Thursday, March 26, 2009

Tony was tops!





I was invited to UMass-Dartmouth's Charleton College of Business today to spend time with faculty and students to discuss hospital-related management issues. This is part of an occasional "Executive on Campus Program" run by the school to give MBA and other students a chance to interact with people in the business community.

My hosts were Dean Eileen Peacock and Hershel Alpert, Executive-in-Residence (in photo). Hershel, a very successful businessperson, has offered this time in his retirement to help in an educational role at the college. Eileen, by the way, is soon leaving her post to be vice president for Asia of the AACBS, the organization that accredits business schools worldwide. We wish her well as she travels to her new assignment in Singapore.

As always, I enjoyed the time with the students (some shown here), who came from three classes: strategy, services marketing, and quantitative methods. They were attentive and friendly, and asked great questions. First prize goes to Tony, though, seen in the top picture in the grey sweatshirt and between two more reticent friends. He had the quickest and best answers to several questions I posed to the students.

Judy's hoping you will come

Judy Kaufman is a former cancer patient who organizes occasional events to benefit the hematology/oncology patient care unit at BIDMC. This year, Judy's Hope is based at the F1 go-cart racing center in Braintree, MA, and will be held this weekend on Sunday, March 29, from 1pm to 5pm. There will be entertainment for all ages and indoor adult racing, plus a silent auction as well as a quickie board. Note: This is all indoors. Perfect for a rainy Sunday!

This will be a great family event. Beyond the go-cart racing, activities of the day include:
-making stuffed animals
-answering trivia questions
-sandy candy
-decorating cupcakes
-design your own toy race car
-spray painting t-shirts.

Auction items include:
-2 VIP passes to Ellen Degeneres along with a gift basket
-4 Back stage passes to a live taping of Two and A Half Men with a signed autograph and offical shirt.
-Signed DVD of The Office
-Signed Red Sox baseball
-Girls teen basket
-Childrens activity basket
-gift certificates to many restuarants including $200 to Davios
-Healthworks monthly gift certificates with bag, yoga mat...
-Swanboats gift certificates with bag and souvenirs
-Silver piece of jewelry from Dorfman collection
-CBS-behind the scene tour for 12
-200 bulbs planted for you
-10lbs of Stavis shrimp
-Dario Preger Photographer-2 gift certificates for family sitting and one 8x10
and many other items.
And many more wonderful items.

Read more about it on Facebook. You don't have to be affiliated with BIDMC to attend. This is a fun-for-the-whole family event that raises money for a good cause.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Er, thanks, we won't be needing that

In today's email:

I wanted to follow up on the information I sent regarding our private jet program. As you may know, Blue Star Jets has access to over 4,000 different jets that can be accessed in as little as 5 hours anywhere in the world. We were also quoted in the Wall Street Journal as one of the most cost effective ways to fly private. Please let me know if you have any questions or if you would like to discuss an upcoming trip in more detail.
I look forward to earning your business and becoming your private aviation provider.
Best regards,
David Parrillo Jr.
Blue Star Jets
Any Jet. Any Time. Any Place.
Blue Star Jets Rated #1 Most Prestigious Jet Service, Luxury Institute, 2008

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

At the ACHE








Jim Conway, Senior Vice President of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, invited me to join him at the annual meeting of the American College of Healthcare Executives in Chicago. ACHE is an international professional society of more than 30,000 people who lead hospitals, health care systems, and other health care organizations. About 1300 showed up for our 7am session this morning, entitled "Transparency and Leadership in Quality and Safety Measures."

The pictures show some of the attendees, looking remarkably chipper given the early hour, from Tennessee, Texas, Florida, and elsewhere. Also, there's Howard Horwitz, ACHE's education vice president. Finally, there are the labeled water glasses to prove that Jim and I were actually there: These guys are serious about infection control! (But it gave me a chance to joke that I did not see if the man who put on the labels had washed his hands.)

I always learn something when I hear Jim talk. The takeaway moment for me was when he displayed a chart showing survey results about the "top issues confronting hospital CEOs." In 2008, 43% percent of those surveyed indicated that patient safety and quality were among their top three concerns. This is an improvement from 2003, when the figure was only 26%. That's the glass-half-full interpretation.

Jim's interpretation, in contrast, is that 57% of the hospital CEOs surveyed did not have safety and quality in their top list of concerns. This is a major indictment of the health care system and demonstrates a lack of understanding of the concerns of a broad group of stakeholders -- patients, families, public interest advocacy groups, business leaders, governors, and legislators. I do not know if we were preaching to the choir today, or if we were able to make some converts.

Final budget decisions

To give you the next chapter in our budget issues, here's the email that was sent out yesterday to the BIDMC community:

Dear BIDMC,

Many thanks for your participation, suggestions, ideas, and criticisms during the last couple of weeks. And special thanks for the generosity shown by hundreds of you throughout the hospital, including the Chiefs and Dr. Rosenberg. It is time to let you know my decisions about the budgetary matters we have all been discussing.

First, though, permit me to offer some observations. At stressful times like this, there is a natural tendency to feel fear. Most of us have families to support or other obligations that go beyond the basics of food, clothing, and shelter. We try our best to plan our lives and live carefully and frugally, saving for future contingencies. Then, an earthquake-like phenomenon occurs, a massive disruption in our economic system that shakes the very foundations of decisions about consumption, savings, and personal security. Add to this a follow-on tremor by telling you that the hospital has been affected by the broad economic issues and that we will have to make tough decisions that will affect you personally.

I know that this is very distressing. In my view, we have two ways to respond. We can retreat into isolation from one another. That path leads to resentment, distrust, and a slow degradation of the work environment and of the sense of mission of our hospital. Or, we can look within and find that the values which have guided our care of patients and families are also the same values that apply to our care for one another. In the words of Lois, a manager our Department of Medicine, I think we will learn much from the process. I even dare to believe that we will become a community of healing for one another, just as we are for our patients.

I choose to believe that we want to do the latter, that we work in this particular hospital because we have come to trust the BIDMC family to care for one another. My decisions below are guided by this premise. Some of you will disagree with aspects of what I have decided, or the rationale for them. I have read and heard those views in your comments on the chat room and in personal emails. I promise you that I have seriously considered those views, and that I respect them, but there comes a time when I need to balance competing concerns and make a decision that will not be popular with all. Please trust and understand that I don't take on this role with a belief that my views matter more than any of yours, but because it is sometimes my job to try to consolidate and reflect back the underlying ethical and moral judgments that you have expressed to me. I believe that this is one of those times, and that we as a hospital will be judged by the broader community for how we handle these issues.

