic Value-Based Care. The goal of the meeting is to define and teach the concept of value-based care in orthopedics and introduce new clinical models, such as the perioperative surgical home.

This is a transformative meeting and its audience brings various health care providers together at one conference. The 2017 meeting sold-out and more than 40% of attendees were in teams of three or more people from the same hospital, Zeev N. Kain, MD, MBA, conference activity chair, said.

“The focus is around improving value in the perioperative management of surgical patients, specifically orthopedic surgical patients, and the focus will be on what that means in terms of how are we defining value, why is it important, what are the competencies we need to improve value,” Kevin J. Bozic, MD, MBA, conference activity co-director, told Orthopedics Today.

Topics will be presented in three parallel tracks.

Zeev N. Kain, MD, MBA
Zeev N. Kain

“The 32 speakers are simply outstanding and include orthopedic leaders from such hospitals as Hospital for Special Surgery and the Rothman Institute, as well as world renown speakers from the nursing, administration, anesthesiology and physical therapy disciplines,” Kain told Orthopedics Today.

Boot camps have been added that focus on digital health and outpatient joint replacement, Kain said, noting the meeting’s scope was expanded to include issues in spine surgery.

“The topics are contemporary and reflect what has happened in a few years in orthopedic surgery within the context of value-based care within the last 12 months,” Kain said.

By the meeting’s conclusion, Kain hopes attendees will have practical knowledge about “how to build a viable practice based upon orthopedic value-based care principles.”

Kevin J. Bozic, MD, MBA
Kevin J. Bozic

“[Attendees] should understand the trend to outpatient surgery and be able to build an outpatient surgical program,” Kain said. “They should understand the trend in health care of digital health.”

Attendees should also come away “feeling energized and less intimidated by the transition to value,” Bozic said.

For Kain, the most important aspect of the meeting is for attendees to network and learn from each other.

“We have assigned seating and are making sure people sit next to people not from their organization because we want people to network,” Kain said. – by Casey Tingle

Disclosures: Bozic reports he is a consultant to the Yale New Haven Hospital for Outcomes Research & Evaluation or CORE, which is a measure developer for CMS. Kain reports no relevant financial disclosures.