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Saturday, September 21, 2013

Church-Based Health Initiatives: Clerical Perceptions of the Church’s Role in Advocacy



Abstract
Church-Based Health Initiatives: Clerical Perceptions of the Church’s Role in Advocacy
by
Valerie Warner-Collins


MA, College of Notre Dame of Maryland, 2000
BA, University of Baltimore, 1995


Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment
of the Requirements for the Degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
Health Services


Walden University
May 2013

Abstract
Health disparities have mostly affected poor Americans, and many of whom have sought social and spiritual solace in religious advocacy. Research on religion and health disparities has focused, historically, on the role of the Black clergy in health care advocacy. The purpose of this case study was to explore the perceptions of clergy in a multicultural community of the Northeastern United States. Systems theory, which concerns the binding of relationships for the purposes of replicating success throughout a community, supported this conceptual framework. Positive social change is promoted through equitable collaborations that benefit whole communities. A 4-member, expert jury validated the 21 interview questions that were posed to 17 clergy. Research questions were: How do clergy perceive their roles in social advocacy? What are the perceived educational, historical, political, or religious inputs of faith communities that potentially affect health policy decisions? What value does mentoring and modeling between clergy have on encouraging their participation in faith-based health initiatives?  
 Findings illustrated that the respondents viewed their role in advocacy as a duty or calling. However, several clergy conceded that severed relationships, from past governmental and interfaith collaborations, greatly hindered the advancement of church-based health systems. Consequently, opinions varied on the effects that faith communities had on the health policy decisions of the local government. The study contributes to positive social change, for collaborators and the underserved, in the following ways: Establishes objectives for mentorship between faith communities, provides a platform for restoring relationships, identifies culturally sensitive services for an increasingly diverse community, and reveals resources for future faith-based

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Hospitals Take a Stand Against Violence in their Communities

With complete editorial credit to H&HN Daily and to author Marty Stempniak. For use in class discussion.  REH 9/16/13



Hospitals Take a Stand Against Violence in their Communities

By Marty Stempniak
H&HN Staff Writer
September 16, 2013
New American Hospital Association resource highlights strategies leaders are using to help treat and prevent future incidents.
Columbine, Sandy Hook Elementary, the Boston Marathon, and now just this morning, we're hearing word of another violent act unfolding at the U.S. Navy Yard in Washington. It seems as if every week another tragedy occurs that eats away at us a little inside and dulls us a little more to the next misfortune. I can't even imagine the grief that befalls the folks on the front lines at hospitals, who have to mend these broken bodies and help their families cope.
Hospitals are often the place where the victims of community violence end up, and it's critical that hospitals take a role in helping to curb violence. The American Hospital Association released a report earlier this month titled "Reducing Violence in Our Communities," which highlights strategies that hospitals and health systems have used to tackle this issue.
"I always say that all social and community failures eventually find their way to the hospital, and certainly the results of violence mean that people do wind up in hospitals in pretty critical condition," Rich Umbdenstock, president and CEO of the AHA, told me by phone last week. "It's critical for hospitals to do whatever they can to either get upstream in the community, working with others to reduce violence, or taking the opportunity when someone is within the hospital's reach to try to prevent somebody from finding themselves in the same situation and winding up a patient again, or harmed even worse than that."
I also attended a thought-provoking session last week at the Mayo Clinic's Transform 2013 symposium that suggests violence is a public health issue for hospitals and health departments. Gary Slutkin, M.D., the founder and executive director of Cure Violence, made a case for how violence is really a contagious disease, and should be treated in the same fashion as one. I spent a few minutes with Slutkin discussing the issue:
The AHA report offers 11 different examples of hospitals and health systems that have developed programs to intervene and help prevent violent situations. Engaging with patients and their families while they're recovering from a violent incident is a key time to direct them toward social resources, offer counseling, or link them with life-skills coaches, according to the report.
Here are a couple of examples:
  • Facing a homicide rate for the young that's higher than state and national norms, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center has developed a program called "Bridging the Gap" to stop violence before it happens. While staying as inpatients, victims of violence receive an intervention that includes reviewing the incident, exploring possible conflict-resolution strategies, and discussing ways to better cope with the aftermath of an incident. The program has also helped victims fill other needs that might lead to violence, including housing, education and mental health services.
  • Northwestern Memorial Hospital — which treats about 1,000 traumas annually, a third of which are violence-related — staffs its ED with violence interrupters to help break the cycle of retaliation. Interrupters, who have links to the neighborhood and its cultural issues, are dispatched to both the hospital and at the street level to help assess the situation and minimize any risk of retaliation.
  • In Chelsea, Mass., Massachusetts General Hospital sends clinical social workers along with police responding to 911 calls where children are present. The social workers provide immediate counseling and intervention to kids who have witnessed or are victims of violence, to help reduce trauma.
Umbdenstock says the report stems from the gun control debate waged earlier this year following several violent incidents, and from calls for the AHA to take a stance on the issue. Guns and violence is a complicated topic that's different in every locality, and the organization wanted to find a way to provide guidance to hospitals while also avoiding getting involved in such a polarized discussion.
"Rather than try to jump into that gun debate, which is so highly political, it was more prudent for us to look at the manifestations, the outcomes of gun violence, and then we started to say, 'Well, we really ought to look at violence in general,' and that's where this set of case studies came from," he says. "It's a way in which we can play an appropriate role and not get bogged down in what are some seemingly never-ending debates across our vast American society."
The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.