So, my decisions below are guided by some social principles as well as business principles. As noted from the outset, I will do what I can to protect the lowest wage earners among us. Even above that income level, I will tend to ask proportionally greater sacrifices from those higher up in the income stream than those below. I do not do this because I believe people earning in the mid-range or even the high range have fewer financial obligations than the others. I know there are people earning $70,000 or even over $100,000 with very tight budgets and lots of financial commitments. But, as a general matter, people who have been earning more for years do have more options and assets than those who have earned less. I feel an obligation, therefore, to skew our budget relief plan in a manner that asks more of those higher up the wage scale.

What does this mean specifically? It means that the people in Grade 4 and below will be exempt from any salary cutbacks and will receive their expected 3% raise this year. People in these grades will be subject to the same reduction in earned time and in 401(k) contributions as everyone else. They will be subject to layoffs for poor performance like anyone else, but they will not be subject to current layoffs as a result of reconfiguring the work organization.

The Decisions

Earned Time Accruals
Many of you objected to the manner in which we proposed to trim earned time accruals during the next several weeks. You said, “Can we please reduce the amount of accruals more gradually, over several months, rather than all at once.” We will do this. The rate of earned time accruals will be reduced so that this is spread out between April and the end of September. The amount of reduction will be about the same: Weekly accruals will be reduced by approximately 19% during this six-month period, which will result in three to four days less accrual of ET for full-time employees, depending on years of service, and prorated amounts for part-time employees. I think you should expect a similar reduction in the total number of days accrued in FY2010, although it will be spread out over more months.

Earned Time Cash-out
Before I address this specifically, let me provide a context and summarize how earned time currently works here. Your comments often indicated some misconceptions of the rules.

BIDMC’s Earned Time (ET) program combines paid time off benefits into one bank of accrued benefit hours and allows employees to draw from this bank. The amount of ET you accrue depends on how long you have worked here. The minimum is 28 days per year for full-time employees, rising to a maximum of 39 days per year. (The ET program does not cover absences covered by Worker’s Compensation, military reserve duty, jury duty or death in the family. These are covered by separate rules.)

The Extended Illness (EI) program accrues paid time off for employees to use for a personal illness, or to take care of a family member during a leave of absence that has been designated and approved as an FMLA leave. Employees must use 24 hours of ET before the EI bank can be tapped. Eligible full-time employees accrue Extended Illness hours at a rate of 16 hours per year. This amount is prorated for part time employees.

Employees may not carry over more than one year’s Earned Time accrual into the following calendar year. Earned Time hours in excess of one times the annual accrual as of the end of the calendar year are rolled into the employee’s Extended Illness bank.

But, we have also had a rule that a person can cash out a portion of their surplus Earned Time days each year, rather than have it flow into the EI bank. The rule now is that employees must have at least 120 hours in their ET bank and must leave a minimum of 80 hours after cash-outs. This is prorated for part-time employees. The hours allowed for cash-out are based on years of service.

It is this rule that I have proposed to cancel going forward, and I have decided that we will go forward with that proposal. I understand that some people have come to expect to have these funds available each year, but this is a very unusual benefit. When we are reviewing how competitive our overall salary and benefits are in the region, we frankly do not consider the idea that someone can get an extra week or two of pay in return for not using Earned Time.

The change is effective immediately. However, I am sympathetic to the fact that the cancellation of the ET cash-out benefit will leave some employees with personal emergencies that they had planned to meet through the cash-out provision. Employees who have an immediate situation that compromises their ability to meet an important obligation that threatens their home, their family or their ability to continue working should send an appeal during the first week of April to Judi Bieber in the Human Resources Department. A committee will carefully consider these requests and will grant exceptions to the cash-out provision on a one-time basis.

Here are examples of the circumstances we will consider for exceptions:

    • Impending college tuition payment
    • Medical/Dental bill for scheduled procedures
    • Contracts signed for immediately necessary home/car repairs
    • Summer family care arrangements that allow an employee to come to work

We will not consider payments for vacation homes, cruises, weddings or new vehicles, general cost-of-living items like gas, food or clothing or contributions to savings accounts of any sort.

Employer Match to Retirement Funds
In my earlier message, I proposed to temporarily discontinue BIDMC’s 2% match to the 401(k) plan and the contribution to the executives' 403(b) plan. I said that we would expect to reinstitute these payments in FY2011. This proposal drew a number of comments pro and con. I have decided to adopt it. I am sympathetic to the fact that people who are closer to retirement will feel the effect of this step more than people who do not have plans to retire in the near future. However, it is one of the largest single items we can use to save money -- $3.5 million for the remainder of FY2009 -- and it has the least impact on current family budgets.

Annual Merit Increase for Directors and Managers

I will be reducing the salaries of directors and managers who received their 3% raise in January to the level they had before that date. As a general matter, directors and managers have higher pay that non-managers, and this decision is consistent with the principles I set forth above. Directors and managers will, of course, keep the increment in pay received from January 1 through March 30, but the base will be lowered as of April 1 to the previous level.

Annual Merit Increase for Non-managers
After earned time, perhaps the largest number of comments came in on the issue of how to handle this year’s 3% annual merit increase. I had proposed to suspend it going forward, i.e., for those people who would have received it on April 1 or thereafter. But I also said that people who had already received their increases would get to keep them.

Since this is the item with the biggest current hit to spendable income, people quite properly raised the issue of equity. Why shouldn’t people give back their increase and therefore be treated equally with those who have not yet gotten it? I have to admit that this is a tough call when the fairness issue is raised, but it is an easier call when you consider that people who have already received their raise have come to expect that amount in their paycheck each week and have budgeted for it. This is a bit different from people who have not yet received it. Perhaps I am trying to make too fine a point here, and you will still disagree, but it feels more right to me to do it this way.

To clarify, though, it also means that the people whose anniversaries are April 1 and after will be the first to receive merit increases when we reinstate the program. In essence, we will re-set the merit increase calendar to that date, instead of the usual October 1.

When will merit increases start again? I think we should plan on two years without increases – although we will start them up again sooner if the FY2010 results are better than we currently anticipate. So, if you were to have received an increase in April through September 2009, your next one will instead be during the same month in 2011. If you already received an increase in October through December 2008, your next one will be in the same month in 2011. If you already received an increase in January through March 2009, your next one will be in the same month in 2012.

(For those managers who received a raise on January 1 but whose raise will be rescinded, you will next be eligible for a raise on April 1, 2011. In essence, the managerial anniversary date will be re-set to April 1.)

