Private practice with Dr Seth Bilazarian

View all posts »

Goodbye CV practice memorabilia, hello ACO perfection!

Jan 16, 2013 15:15 EST


Office renovations give a chance to pause and reminisce about the practice of yesteryear as Dr Seth Bilazarian empties his office drawers of promo knickknacks, dictation audio tapes, prescription pads, and mangy old stethoscopes. With an era of ACO perfection on the horizon, how quaint to look back at how practice used to run.








Your comments
Goodbye CV practice memorabilia, hello ACO perfection!
# 1 of 3
January 16, 2013 08:30 (EST)
William Hartmann
Everything will be "perfect, efficient"
I am surprised that you where able to keep a straight face.
Author's disclosure (Jan 16, 2013)
I have no relevant disclosures to make in connection with this topic.
# 2 of 3
January 22, 2013 04:56 (EST)
Carolyn Thomas
Are you sure?!?
I don't know, Dr. Seth - are you absolutely sure that you don't want to check with the Smithsonian before you toss out potential heirlooms like that Avandia and Lipitor swag? That stuff could be worth something someday to pharmaceutical anthropologists. Congrats on 20 years of practice, and enjoy your newly renovated office!
regards,
C
Author's disclosure (Jan 22, 2013)
I am voluntarily disclosing that I carry my gym clothes back and forth in a 'Canadian Cardiovascular Congress' duffle bag (which I am hanging onto!)
# 3 of 3
March 1, 2013 03:40 (EST)
Gary Levin
Put some of this stuff in writing
Post it to your blog, or do an ebook...
Author's disclosure (Mar 1, 2013)
I have no relevant disclosures to make in connection with this topic.

You must be a member (with full membership) to post a comment.
Already a member?
Enter your login information below:
 Remember me on this computer
Enjoy all the benefits of theheart.org

With full membership, you can check out our educational and editorial content, search the site, receive our newsletters, join discussions, download slides and much more.

Membership is free!

About Dr Seth Bilazarian
Seth Bilazarian MD has been a Clinical and Interventional Cardiologist at Pentucket Medical Associates in Massachusetts since 1993. He is board certified in Internal Medicine, Cardiovascular Medicine, Nuclear Cardiology, Vascular Ultrasound, Interventional Cardiology, and Vascular and Endovascular Medicine.

Dr Bilazarian performs coronary and peripheral interventions at Lahey Clinic and Massachusetts General Hospital. He has been an investigator in the interventional laboratory for new devices including drug-eluting stents, distal protection devices, imaging devices (OCT and InfraRed), and anticoagulant pharmacotherapy.

Dr Bilazarian is an active participant in clinical trials in congestive heart failure, hypertension, coronary disease prevention, prediabetes management, anemia, atrial fibrillation, and anticoagulation/antiplatelet therapies in the outpatient setting. He has authored numerous papers and book chapters in clinical cardiology. He was appointed as a physician advisor to the circulatory device panel of the FDA in 2008.
About this blog
My intent is to create a forum for dialogue on issues pertinent to private practice cardiology around topics such as:

  • Integration of new data and guidelines on inpatient and outpatient practice in clinical and interventional cardiology
  • Practice approaches to the extra clinical issues in dealing with managed care insurers
  • Strategies for navigating the restrictions of pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) on pharmacologic therapies for our patients
  • Experiences with restrictions on testing and imaging
The video blog (VLOG) will provide an opportunity to share broadly different approaches to the common conundrums we face in caring for patients. My hope is that this forum will provide useful data points for practice outside of tertiary and academic centers and a look inside community hospitals and physician?s practice patterns in the office, starting with mine.