Tuesday, September 3, 2013

A Good Word About Old Age: 'Compression'


Complete credit for this interesting and timely article is directed to Bill Santamour.  It is used as a basis for discussion in graduate classess.  REH


A Good Word About Old Age: 'Compression'

By Bill Santamour
H&HN Managing Editor
September 03, 2013
Living more years with chronic illness, but fewer with disabilities.
Every time I passed my neighbor Otto walking down the block in that tentative, arthritic gait of his, he would shake his head, smile ruefully and feed me that old chestnut: "I'm warning you, Bill, getting old ain't for sissies." Otto was in his 70s by then, and he had a number of infirmities beyond arthritis, including heart and circulation troubles. But he was no sissy. He was the primary caregiver for his wife, Marcy, who suffered from Alzheimer's. Into his 80s, he kept his own house, ran his own errands and carried on with the photography that was his life's work, producing striking, black-and-white images in his own tiny darkroom.
Every day, 10,000-plus baby boomers reach age 65 and the proportions of Americans older than 70, older than 80 and older than 90 are ballooning; health care policymakers worry how in the heck we as a society are going to cope economically and otherwise. Providers foresee a tidal wave of patients with multiple chronic conditions and other needs that will require a support system built around IT and staffing models that are still evolving.
But a recent report from Harvard and the National Bureau of Economic Researchcontained a bit of hopeful news on the aging front. The report challenges the assumption that old age necessarily means diminished quality of life. The study discovered "a compression of morbidity" among older Americans, which means that while more people are living longer and have multiple chronic illnesses, they are, as the National Journal puts it, "both living more years disability-free and fewer years disabled." In other words, the period in which quality of life is diminished occurs in a more compact time frame, closer to death.
"People have more diseases than they used to, but the severe disablement that disease used to imply has been reduced," the researchers said. My neighbor Otto was an example of that phenomenon. He became unable to care for himself only near the end of his life.
Optimism about old age is reflected in the second annual United States of Aging Surveyreleased in late July. Among respondents older than 65, 84 percent said it is not very or not at all difficult to perform regular activities independently. More than half (58 percent) with one or more chronic conditions are very confident they can manage their health so as to reduce their need to see a doctor, up from 44 percent of senior respondents in 2012.
The survey does contain some alarming findings. While 65 percent of seniors report having at least two chronic conditions, fewer than one in five has received guidance in the past year to develop an action plan to manage their health. Twenty-six percent of seniors exercise less than once a week for 30 minutes or more.
"Maintaining good health as we age requires being proactive, especially for people with chronic health conditions," said Richard Birkel, senior vice president, healthy aging, and director of the National Council on Aging. "We must seize opportunities across local communities to empower seniors with the skills they need to stay healthy." The NCOA conducted the survey with UnitedHealthcare and USA Today.
The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

AMA Declares Obesity A Disease


Complete credit to author Paul Barr.
REH



Obesity, Diabetes Stymie Physicians

By Paul Barr
H&HN Senior Writer
June 19, 2013
Traditional approaches to controlling these conditions aren't that effective.
CHICAGO — Obesity is a major problem and one that the traditional health care system seems ill-equipped to solve. Many of the best ways to treat or prevent obesity entail getting patients to change their behavior by exercising and eating better, neither of which is in the wheelhouse of a primary care physician.
Nearly one-third of U.S. adults are obese and the condition exacerbates other problems including heart disease, hypertension and diabetes. It has become so severe that the AMA's House of Delegates this week voted to classify diabetes as a disease.
"Recognizing obesity as a disease will help change the way the medical community tackles this complex issue that affects approximately one in three Americans," said AMA board member Patrice Harris, M.D. "The AMA is committed to improving health outcomes and is working to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes, which are often linked to obesity."
At its annual meeting this week, the AMA devoted a portion of a Ted Talk-like presentation to the issue of obesity. Fatima Cody Stanford, M.D., clinical and research fellow in obesity medicine and nutrition, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, tried giving physicians an incentive to take action.
"Obesity adversely affects every major organ system," Stanford said. "What we are doing has not been working."
She urged physicians to ask patients simple questions about diet, exercise and sleep, all of which can have a big effect on weight.
On a related topic, there has also been a fair amount of attention to diabetes at the meeting. The YMCA of the USA, the umbrella organization for the confederation of YMCAs across the country, was on hand to discuss its efforts to curb diabetes, and Heather Hodge, manager of chronic disease prevention programs, outlined the program in this video interview:
The YMCA and AMA are working in consort to support the CDC's National Diabetes Prevention Program. The idea is to target people likely to get diabetes. The program is classroom-based and focuses on education and teaching good habits and decision-making, which tend to work better than a mandated diet or exercise plan, says Heather Hodge, manager of chronic disease-prevention programs for the YMCA. For more on how the YMCA program works, see the video below.
And to see how hospitals are confronting the diabetes epidemic, be sure to check out our yearlong series, Diabetes: An Alarming Epidemic.
We'll have a wrap-up report from the AMA's meeting in tomorrow's H&HN Daily.
The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