The Residents
A few of you asked why residents should be exempt from the merit increase cancellation. The main reason is that we make a promise to prospective residents, when they apply, about the level and trajectory of wages. They, in turn, make a multi-year contractual commitment to our hospital. If we were to renege on that commitment, it would severely affect our future recruitment efforts in the highly competitive market that characterizes the Boston academic medical centers. Furthermore, to change the salary structure after the residents have submitted their selections for residency (called “the Match”) would place us in violation of national rules created to govern the selection process.

Beyond that, please rest assured, based on the fairness criteria, that the wages paid to residents – whether on an annual or hourly basis – are certainly not in any way overly generous, especially when one considers the average indebtedness of medical students when they graduate and enter our program.

Other Items
All the other items I proposed in my earlier email – meals at meetings; Blackberry and cell phone reimbursement; employee events; and attrition -- will go into effect. These received virtually unanimous support in your comments. And the salary cuts voluntarily offered by the vice presidents and Chief Operating Officer Eric Buehrens and me will go into effect. Finally, let's all continue to seek out other cost-savings measures in the floors, units, and offices.

Early Retirement/Donations/Layoffs

Early Retirement
As I mentioned, all these steps will save $16 million in FY2009 and reduce the number of required layoffs from 600 to about 150. It is possible that we will be able to further reduce that number during the next couple of weeks. Many of you suggested that early retirements are a key step that could avoid some layoffs, and I am going to adopt your idea. We will institute an early retirement program that will permit people 62 and older who have completed 3 or more years of service to leave with a severance payment. Plus, employees in this group who are currently enrolled in health and/or dental insurance could elect to continue their participation at employee rates until the age of 65, when they are eligible for Medicare. In addition, employees volunteering for this program may be eligible for retirement benefits through the Pension Plan.

This is only a brief summary of the plan, and more information will be published soon. For those who are interested in considering early retirement, informational meetings will be held on Wednesday, March 25 at 8:00 AM and on Thursday, March 26 at noon in Shapiro 1A.

Donations to the hospital

Donations to the hospital can also help avoid layoffs. For example, the $350,000 in funds already committed by the Chiefs has already saved about ten jobs during this fiscal year. Charitable donations from the doctors as part of the fundraising being conducted by HMFP can also help, although we do not yet know by how much, in that the donations have not yet arrived.

I also want to encourage other staff members who feel so inclined to make donations. You can make donations on our website at www.bidmc.org and designate the gift for the BIDMC Staff Support Fund, or you can deliver them to the Development Office at 109 Brookline Avenue. To give you an extra incentive, my wife and I will personally match gifts through April 10 at the rate of $1 for every $10 donated.

Layoffs

Given these measures, I hope that the new layoff figure of 140 people will go down over the next couple of weeks. I’d like to see it drop considerably, but we’ll just have to see. We will wait until the last possible moment to issue notices of termination so that we can evaluate the effect of the early retirement and philanthropic initiatives.

Here are the instructions that have been given to the vice presidents. The order of layoffs will be based on the following four criteria, in this order, and apply to all BIDMC facilities (including Bowdoin Street, Lexington, and Chelsea, but not BID~Needham):

Performance: Poor performance will be the first factor in selecting individuals to be laid off. In fairness to those thousands of you who work hard and well, we will be moving more quickly that we would have in normal times when it comes to removing people for poor performance. Although we always expect the highest level of performance from our managers and employees, exceptional performance becomes even more critical when we must continue our work with fewer resources. Many departments will be affected by the layoffs we will implement. Our ability and willingness to retain managers and employees who are not meeting performance expectations will significantly decrease. The Medical Center stands by its personnel policies, including PM-04 (our Corrective Action Policy). That said, when staff levels are reduced we expect that terminations based on performance or behavioral problems will occur more quickly (in some cases immediately) and the corrective action described in PM-04 may be truncated or bypassed entirely, even in the most routine circumstances. I say this not to sound threatening, but to encourage every manager and employee to redouble your efforts to maintain the highest level of performance so we can keep the Medical Center running smoothly with reduced resources. Your consistently excellent performance is key to our success.

Volume: Where volume, hours of care or other demand metrics have not met budget and are unlikely to grow in the near future, we need to reduce salary expense so we do not carry over future structural problems.

Structural Reorganization: Some areas have the opportunity to restructure operations, streamline workflow, improve productivity and save personnel expense.

All Other: If these measures which are tied to performance and productivity can’t get us to the needed goal, then the least desirable alternative will become part of the solution.

I expect and hope we will not get to the last category. Indeed, I think that the first category will comprise the bulk of our termination notices. But I wanted you to have exactly the same information as the vice presidents so you know what their task is during the next few days.

Also, as I said to you earlier, all of this will likely close the gap for FY2009, but we have to understand that there is some uncertainty about that for FY2009, and there is still more uncertainty for FY2010. I want to defer action beyond this and see how things work out for us and the national and state economies. Only if still needed after these steps would we return to the idea of other layoffs. I expect we would review that early in the summer, and of course, will keep you all informed as we go along.

Thank you for your patience and understanding during this period.

Sincerely,
Paul

Monday, March 23, 2009

Observations on value-driven behavior

The recent extensive publicity about my approach to addressing budgetary problems at BIDMC is a bit discomfiting to me personally. While it is always nice to get good reviews and favorable press, I view what we are doing as so consistent with the values of the people at BIDMC that I think that the praise that is being applied to me individually seriously misses the point. Yes, leadership really matters. But after all, it is our staff who are choosing to make sacrifices to help avoid layoffs and to help the lower wage workers in our hospital. They are the true heroes, whom people need to be focusing on most. If they didn't have the core values they are showing these days, nothing I or any other leader could do would matter.

Clearly, there is something bigger going on, something I had not fully understood or anticipated. I have come to conclude that the credit being given to me is reflective of something that people seek and need during these rough times. Thomas Friedman writes about it in yesterday's New York Times, citing a lack of leadership at the national level that would draw people to think more deeply about their values and to act on them.

“There is nothing more powerful than inspirational leadership that unleashes principled behavior for a great cause,” said Dov Seidman, the C.E.O. of LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures, and the author of the book “How.” What makes a company or a government “sustainable,” he added, is not when it adds more coercive rules and regulations to control behaviors. “It is when its employees or citizens are propelled by values and principles to do the right things, no matter how difficult the situation,” said Seidman. “Laws tell you what you can do. Values inspire in you what you should do. It’s a leader’s job to inspire in us those values.”

Dr. Lachlan Forrow, an ethicist at BIDMC, thinks that Mr. Friedman has it just slightly wrong. In a note to me, he says, "I do not think it's true that what the most effective leaders do is "inspire in us those values" (though yes, that's part of the story), as much as embody them, honor them in the rest of us, encourage and facilitate their expression/release, and then celebrate that release so there's a positive feedback loop."

I really like Lachlan's formulation of the case. In an earlier post, I referred to Lois, a manager in our Department of Medicine, who taught me that our community's approach had contributed to her ability to deal with the fear of the moment, enabling her to be able to be generous to others. This was extremely touching and meaningful to me and supports Lachlan's statement.

Last week, I heard about a priest in Duxbury, MA who was using our hospital's experience to make the same points. I thought this was an isolated case, but then a friend sent me this link to a pastor in Concord, MA. I remain a bit abashed by the personal nature of the post, but I need to share with you the lesson that this preacher set forth and to commend his leadership in doing so for his congregation. And I am grateful, too, for how he empowers our own staff at BIDMC -- regardless of their religious beliefs -- to further greatness by specifically citing their good deeds.

The employees at Beth Israel Hospital may or may not be Christians, but they certainly give us Christians a sign of the kind of giving our faith requires of us.

It’s always easy to give from our surplus,
from what we don’t really need. But the love of Jesus asks us to give from our want: to give even when we don’t have enough to give or when it seems we have nothing left to give.

The more this economy pinches and squeezes and drains us,
the more real will become the options faith sets before us.

May the sacrament we share here nourish in us
the love that gives freely of itself for the sake of others.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

A mitzvah, don’t you think?


A note I print in its entirety from Ediss Gandelman, our director of community benefits.

Hi Paul,

Our BIDMC staff gave so much this week, and today they continued to keep on giving.

Several months ago we were approached by the American GI Association, the Department of Public Health and the American Cancer Society to join with them in replicating a free colonoscopy screening event that was so successful in Texas. Tom Lamont (PL note: our chief of GI) quickly put out an email to the GI physicians and got an overwhelming response from docs willing to donate their time to do procedures on a Saturday in March (today). But as I learned in trying to organize the event, the docs account for probably 25% of the effort—when I called together all the departments who would be need to be involved, I learned that we had a cast of thousands—okay, not thousands but at least 30! AND EVERYONE MADE THE GENEROUS DONATION OF TIME AND TALENT!

Pictured in this photo are many of my treasured colleagues who participated today including:

Our GI specialists—Drs. Douglas Horst and Alan Moss.

Nurse Manager: Janet Lewis.

The nurses: Laureen Smith, Judy Oakes, Robin Dunn, Cheryl Smith, MaryAnne Hickey, Kerri Grief, Chris Hunt, Marie Paul (actually left early to take her sign language course so she can better serve our patients).

Nurse/Med Tech: Sokha Hou.

The receptionist: Tinea Simpson.

Interpreters: Grace Peters and Winmolwan Reed.

Corporate communications: Zineb Marchoudi (who is not in the photo as she took the photo).

Administrators: Eileen Joyce, Sara O’Connor and Ediss Gandelman.

Our 9 patients who benefited from the free colonoscopy procedures were all uninsured or underinsured patients from our affiliated partner, the Joseph M. Smith Community Health Center. So, in the picture are the JMSCHC staff who were responsible for recruiting the patients, making sure they were educated and prepped properly for the procedure, and ensuring that any and all barriers were removed: Nancy Gilday, RN and Alejandro Alvarez, case manager.

Behind all these smiling faces also are many others from BIDMC, without whom this effort would not have been successful including:

Judy Jensen and Gina McCormick from Pathology and the “slicers and dicers” who will prepare the specimens from today’s procedures.

Dan Bazinet from Security.

Mark Leonard from Housekeeping.

Beth O’Toole, Mary Feeley, Martina Comisky, and Kristin McKenney from our fiscal department.

And last but not least, our senior managers who supported the effort—Jayne Sheehan, Alice Lee and Diana Richardson.

PHEW…I hope I didn’t leave anyone out and apologize if I did! But it certainly takes a village to do a free colonoscopy! AND the bonus was getting to see Doug Horst tango with Judy Oakes!!!

A mitzvah, don’t you think?
Ediss

The waste patrol at work, all 6000+ of them!

I love that people throughout the hospital are now involved in ferreting out waste. And I like it even better that they are calling out problems they see. And I like it even better when our managers treat these comments politely and respectfully, even when they sometimes have to explain why suggestions might not always be the best possible idea. Here's an email chain from today between one of our nurses, me, one of the vice presidents, and then another who had been copied. (I have changed the nurse's name for privacy purposes.)

Saturday, 9:14am
Hi Paul,

I was frustrated this morning when I came into the West Campus front entrance to find a new dispenser of complimentary umbrella bags for visitors. Why would we be purchasing something so unnecessary as this when we are being forced to give up [other things]? I really felt this was inappropriate.

-Mary

Saturday, 9:23am
News to me, Mary, although I could imagine that we do it to keep wet umbrellas from dripping all over our floors, which would then have to be cleaned up. I'll inquire around. Diana?
Paul

Saturday, 10:37am
Mary,

Thanks for your note-I know it is frustrating in these times to see something that looks like waste!


As you probably know, we've been doing a lot of work on employee safety through the Spirit initiatives. There have been literally hundreds of employee slips and falls in the last several months. Besides the pain of these incidents for the employee, slips and falls result in a major cost to the medical center in claims and lost productivity.


When the slips and falls committee, chaired by Jayne Sheehan and Michael Kennedy, investigated the root cause of these events, they discovered a significant number occur in lobbies when employees (and patients) slip on water that has dripped off of umbrellas. The umbrella bags are an inexpensive solution to help keep our employees and patients safe. (And eliminating just one claim from a bad fall will more than cover the cost of the bags!)


Please feel free to contact me if you would like more information. Thank you again for your note!

Diana


Saturday, 10:47am
Thanks, Diana and Mary,
Yes, Michael and I spent a lot of time investigating real time slips during inclement weather. It was clear the dripping umbrellas caused a wake of slips for not only our employees but our patients, particularly on the slick terrazzo floors and vct floors. We immediately looked into solutions to allow folks to keep their umbrellas, but leave a safe path behind them. Michael found a great solution, used in many other environments, and thought bringing it to the health care environment would serve the same purpose.

Important to note, is that the expense of all umbrella trees and the bags came to 1/10th of the cost of one employee injury where an employee may be then out for one or two days of leave. I felt it is well worth the minimal dollars to keep our staff who hurry a lot from campus to campus and our patients and their families safe.