New Approaches for Community Hospitals and Health Systems

With complete credit to both authors.
REH


New Approaches for Community Hospitals and Health Systems

By Gary Ahlquist and Sanjay B. Saxena, M.D.June 06, 2013
Envisioning a strategy will help your health system weather the changes in reimbursement.
"Five years from now," said a hospital CEO to his peers at a recent conference, "our organizations will look very different. They will operate with different incentives, different business models and different footprints." What does the future look like for community hospitals and health systems — and what are their marching orders?
The hospital business model is under pressure. The costs of physicians, nurses, technology, compliance and marketing are rising, while payments from all payer types are shrinking, as is inpatient utilization. We anticipate a 12 to 28 percent revenue decline over the next few years.
Many community hospitals, already operating at razor-thin margins, soon may find themselves deep in the red. Although most hospital leaders realize this, their responses to these pressures often betray a lack of focus. They react with across-the-board cuts, a race to acquire physicians, a superficial rebranding, or a search for elusive mergers and acquisitions. These incremental actions are unlikely to move the needle. What's needed is a new way of thinking about form and function.

Cutting Through the Strategic Haze

When we ask hospital executives to share their strategy, too many respond with their vision and mission. Vision and mission are critical if leaders are to inspire, challenge and direct, but they are no substitute for a thoughtfully conceived and well-executed strategy. Mission statements are often rooted in the past and can become disconnected from the current market reality, and even the best one cannot inform the kinds of daily decisions an organization faces. A strategy is a set of choices, trade-offs and priorities that steer the organization's course, direct its investment decisions, shape its operating model and guide the performance of its people.
Community hospitals in particular are prone to "strategic haze." Many were founded to serve their community as the first and only provider of care. By necessity, these entities tried to be all things to all people. However, in many communities the market realities since have evolved — and better-capitalized, more-focused competitors have moved in. Providing access to care is no longer sufficient. If community hospitals want to be the providers of choice rather than the providers of last resort, they have to declare and defend their areas of distinction.
The critical first step is answering this strategic question: Who are the customers we want to attract? Defining the target customer and a value proposition that this customer would find appealing provides crucial focus. This does not mean denying care to anyone; it means selecting a center of gravity and aligning the bulk of your organization's resources behind it. For example, a hospital may consider what role it wants to play for its traditional customer, the health insurance company. Will the hospital be a must-have brand in the network, a destination for a subset of clinical services, a high-value alternative, a broad network player or a risk-sharing partner? These decisions then inform a hospital's investments, services, pricing and footprint.
Now, as health care becomes increasingly consumer-centric, hospitals also must define their customer-facing value proposition. Who are their target consumers, what do they value and how do they make choices about where to seek care? These answers will inform how a hospital positions itself — as a cutting-edge innovator, a leader in a particular service, a ubiquitous and convenient provider of care, a best-value-for-money treatment center, or a one-stop shop. See the table below for a full list of pure-tone value propositions.

Rethinking Form and Function

Once hospitals identify their value proposition, they must invest in the right capabilities to support it. For example, a specialist hospital seeks to attract customers who are looking for a provider with a single-minded focus on their condition and a track record of excellence. Organizations such as MD Anderson Cancer Center (a world leader in cancer treatment) pick one or a few clinical areas and use all their attention and scale to deliver consistent and quantifiably superior results within them.
Alternatively, a convenience king, such as St. Vincent Health in Indianapolis (a member of Ascension Health, the nation's largest nonprofit Catholic health care system), offers a full range of clinical services in its community-based facilities, providing a core set of service offerings to meet most of its patients' needs close to home, in one facility. For the rest (including specialized tertiary and quaternary care), a convenience king might designate one of its hospitals as a center of excellence or partner with a specialist institution.
A possible emerging market position for community hospitals is that of a value maximizer, which does not seek national leadership in clinical care, nor does it attempt to be the lowest-priced option in the market. Instead, it seeks to deliver the best possible outcome and experience at the lowest possible cost. By reducing complexity, shifting care settings and removing waste, these hospitals seek to create pricing transparency and help their customers get everything they need while eliminating unnecessary extras. A value maximizer like Steward Healthcare in New England holds unique appeal not only to consumers, but also to employers and other payers in the community.
Few health care institutions play only one function and fit perfectly into any of these value propositions — indeed, many hospitals are likely to adopt a hybrid strategy rather than a pure play. For example, an R&D leader might also cultivate a premium price position, while another hybrid might mix the frugality of a value maximizer with the accessibility of a convenience king. The key is to select a hybrid that is coherent. For example, a combination of convenience and value is more coherent than a combination of innovation and ubiquity.
A hospital's value proposition also impacts its asset portfolio. Combined with its capabilities, an institution's assets enable it to effectively serve its function. Through our analysis of the success of multiple merger and acquisition transactions, we have identified several distinctive and coherent portfolio types. For example, a scaled portfolio system has reached the size at which all of its service lines and support services are at scale — and has eliminated or outsourced the rest. It is tightly integrated through shared services and best practices.
A hub-and-spoke system creates value through a network of convenient "feeders" that provide basic care and refer more complex cases to the hub. A geographic cluster goes deep in a particular market — giving it greater market power and more ability to manage population health. Finally, an innovation system is built to monetize intellectual property (such as co-branding) without a major capital investment.

Putting It All Together

Community hospitals seeking to define or refine their strategy have to answer several key questions: What are our organization's aspirations and strengths? What are the market realities we must consider? What are the strategic imperatives for success? Who is our target customer and what value proposition is required? What assets and capabilities are needed to deliver on this value proposition? How should they be organized into a high-performing operating model?
In these challenging and exciting times, hospitals and health systems that have the will, the courage and the discipline to truthfully answer these questions and define a clear strategy will regain control of their future. They will become vital to their communities, distinctive in the market and financially sustainable — they will stay the course through the storm.
Gary Ahlquist is a senior partner in the health practice at Booz & Co. and leads the firm's work for health care clients worldwide. Sanjay B. Saxena, M.D., is a partner and co-leads Booz & Co.'s Hospitals & Health Systems practice in North America. Booz & Co. principals Igor Belokrinitsky and Akshay Kapur are also co-authors of this article.
The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.


Monday, June 3, 2013

New Study Analyzes Impact of Hospital Mergers


Complete credit for this excellent and timely article to Marty Stempniak.
REH


New Study Analyzes Impact of Hospital Mergers

By Marty Stempniak
H&HN Staff Writer
June 03, 2013
American Hospital Association-commissioned analysis says 316 transactions took place in six years.
Hospital consolidation — and the affect it might have on pricing and competition — is a constant topic of conversation in health care circles. Anew study commissed by the AHA suggests that the pace of mergers and acquisitions has actually been relatively modest. The report aims to provide a deeper analysis of why the mergers occurred and what happened in those communities, according to the report authors and AHA officials.
All told, 551, or 10 percent of community hospitals, were involved in 316 such transactions over the past six years, the Center for Healthcare Economics and Policy found. Most of those deals were smaller in size, involving one or two hospitals. Only 20 of those transactions occurred in markets where there are less than five hospitals, which, the authors believe, should ease concerns that M&A activity leads to reduced competition.
"I think there's been a lot of misinformation about what's going on in the hospital field, particularly around mergers and acquisitions," Mindy Reid Hatton, a senior vice president of the American Hospital Association, which commissioned the study, said during a conference call this morning. "This really fills a gap because you hear a lot about consolidation, but you don't ever really see the facts about consolidation."
Drilling deeper into the data, nine of the 20 aforementioned mergers included hospitals with 50 beds or less, likely looking to find a larger partner to pursue clinical integration and provide economies of scale. Jerry Morasko, CEO of Avita Health System, in Galion, Ohio, said during the call that his organization acquired Bucyrus Community Hospital a couple of years ago for similar reasons.
Bucyrus, just a dozen or so miles away, was in bankruptcy and in danger of shuttering. So, Avita pursued the acquisition to help with recruiting, bolster IT, share specialists, and find savings in shared management structures.
"When you live in a rural community, it's hard to get specialists in there because there isn't enough volume to support more than two or three of them, and you have to think every time, if you've got one specialist, he's got to be on call all the time," Morasko said. "It's not a very livable lifestyle, but when you put two of these community hospitals together in a geographic region, they can cover calls with each other and it makes their life a lot more livable."
Responding to a question about previous reports — including one last year from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation — showing that consolidation leads to higher prices, Meg Guerin-Calvert, president and senior managing director with the Center for Healthcare Economic and Policy, pointed out that the vast majority of those transactions weren't classified by regulators as anti-competitive. She also said that's important to distinguish between just general price increases that happen over the course of time, versus price increases that occur when competition dries up.
"The mere fact of a price change in and of itself before or after a merger is not an indicator necessarily of anti-competitive effect," Guerin-Calvert said. "It's really not possible to generalize from those empirical studies that are referenced in that report to say that all mergers lead to anti-competitive price increases."
Rick Polack, executive vice president of the AHA, said that, overall, prices are trending downward in the industry. Plus, health care is local and varies market to market, he said, and a number of other factors contribute to price change, including insurer consolidation.
Pollack expects the health care industry to continue changing at a fast clip, but he's unsure whether that will equate to further merger and acquisition activity.
"There's so much transformation that's going on now as we move toward creating more efficient systems that coordinate care, and whether it's clinically integrated models or whether it's mergers and acquisitions relative to bringing people together, that pace is not going to let up," he said.
The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.


Thursday, May 2, 2013

NCI Cancer Prevention Fellowship (May 1, 2013)

Accepting Applications
NCI Cancer Prevention Fellowship Program

Dear Friends and Colleagues:

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) Cancer Prevention Fellowship Program (CPFP) is now accepting applications for Cancer Prevention Fellows. The deadline this year is August 25, 2013. Please share this unique postdoctoral training opportunity in the fields of cancer prevention and control with your contacts across the biomedical, health and related disciplines.