Thank you, as always, for your thoughts and concerns during this fiscally challenging environment.
Jayne Sheehan

Saturday, 12:20pm
OK, thank you all for your responses. That certainly sounds reasonable and well thought out.

Mary

Friday, March 20, 2009

Coming to terms with things as they are

I have been struck by the outpouring of interest in and support for BIDMC's approach to solving our budgetary shortfall this year. Starting with Kevin Cullen's story in the Boston Globe, which was spread throughout the country and picked up on dozens of blogs and elsewhere, people seem to be looking for good news in these hard times. Here, within the hospital, we have learned a lot about our colleagues when we face adversity and band together to solve problems.

But, it is not always an easy lesson. Sometimes it is downright painful to get there. Here is one incredibly honest and insightful email I received from Lois, a manager in our Department of Medicine.

Dear Paul,

Thank you for the opportunity to have an open air debate. I'm discouraged by the cuts that are necessary, but recognize that given this severe economic downturn that cuts are necessary. Lately, when I am with people who are complaining, or have a lack of understanding of the issues, I've been asking them what they would do differently. Usually they don't have an answer. As a manager, I applaud you for taking a thoughtful, difficult way, by choosing transparency in the process. I know that none of these decisions are easy.


Last evening, I went to a lecture by Jon Kabat-Zinn, founder of the Mindfulness Stress Reduction Clinic at U Mass Med School. I had to look at my own feelings. Yes, I want to support the lower wage earners. But, I found myself resisting when it means personal sacrifice. I was surprised at how much my fear was blunting my usually generous heart.


Jon Kabat-Zinn defined healing as "coming to terms with things as they are, allowing things to unfold, and recognizing our interconnectedness." You are choosing a different way of handling this challenge, I think we will learn much from the process. I even dare to believe that we will become a community of healing for one another, just as we are for our patients.


Lois

The doctors pitch in, too!

Jeff Krasner at the Boston Globe writes about the generosity of our doctors. Here's the note from Dr. Stuart Rosenberg, head of our 800-doctor faculty practice (HMFP), sent to the BIDMC community last evening:

By now, we all know about the enormous stresses on the world economy and the inevitable negative impact on the healthcare system including BIDMC. In the past week it has been announced that economies and cost savings will be necessary in order to continue the critical responsibilities BIDMC has to our community.

Yesterday evening, the BIDMC Department Chiefs of Service and HMFP took steps to demonstrate our support of the outstanding and loyal staff of the medical center. We created the "Physicians Support BIDMC Fund" to complement job preservation and budget efforts at the hospital. As a start, each of the 12 Chiefs and I have agreed to make a significant voluntary contribution to BIDMC for this purpose, the total of which is over $350,000.

We are also sending a letter to the entire BIDMC physician community, inviting them to make as generous a contribution as possible to this same effort. Although physicians are not employed by the hospital, our commitment to patients, teaching, and research are inextricably linked to BIDMC. Thus, just as medical center staff and colleagues are asked to make sacrifices, so shall we.

It is a privilege to be associated with so many fine individuals whose daily hard work and commitment add so much value to our community. Together we will come through this challenge stronger and better positioned to continue our important work.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Young adjunct staff members

A belated St. Patrick's Day gift sent to me, which I share with you, too. The note is from one of our nurses, whose daughter, the mother of these kids, also works for us:

I know you are extremely busy, but your smile for the day is in the pictures. My grandchildren, born here at BIDMC, are the pride and joy of the Oncology Shapiro 9, where their mom is a patient and on the West campus where she shows them off with me. As you can see, they are also Fenway fans.

They are part of BIDMC.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Caller-Outer of the Month Award #3


Today was the monthly meeting of our Board of Directors, along with another chance to present our Caller-Outer of the Month Award. It was given to Deborah Kravitz, seen here, who works in our Central Processing Division (CPD).

The purpose of the award is not to recognize someone who has solved a problem, but rather to recognize someone on the staff who has noticed a problem and called it out. The idea is that call-outs lead to root cause analyses that enable us to fix problems systematically rather than engaging in work-arounds. Our Board of Directors created the award as part of our BIDMC SPIRIT program to encourage people to call out problems to make our hospital a better place to work. (Beyond the recognition, the award is accompanied by two really good tickets to a Red Sox game.)

You may recall reading about the LEAN rapid improvement event we ran in the CPD recently. Well, Deborah got the whole thing started many months ago when she invited me for a tour of CPD, and I was able to see the terrible working conditions facing her and her colleagues as they try to carry out their job of sterilizing all of the surgical instruments used in the hospital's ORs. After some delay, Deborah nudged me again a few months later and pointed out that nothing had improved. So, we got to work on the problem and with the help of the CPD staff, are now on the path to a much healthier, safer, and efficient work environment.

By the way, Deborah is also a talented artist. Check out a sample of her work here.

Signs of spring in the neighborhood





From this past weekend: The stream on the Glacial Hill trail at the Mass. Audubon Sanctuary in Natick was no longer frozen over, so you had to use the rocks to get across; new buds were appearing in slightly warmer parts of the garden; and the ducks at Crystal Lake in Newton finally found a bit of water in which to swim.

Today will be sunny and in the 50's. Is it really spring? Well, in Boston, you are never quite sure, but St. Patrick's Day is the traditional day to plant peas in the vegetable garden. Did you plant yours yesterday?

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

On the air with Dan Rea at WBZ



I just returned from an hour-long radio show with Dan Rea, host of a talk radio program called Night Side on WBZ radio here in Boston. The topic was the budget and personnel issues at our hospital, and the fact that many employees are willing to make personal sacrifices to help reduce layoffs and adverse impacts on lower wage workers. As always, Dan was thoughtful and polite, and several callers to the show likewise had interesting observations and question.

I ran into two others in the studio. One was Charlie, seen sleeping above. Dan reassured me that he often sleeps during the show, and that it was not a reflection of my answers to his questions.

The other was Jon Keller, a political reporter with the affiliated TV station. I have known Jon for years, dating back to his days as a cub reporter. He reminded me of an interview we did back in the late 1980s, when I was running the local water and sewer system. It was being broadcast at about 6pm. His question was, "Can you please explain what sludge is?" My reply, "Do you really want me to answer that question while people are enjoying their supper?"

Good progress in budget deliberations

Here's a message I sent out to the staff last night. It is a follow-up from town meetings and the previous budget message.