As part of the program fellows receive:
The opportunity to obtain an M.P.H. degree at an accredited university during the first year, followed by mentored research with investigators at the NCI. Research opportunities exist across the spectrum of cancer prevention research, including: epidemiology, biostatistics, clinical services, laboratory, nutritional, and social and behavioral sciences.
Competitive stipends, paid health insurance, reimbursement for moving expenses, and a travel allowance to attend scholarly meetings or training.
The typical duration in the CPFP is 4 years (year 1: master's degree; years 2-4: NCI Summer Curriculum in Cancer Prevention and mentored research).

Applicants should meet the following eligibility criteria:
Possess an M.D., Ph.D., J.D., or other doctoral degree in a related discipline or must be enrolled in an accredited doctoral degree program and fulfill all degree requirements by June 2014.
Be a citizen or permanent resident of the United States at the time of application.
Have no more than five years relevant postdoctoral experience.
To learn more about eligibility requirements and application details, please visit our website https://cpfp.cancer.gov/fellowship or contact cpfpcoordinator@mail.nih.gov. Additional program details can also be found in the comprehensive Cancer Prevention Fellowship Program Catalog.

I appreciate you helping us reach potential fellows and achieve our goal to train leaders in the fields of cancer prevention and control.

Sincerely,

Dave


David E. Nelson MD, MPH
Director, Cancer Prevention Fellowship Program
Email: cpfpcoordinator@mail.nih.gov

Clinical Trial Opportunity (May 1, 2013)


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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Transformation of an Academic Medical Center by Dan Beckham



Credit is given to author Dan Beckham for his description of what one Academic Medical Center (The Medical University of South Carolins) is currently doing to meet todays challenges.  (REH)

The Transformation of an Academic Medical Center

By Dan BeckhamApril 16, 2013
The Medical University of South Carolina used planning principles to realize its aspirations.
Some of the challenges that confronted the Deep South's first medical school, the Medical University of South Carolina, were unique. In 1861, a fire destroyed a wide swath of Charleston. Then the Civil War shut MUSC down for four years, leaving it to resurrect itself out of a wrecked and impoverished city. Two decades later, an earthquake with an intensity rivaling San Francisco's in 1906 leveled much of what was left of Charleston. These setbacks occurred in the broader context of the ruined economy that characterized the South from 1865 well into the middle of the following century.
Through much of that period, Charleston remained frozen in its past, "too proud to whitewash and too poor to paint." Eventually, the economic renaissance of the South spilled into the low country and Charleston began to stir.

An About-Face

Like most academic medical centers, MUSC began to grow as funding for research, medical education and patient care flushed into the American health care system during the 1950s and '60s. As an institution, however, it remained relatively passive, satisfied with its position as its state's only academic medical center even as it operated in the lengthening shadows of Duke, Emory and Vanderbilt. There were lessons in the rising pre-eminence of these Southern institutions; chief among those was that leadership, both administrative and clinical, mattered.
Unlike Duke, Emory and Vanderbilt, MUSC was a public institution without the benefit of a philanthropic portfolio. It served as the safety net for Charleston and much of the low country. This proved both a burden and a blessing. On one hand, community hospitals managed the profitability of their patient mix at MUSC's expense. But it also gave the academic medical center a degree of political clout that was useful at local, regional and state levels. Still, the patient care environment at MUSC languished as its facilities aged compared with those of its community-based competitors as well as those of other academic medical centers.
Then MUSC began a remarkable transformation. The hospital invested in the construction of a new bed tower, which opened in early 2008. Alarmingly, initial utilization fell well short of projections. Soon there was a realization that recruiting additional faculty was the key to generating increased utilization.
MUSC's faculty practice plan leaders stepped forward and took on the challenge. With this came a recognition that recruitment of new faculty offered an opportunity for a significant upswing in clinical reputation and entrepreneurialism. Within two years, it had recruited 114 additional faculty, its new facilities were fully in use and its brand was beginning to really shine. MUSC had begun to build market momentum.
MUSC then committed itself to becoming one of America's most highly rated academic medical centers on the basis of patient satisfaction. This was an extraordinary undertaking. Size and organizational complexity can conspire to create seemingly insurmountable barriers when it comes to significantly improving patient experience. As a rule, academic medical centers are both big and complex. In most markets, because of their smaller size and less complex structures, community hospitals consistently outperform academic medical centers on patient satisfaction. Despite this, leaders at MUSC pushed their institution to the top of the patient satisfaction pile.
Today, anyone walking through the halls of MUSC immediately will notice an energetic, welcoming and proud spirit. Not only does MUSC now outperform other academic medical centers on patient experience, it consistently outpaces most of the community hospitals in its region. By 2010, statewide market research revealed that MUSC had become the preferred health system for much of South Carolina. The research reflected the impact of its growing clinical reputation and the satisfaction of those who used its services. These successes generated more fuel for MUSC's transformation by imbuing it with a growing sense of confidence.

United Leaders

Perhaps most remarkable in these accomplishments was the extent to which leaders across MUSC united to achieve them. Like all academic medical centers, MUSC was distinguished by its tripartite mission of education, research and patient care. However, unlike many academic medical centers, it did not develop debilitating conflicts related to these three mission commitments. There were no ongoing high level battles between the dean and the hospital CEO, for example. Within other academic medical centers, such conflict had sometimes flared into well-publicized and distracting leadership struggles that undercut institutional potential.
At MUSC, a high degree of trust and collegiality extended across the institution. This was no lucky coincidence. Nor was it a manifestation of Southern hospitality. Trust and collegiality had been quite consciously cultivated as organizational assets worthy of preservation and accentuation. This translated into the potential to act with a relatively high degree of unity compared with other academic medical centers.
It also resulted in a willingness to move resources, including dollars, across organizational boundaries where they could generate the greatest good for the institution overall. This sometimes involved hospital funding of initiatives that directly benefited the medical school or the faculty practice plan. Similarly, MUSC's faculty practice plan took on the preponderance of the investment necessary to build out MUSC's outpatient capabilities, letting the hospital focus on inpatient capabilities.
In 2011, MUSC began a search for a new dean for the college of medicine. The search committee found Etta Pisano, M.D., a hard-driving individual whose leadership was producing impressive results at the University of North Carolina. Pisano was ambitious and direct in laying out her expectations. She wanted to push MUSC up significantly in the ranks of NIH-funded research institutions.
Unlike some of its peers, MUSC does not have the benefit of a rich endowment nor does it serve a population that can afford much philanthropy. It was clear that fueling the dean's aspirations would require expanded funding. The only realistic source of that funding was operating revenue from across the clinical enterprise, which encompassed the delivery of patient care by the hospital and the faculty.
Soon after her arrival, Pisano affirmed Jack Feussner, M.D., as executive senior associate dean for clinical affairs. Among his new responsibilities was the formulation and implementation of strategies to put MUSC's clinical enterprise on what the dean described as an "elevated trajectory" — a dramatic jump above the curve of its already impressive rise. The concept of an elevated trajectory became a linchpin in MUSC's vision for the future. The dean's vision drew the hospital CEO, Stuart Smith, and Feussner into thoughtful consideration of the challenge it represented.
In the past, Feussner and Smith had translated MUSC's tradition of collegiality and trust into improved clinical reputation and patient satisfaction. Putting MUSC on its elevated trajectory was going to demand an even greater degree of unity and focus. Department chairs and administrators were going to have to work together to clear a path to a compelling future. Feussner and Smith soon determined that the leadership tool best suited to their needs was a strategic plan for MUSC's clinical enterprise. Dean Pisano agreed. Because Pisano, Feussner and Smith enjoyed respect and authenticity throughout MUSC, their endorsement gave the strategic planning effort considerable credibility from its onset.

A Common Framework

MUSC had developed strategic plans in the past for its various operating entities and clinical departments, but this was the first strategic plan designed to extend across the entire clinical enterprise. For that reason and because there are a variety of models, methods and nomenclature used in strategic planning, MUSC took time to establish a common framework and definitions.
While the framework incorporated components recognizable in most strategic plans, including a situation assessment, mission, values and vision, it also included some less common elements such as a rigorously defined value proposition and strategic intent, as well as a set of focused driving strategies and supporting tactics. Then all of these were to be tied to very specific mechanisms for ensuring effective implementation.
The framework was hierarchical. It addressed the most critical questions facing the clinical enterprise, including:
  • Why does it exist? (mission)
  • What does it stand for? (values)
  • What does it aspire to become in the future? (vision)
  • What is it going to be really good at that will make it different? (value proposition)
  • What's its stretch goal? (strategic intent)
  • What is it going to do in order to achieve its vision? (driving strategies and tactics)
Ambition and stretch were intrinsic to the framework. An assertive vision and strategic intent would force the organization to seek high-performance breakthroughs. The framework also was designed to generate focus. It would define not only what the organization would be and what it would do, but also what it would not be and what it would not do.
Early in her tenure, Pisano established a new leadership structure that greatly facilitated the development of the strategic plan. Every Monday morning, key leaders from across the clinical enterprise met to address challenges that cut across MUSC. Development of a strategic plan for the clinical enterprise clearly represented such a crosscutting challenge. To support the strategic planning process and to provide insights from institutions in other markets, MUSC retained a boutique strategy-consulting firm which reported to Feussner and Smith.
The notion of "dyad leadership" that combines administrative executives with clinical leaders was already in place at MUSC as the strategic planning effort was launched. Pat Cawley, M.D., had functioned as the chief medical officer of the hospital since 2006. Although he reported to the hospital CEO, he and Smith had established a strong relationship best characterized as coequal. Significantly, Cawley had been trained and mentored by Feussner when they were both at Duke.
With Feussner's confidence and trust in Cawley came the support of the dean. Cawley had been deeply involved in MUSC's focus on clinical quality improvement as well as its patient satisfaction accomplishments. He was well-positioned to put in place the working relationships across the hospital and the faculty to achieve the improvements in productivity and financial performance that an elevated trajectory would demand.
By early 2013, as Smith's long-planned retirement approached, the strategic plan had generated clear implications for the kind of chief executive the hospital would need to support its elevated trajectory. The hospital's board voted unanimously to name Cawley as Smith's successor.