Dear BIDMC,

It has been a very busy couple of weeks, with thousands of you attending town meetings and sending suggestions to me personally or on our chat page. As promised, here’s my analysis of the options we have considered and suggestions for going forward. This is going to be a long message, so grab a cup of coffee while you read it. I apologize if I don’t address each and every idea that has been suggested, but I am pretty sure I will cover the major ones. At the end of this e-mail, I will tell you how you can best provide input into the next stage of this process.

First, though, an important summary. Your participation in this process and your advice to me has succeeded in accomplishing two very important things: First, we have reduced the number of necessary layoffs dramatically, from over 600 to about 150. This is a major victory and will mean a lot to more than 450 families who would otherwise lose their income from BIDMC. Second, we will do this at the same time we provide earnings protection to our 900 lowest wage workers. As you will see, this does come at a higher cost to the rest of us, but you have all made clear to me that this is consistent with our community's values and expectations. Thank you in advance for your generosity of spirit.

The Situation
Unlike the years leading up to 2002, when most of the hospital’s problems were self-inflicted, we are finally seeing the effect of the general economic downturn on our hospital. As you know, these problems are not ours alone. Our sister hospitals in Boston and across the country, as well as institutions and companies all over America, are facing similar situations. BIDMC has had seven years of extraordinary growth: Our revenue has grown from about $800 million to $1.4 billion and our staffing has grown by over 2000 employees since 2002. But the brakes must now be applied.

The main problem we face is a likely budget imbalance in FY2009 because of reductions in state funding, a slowdown in research spending, and because the number of people we have on staff is not proportionate to our expected level of patient volumes. After at least two years of volume growth that exceeded the regional average, it has slowed down considerably. Some of this is due to the economy, with people deferring medical care. Some portion is due to the fact that the state no longer permits diversions from emergency rooms. In the past, we benefited from diversions in other hospitals, but that has now diminished.

The problem for FY2010 will be more of the same, but it is also compounded by a likely requirement that we will have to make a large cash contribution to the pension plan, and also because we continue to project lower than adequate reimbursements from Medicaid and Medicare. For example, President Obama has proposed a reduction in Medicare payments to hospitals and doctors as part of the “down-payment” on expanded access to health care.

We do not want the hospital to end either of the next two years with an operating loss. Therefore, we believe it is prudent to aim for cost reductions of about $20 million in the remaining six months of FY2009 and at least an additional $20 million in FY2010. My focus in this note will be on FY2009, but many of the steps we take now will also be helpful going forward.

Savings Across the Medical Center
While it is possible to reduce expenses other than personnel, e.g., energy and supplies, these reductions would not be significant enough to eliminate the need to look at personnel-related expenses. We have already taken some major steps to save funds in our research budget. The largest single item is that we will be decreasing the amount of research space that we are renting. But that change will not have an impact until FY2010. The major step we have taken this year was our decision not to fill many positions throughout the hospital. During the last several months, at least 100 vacant positions have not been filled, blunting the previous growth rate in staff.

The personnel budget, including benefits, is about $545 million per year. A $20 million savings is thus approximately 4% of this amount. If we were to accomplish this in layoffs alone, we would have to eliminate over 300 jobs. (This is based on an average cost of $80,000 per employee. This number may surprise you, but it is a “fully-loaded” figure, including all benefits, taxes, and the like. Also, this has to be offset by the amount of severance pay for those people laid off.) With 6,200 full-time equivalent employees currently on staff, this would be nearly 5% of the current staff.

But that is on an annual basis: To achieve the same savings in the remaining six months of the fiscal year, we would have to double the number of people laid off, or over 600.

Our task, it seems to me, and the one with which you have been so helpful in your comments, has been to come up with alternatives that dramatically reduce this number of layoffs and get us close to these total dollar figures. With the strong support I have felt from many of you, I also am trying to shield our 900 lowest paid workers – transporters, food service people, housekeepers and others – from impacts on them and their families. As we have discussed at our town meetings, this will mean a bit more sacrifice from the rest of us, but I sensed a clear commitment to doing that.

Here are my suggestions to meet the likely budget shortfalls. I have outlined here my initial proposal of steps, along with their impact they would have on the budget. It doesn't look to me, at this point, like a menu of options is workable – financially or logistically. In other words, I had hoped to give you some individual options to choose from, but, as you will see, all of the items mentioned below would be necessary.

1) Temporarily discontinue the employer match to the 401(k) plan and the contribution to the executives' 403(b) plan. We currently provide up to a 2% match to the 401(k) plan. The savings from suspending these two types of contributions amounts to $3.5 million for the remainder of FY2009. We would expect to reinstitute these payments in FY2011.

2) Withhold the 3% annual salary increase for those people who would receive it on April 1 and thereafter, exempting people in Grade 4 and below, as well as our residents (physicians-in-training). This freeze on raises would stay in effect through FY2010. The savings from this will be $2.4 million in FY2009.

3) Re-set the salaries for managers and directors to their level before the 3% salary increase received on January 1, 2009. This will save $540,000 in the remainder of FY2009.

4) We had reserved $3 million in the budget for market adjustments in certain highly competitive job classifications. We will choose not to use those funds, saving that money in FY2009.

5) Suspend earned time accruals for five weeks of payroll. This means people will not accrue 3 to 4 days of earned time between April 1 and the second week of May. Then, accruals will start again at the regular rates. This will save $2.8 million in FY2009.

6) Eliminate the ability of people to cash-out their surplus earned time days. Those days would remain in each person’s “bank” for short-term disability purposes, but could no longer be received as cash until an employee leaves BIDMC. This will save $1.0 million in FY2009. (Note: Unlike the other proposals listed here, this one goes into effect immediately.)

7) Continue to reduce payroll by attrition, leaving the vast majority of open positions unfilled, saving $1.25 million in FY2009.

8) Eliminate the employee barbecue this year, economize on other events, and eliminate most hospital reimbursements for cell phones and Blackberries (more on this below), for a savings of about $100,000.

9) On top of this, we will save $1.4 million in the voluntary pay reductions taken by the senior VPs, the VPs, our Chief Operating Officer, and me.

Taken together, these actions would save about $16 million in FY2009, eliminating the need for about 450 layoffs. This is a major step in the right direction! Unfortunately, it does not get us all the way there, and we would still be about 150 positions overstaffed for FY2009. How would we deal with this?

Layoffs and Department Responsibilities
Our first guide to reducing our staff will be based on structure and performance. What do I mean by structure? Many of you have pointed out that there are too many management layers in some cases, and reducing these would be consistent with “flattening” the organization and responding to some of your concerns.

There are also a few departments that are clearly overstaffed relative to the amount of work that needs to be done and will likely be done during this recession. Those departments will be given an overall budget reduction target, and the vice president in charge will have to come up with a plan to meet that target. This might result in some layoffs or it might result in other operational changes or reallocations of staff or managers.

It is clearly our intent to look first at managers and staff who have consistently substandard performance. We will look at performance reviews, your comments on the employee survey, progressive discipline records and other performance factors in making these decisions. We will not make them lightly, but we want to retain employees who work hard and come in on time; managers who have great people and management skills; and employees throughout the organization who make important contributions to patient care.

Finally, we are exploring incentives for early retirement, so that people could voluntarily choose to leave. We are thinking about a plan, say, for people 62 and older, who would be able to leave with their full severance payment but also with an opportunity to continue health insurance coverage at employee rates through age 65. More details will come on that in a few days.

Will This Be Enough?
All of this would likely close the gap for FY2009, but we have to understand that there would be some uncertainty about that for FY2009, and there is still more uncertainty for FY2010. But I would want to defer action beyond this and see how things work out for us and the national and state economies. Only if still needed after these steps would we return to the idea of other layoffs. I expect we would review that early in the summer, and of course, will keep you all informed as we go along.

Your Other Suggestions
Let me address some of the other ideas and suggestion you have brought up. Although they do not amount to a lot of dollars, they have symbolic importance, and we should probably be considering them anyway, in terms of the efficiency of our hospital.

Many of you have offered to voluntarily give up prior earned time and/or make charitable donations to the hospital. We will certainly make that possible and will send out information on how to do it. To the extent that people contribute in this way in the next few weeks, we will be able to see the dollar value of that and apply it against payroll reductions.

I have not adopted suggestions made about furloughs (unpaid leaves of absence); eliminating tuition reimbursement; and eliminating the pay differential for holidays. The problem with furloughs is that we generally have to backfill vacancies, often with overtime pay, so the savings are not that great. Also, there is a large administrative burden associated with this measure. I am loathe to eliminate tuition reimbursement because I do not want to abandon our goal of providing professional advancement for people. In addition to the personal value of these payments, they are important for the long-term viability of our workforce. Finally, holiday differentials in pay are needed to give people an incentive to work on holidays.

There are several hundred people on staff whose cell phone service and/or Blackberry service is reimbursed. Except in special circumstances, I have trouble justifying that. Some people who need to have quick and complete information on technical problems should be reimbursed for these services. But for the vast majority of people, a cell phone is something they would likely have anyway and a Blackberry is handy, but not a necessity of the job. Accordingly, we will do a complete review of who is being reimbursed for these services and will discontinue that reimbursement if we find that it is not necessary. I am guessing that this will save $100,000 for a full year.

Many of you have asked that we cancel the employee barbecue this year. I think that social events for our employees are important for our overall sense of community, but the $50,000 for this occasion is very hard to justify this year, and so we will cancel it. You have also suggested that we economize on other events, like the nursing awards, years-of-service recognition, and so on. We will do so, but we will not cancel them. It is good and important to recognize people for special service.

Many of you have suggested a reduction in catering and meals at meetings in the hospital. In my last e-mail to you, I suggested that this did not appeal to me. Meetings are often scheduled during the times that people would otherwise be having lunch or breakfast, and it seems to me to be appropriate to feed people in these settings. Nonetheless, I will defer to your comments and will say that the hospital will no longer pay for meals for staff people at meetings. Light snacks and drinks, however, will be permitted. I cannot estimate what the savings will be from this measure. (An exception: The meals prohibition would not apply to residents' educational sessions.)

Some of you have asked me to cancel our partnership with the Red Sox. I cannot because it is a contractual obligation, but I would not in any event. This is an important part of our marketing and community presence. The Red Sox are the strongest brand in the region, and our affiliation with them leads to multiple benefits for the hospital. Our name is seen and heard by 2 million fans per year at Fenway Park and millions more on radio and television during the games. We could never afford to buy that kind of visibility with traditional advertising. Our first aid crews provide medical care to thousands of patients each year. We are also involved in important community activities, like the Red Cross Blood Drive and the Scholars Program, with the Red Sox. When the Red Sox sought an "official hospital" six years ago, every hospital in Boston wanted the partnership, and they still do. I was very proud that they chose us, and I still am. In any event, as mentioned, this is a contractual obligation.

There have been other suggestions regarding staffing of the PACUs and other clinical areas. We will continue to review those. There have been suggestions with regard to energy conservation and recycling. We already have strong programs in those areas. For example, as a result of energy efficiency steps, our energy use is the same now as it was when we had 2000 fewer people working here several years ago. Nonetheless, we will continue to pursue enhancements in these areas, but I cannot quantify savings that I can count on at this time. Ditto for other operational improvements, like changes in laundry collection practices.

Now, for your reactions to this list of more concrete options: We have set up a new chat room called Budget Forum 2. See the BIDMC SPIRIT site or the link under “announcements” on our general portal, and each of the major proposals has its own "chapter." Please offer your thoughts there until 5 p.m. on Thursday, March 19. (The original Budget Brainstorm chat room will remain up for observation, but it will no longer be possible to post comments there.) It was great to see the overwhelmingly positive and heartening feedback on our first forum. While there was a small number of commenters who engaged in meanness and sarcasm, we are not going to let that interfere with our goal to give everyone here a voice. I'll ask again: Please use this forum in the way intended, i.e., to comment on these ideas in a polite fashion. (In this next round, we will delete comments that are inconsistent with our values and the purpose of the forum.)

And, of course, feel free to write me directly as well by return e-mail.

I will issue another e-mail within a week with my final decisions and more details on these matters.

Thank you for your patience and involvement as we work through all of these issues. Our commitment to excellent and compassionate patient care and superb research and teaching will continue unabated, and we will come through all this fine.

Sincerely,

Paul

Paul F. Levy
President and CEO

Monday, March 16, 2009

New Joint Commission blogger

Jim Parker, Senior Editor and Publisher at the Joint Commission, has started a new blog called Perspectives on Patient Safety. The focus of the blog is on patient safety issues, the Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goals, and the prevention of sentinel events. Check it out here.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The adverse selection problem

A Boston Globe editorial today supports a point I made a few days ago about the conflicting objectives the president and Congress will face as they attempt to provide greater access to health care to Americans. It will be difficult, if not impossible, to provide such access while also controlling costs.

The editorial focuses on President Obama's proposed new, Medicare-like public insurer for consumers younger than 65, saying, "By backing a public alternative, Obama showed he understood the necessity of an affordable option for those who cannot get work-based insurance, either because their employer does not offer it or because they aren't working.