Planning Principles

Several principles came to characterize the strategic planning effort for MUSC's clinical enterprise. Some of these were identified at the onset of the process while others emerged as the plan solidified. These included:
Ambitious stretch. When the dean articulated her vision of an elevated trajectory, it was in relation to other academic medical centers. The physicians and executives at MUSC were not highly motivated to parry with local community hospitals. They were moved to carve out a desirable position relative to other respected academic medical centers in the South — institutions that inhabited the upper tiers of the U.S. News & World Reportand National Institutes of Health rankings — remembering the advice of Daniel Burnham: "Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men's blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistency."
Pragmatic optimism. While leaders at MUSC were well-grounded in the challenges facing academic medicine in general and their institution in particular, they cultivated from the onset of the strategic planning process an open enthusiasm for the future. It reflected the question asked by English historian Thomas Babington Macauley in 1830: "On what principle is that when we see nothing but improvement behind us, we expect nothing but deterioration before us?"
Mission balance. A delicate balance was judged fundamental to fulfillment of MUSC's tripartite missions. A focus on the patient experience had helped generate MUSC's exceptional performance on patient satisfaction. The arrival of a new dean and her focus on research necessitated a rebalancing that, while preserving MUSC's edge in patient satisfaction, would give greater emphasis to the research mission. Implicit in this was a belief that an enhanced position in research would contribute significantly to MUSC's reputation overall and, in so doing, further strengthen the clinical enterprise so it could give sustenance to MUSC's patient care and teaching missions. Leaders did not view balance across the missions as static but as dynamic — more like balancing a broom on a fingertip. Persistent potential for imbalance required equally persistent adjustment.
Leader driven. There is a popular tendency to cast the strategic planning net widely across organizations, then rely on a variety of methods to encourage large numbers of individuals at all levels to provide the input out of which a consensus view of strategic direction is cobbled. Unfortunately, although such exercises may feel good, they run in the face of what leadership exists to do — define a place worth going, along with a path to that place, then enlist the organization in getting there. Implicit in the word leadershipis a question: "Leading where?" Defining and accomplishing strategic direction was seen as the responsibility of top leaders.
Focused commitment. The temptation in a complex enterprise like an academic medical center is to declare everything equally important to avoid alienating constituencies. But everything is not equally important, and tough choices must be made. Attention, energy and resources must be focused if they are going to have impact. As Harvard Business School strategy expert Michael Porter has suggested, "The essence of strategy is choosing what not to do." Trade-offs are essential to the development of sound strategy. For MUSC, the strategic plan drew a relatively bright line between where it would invest itself and where it would not. The strategic plan became a tool for determining "fit." Activities and investments that might have been unfocused, ad hoc and unchallenged began to be tested against the question, "How does that support the strategic plan?"
Strategies with quality. There was a recognition that some strategies are better than others. MUSC intentionally ensured that its driving strategies were well-tested against proven principles of strategic thinking, including concepts like differentiation, focus and stretch. Participants recognized, for example, that a strategy is not a goal; it is a pathway, a bridge that links means to ends. The driving strategies represented much more than a to-do list. They represented the leadership team's best thinking related to a world of limited resources, tough competitors and relentless change. They defined the pathway to a compelling future in the face of uncertainty and resistance.
Things in flight. In most organizations there are multiple high-level initiatives under way or being contemplated as a strategic planning effort is launched. An effective planning process identifies these existing strategic commitments and herds them into one corral, a single unified strategic plan. For example, the dean's commitment to research was already in motion. During planning sessions, the rumble of bulldozers could be heard as two new research buildings were being sandwiched in close proximity to patient care facilities to help bring research to the bedside. MUSC also had already launched regional specialty centers — strategically located outpatient sites to provide a wide array of subspecialty care concentrated on convenient campuses. Such strategic initiatives already "in flight" or "on the runway" were incorporated into the strategic plan and built upon.
Iterative development. MUSC developed its strategic plan in iterative fashion. For example, it asked stakeholders to suggest words and ideas they wanted to have in the vision statement. This input was synthesized and eventually crafted into a preliminary vision statement for stakeholder reaction. In their planning sessions, stakeholders then were asked, "What do you like about the statement?" "What don't you like?" "What's missing?" They used this same iterative approach in developing other key components of the strategic plan. Feedback flowed to top leaders who then used it to shape the plan.
Space for dialogue. Overall, nearly 100 leaders participated in 28 planning sessions, all of which lasted more than two hours. But rather than emphasize the number of individuals providing input, MUSC emphasized quality of dialogue. Meetings were interactive with the focus on addressing critical strategic questions. There was a recognition that productive conversation requires sufficient time. Organizations inside and outside health care dedicate a very small percentage of their available time and resources to setting strategic direction.
In their book Competing for the Future, Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad underscored how little time leadership teams dedicate to thinking about the future: "In our experience, about 40 perent of senior executive time is spent looking outward, and of this time about 30 percent is spent peering three or more years into the future. Of the time spent looking forward, no more than 20 percent is spent attempting to build a collective view of the future (the other 80 percent is spent looking at the future of the manager's particular business). Thus, on average, senior management is devoting less than 3 percent (40% x 30% x 20% = 2.4%) of its energy building a corporate perspective on the future. In some companies, the figure is less than 1 percent."
Ownership from participation. It is certainly possible for a single individual to articulate a sound strategic plan without input from others. But quality of thinking is not the most important goal of inviting others to participate in a strategic planning process. The real benefit of such participation is strength of understanding and commitment. It is a truism that individuals tend to own more fully those things they help create. There is little that is more important to an organization than leaders who together own a plan for the future and share a mutual commitment to transform that plan into reality.
Leadership development. At MUSC, as in all organizations, there is variance in individual aptitude and interest related to strategic thinking and leadership. Effective leadership in a functional or clinical role does not always translate into effectiveness in a strategic role. This is as it should be. But sorting out and developing strategic leadership becomes a necessary ingredient for effective formulation and implementation of strategies. Today, there is recognition across MUSC that participation in strategic planning is not an empty exercise. Participation yields credibility and influence because it provides a laboratory for identification and development of leaders.
Process efficiency. Developing the key components of the strategic plan took six months. Throughout the process, there was an emphasis placed on maintaining efficiency — making good use of people's limited time — and generating dialogue of high quality. In the interest of process efficiency, some popular strategic planning tools were intentionally set aside. These included "SWOT analysis" (too prone to bog down in distinctions between strengths and opportunities, weaknesses and threats), "balanced scorecard" (too goal-centric and insufficiently strategic) and "scenarios" (too likely to devolve into infinite variations). To enhance process efficiency, MUSC employed a disciplined strategic planning framework and consistent nomenclature.
Transparency of process. The allocation of scarce resources in strategic planning reinforces the importance of transparency. For example, "funds flow" remains a mystery in many academic medical centers. Yet, defining the organization's top strategic priorities invariably transitions into the question of how to adequately resource those priorities; addressing this question leads to another: "How are things funded now?"
Recognizing the importance of transparency in resourcing strategic initiatives, MUSC launched a separate parallel initiative to bring clarity to its funds flow. It conducted this initiative at the same time as its strategic planning process and finished just as the critical questions related to resource allocation were being addressed in the process. Funds flow was not the only dynamic to which the strategic planning process gave transparency. Gaps in the performance of the various clinical departments became more apparent. As a result, MUSC soon focused on closing these gaps. In some cases, this led to the recruitment of new department leaders.
Accomplishment driven. During MUSC's strategic planning process, an important distinction was made between "accomplishment" and "performance." Many strategic planning processes focus attention on setting goals early in the process as ways to target performance, then develop a plan ostensibly to deliver that performance. This is backward: Performance is always an outcome, not a cause. Accomplishments generate performance. The strategic plan operates in the realm of accomplishment by asking the questions "What will we become?" and "What will we do?" It is the "becoming" and the "doing" that generate performance. Performance goals should be set after those two questions are addressed. Unlike many organizations, MUSC has held itself accountable not only for performance but for accomplishment of commitments set forth in its strategic plan.
Targeted communication. There are a wide variety of audiences in an academic medical center, some of whom wear multiple hats. They are distinguished not only by differences in their functions, but also by their training and experience. They range from housekeepers to physician scientists. The same approach to communicating the strategic plan cannot be used with every audience. MUSC deployed a variety of communication venues and methods, including town hall and departmental meetings as well as online and print summaries and updates. In each instance, while MUSC crafted its communication to fit the audience, it repeated the core messages with relentless consistency.
Trust-based. An environment of trust is an essential catalyst in developing and implementing a powerful strategic plan. This cannot be overstated. The only substitutes for trust are "systems of control," which are often experienced as onerous impositions, particularly by competent professionals. Systems of control are also prone to breakdown and collapse when confronted with too much complexity and uncertainty. Because academic medical centers are by their nature complex and loosely coupled, a federated approach to organization and leadership is a necessity.
As the English management expert Charles Handy emphasized, the glue that matters most in a loosely coupled federated model is trust. By trust, Handy meant "a confidence in someone's competence and in his or her commitment to a goal." Those who cannot be trusted need to be shoved out, "ruthlessly if need be." According to Handy, "Trust requires leaders. At their best, the units in good trust-based organizations hardly have to be managed, but they do need a multiplicity of leaders."

Results

Ultimately, every strategic plan ought to be measured against the extent to which it generates important results. Despite growing challenges to MUSC's revenues and margins, it set not one thing aside that was targeted for focused implementation. MUSC has generated impressive results: The number of specialties in which MUSC is nationally ranked doubled. Growth targets for its primary care network were exceeded by 50 percent.
Perhaps just as importantly, the strategic plan fortified and leveraged MUSC's unique legacy of collegiality and trust into greater advantage. It generated awareness and pride for past accomplishments and optimism for the future. It captured, directed and intensified the energy of existing market momentum. It created productive virtual integration without cumbersome structural changes. It engaged community hospitals and physicians as partners in unified effort. And it solidified commitment to common purpose while strengthening the foundation for continuing success. MUSC's elevated trajectory holds lessons for all health care organizations facing an uncertain future.
Dan Beckham is president of The Beckham Co., a strategic consulting firm based in Bluffton, S.C. He is also a regular contributor to H&HN Daily.
The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.