"The need for such a public provider - and yardstick - is vividly evident in Time magazine's March 5 cover story. Reporter Karen Tumulty recounts in heartrending detail her time-consuming effort to get an insurer in Texas to pay for treatments for her brother, who suffers from kidney disease."

Referring to the recent Massachusetts legislation that provided expanded access, the Globe notes: "In Massachusetts, reform won such broad support in part because the bill focused solely on expanding access to the uninsured and did not attempt to control health cost inflation at the same time."

Indeed, Massachusetts ended up being surprised at the cost implications of its access program. Uninsured people who had not had good primary care for years or who had been forced to let health problems mount caused a surge in costs for the system as a whole. This is a variant of the adverse selection process often discussed in the insurance field -- creating a product that tends to recruit the higher risk cohort of society.

The Globe goes on to say, "This could work in a relatively rich state, in which healthcare and medical research are seen as economic mainstays. But evading the difficult choices that cost-cutting requires is not an option for Congress."

The editorial concludes: "Ratcheting back the nation's medical bills while also extending coverage in a way that commands a solid congressional majority is a daunting task."

As I note in my earlier post, cutting Medicare payments -- both for existing products and for the new ones that would arise from expanded access -- is not a way to cut costs. It is simply a way to cut federal appropriations.

Even if you believe that, over time, better access to primary care and other early-stage care will reduce costs, you still face the multi-year problem of a surge in health care costs when access is expanded.

In my view, the only way to control costs in the short run is the one outlined by MIT's Steven Spear, a huge and dedicated focus on process improvements that would eliminate the major bolus of costs in our system -- the harm we cause to patients. The tools for doing that are in the hands of the health care profession. Our failure to use them and demonstrate that point leaves Mr. Obama and Congress with the only alternative they have, lowering payments to providers.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Pay it forward

While many of you have submitted comments on this topic, I have avoided posting anything about a recent Boston Globe article written by Kevin Cullen about our town meetings and other events at BIDMC because, frankly, it was a bit too complimentary to me personally. But, there was something about the article that captured the imagination of lots of people, especially during these hard economic times. Yahoo posted it on its homepage that day in the "featured" slot; a bunch of my Facebook friends posted it on their home pages; over 13,000 (!) people emailed to their friends from the Boston.com website; over 800 people submitted comments about the article on Boston.com itself; and Kevin, too, received hundreds of emails.

But I overcame my reticence on this because I need to share with you this email Kevin received. It is really, really wonderful. Perhaps writing about it here will help spread the word to others.

JUST WANTED TO LET YOU KNOW SIR AS A BUSINESS OWNER MYSELF HERE IN FT.LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA. PLEASE LET MR.LEVY KNOW THAT MY HEART AND MY BLESSINGS GO OUT TO HIM AND I THINK THAT HE IS ON THE RIGHT TRACK. I ALSO MAY NEED TO LAY OFF SOME OF MY STAFF BUT AFTER READING HIS STORY I SHALL RECONSIDER. AFTER I READ THIS STORY I HAD A MEETING WITH MY STAFF AND THEY ALL CAME TOGETHER AND ARE ON THE SAME OPINION AS HIS STAFF AND I THINK THAT WE WILL TRY DIFFERENT MEASURES TO TRY TO KEEP ALL OF OUR PEOPLE WORKING. I REALLY THINK THAT THIS NEEDS TO BE ON THE NEWS WORLDWIDE. THE MAN TO ME IS A HERO. THANK YOU FOR YOUR REPORT SIR. IT MADE MY LIFE AND MY EMPLOYEES LIFE A WHOLE LOT HAPPIER TODAY. THANK YOU AGAIN.

VICE PRESIDENT OF EXPERT DIESEL
BOB RUIZ

In the trenches

With all the talk about the bad economy, a little humor sometimes is helpful. One of our chiefs sent the attached as a type of advice and warning about how to decide about layoffs. Caption: The economic situation has gotten so bad we may have to lay off Andre.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Thanks to Jackson Memorial



I’ve just returned from giving a lecture at a management training session at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, Florida. Jackson is a large, county-owned hospital with an annual budget just under $2 billion. The hospital has been running a leadership conference series for many months, and today’s session was entitled, “Achieving Success & Quality through Transparent Leadership.”

Now, here’s the funny thing. Although the assembled group was new to me, I was not new to them. Apparently they had used the Harvard Business School case about my first six months at BIDMC in earlier sessions. That six-month period, as I have written here before, followed a five-year decline in the BIDMC after the merger of New England Deaconess Hospital and Beth Israel Hospital. My job at the time was to conduct a turn-around of the hospital and get it on a sound financial footing.

Today’s topic, in contrast, was focused on improving hospital processes through engagement of staff at all levels in the institution. People were very interested in our approach to transparency.

They were also intrigued with the blog, and so I took these pictures so they could be participants in this posting!

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Maybe two out of three?

I heard President Obama speak several days ago about his plans for health care legislation. As I recall, he said he was hoping for three things: (1) a reduction in health care costs; (2) an increase in access for people currently uninsured or under-insured; and (3) maintaining choice for people in their selection of doctors and hospitals.

While I admire his goals and hope for the best, I don't see how all three are possible. The Massachusetts experiment with access, i.e., giving insurance to a much broader group, has actually led to higher costs as people use that access for care. Now, over time, this will hopefully level out, as the value of preventative care spreads, but it could be many, many years before that effect is seen.

On the cost front, the president for now seems to be confusing underlying costs with how much the government chooses to pay. His budget proposal apparently would reduce Medicare payments to doctors and hospitals as a way of building a savings account for greater access. Reductions in appropriations might reduce costs to the federal government, but they do not reduce the underlying costs of care. With 50% of American hospitals operating at a deficit right now, it is hard to imagine how a reduction in federal payments for Medicare patients deals with the cost problem. Costs remaining uncompensated by the federal government would simply be spread to other patients.

Finally, other countries that provide universal access usually take away a great degree of consumer choice in doctors and hospitals. Instead, a parallel private insurance system often emerges, outside of the government plan, to provide such choice -- usually to wealthier people.

So, it seems to me that we could accomplish two-thirds of the Presidents goals, but that it would be difficult to obtain all three -- at least in the foreseeable future.

Your thoughts?

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Please check with mom before writing

As noted below, we are holding town meetings with our staff to get ideas on how to narrow our budget gap. Several hundred people have attended so far. In addition, I have received countless emails with questions and suggestions. People have been honest, forthright, curious, attentive, and sometimes even humorous.

And then we have also set up a chat room for people to submit comments. Here, they can do so anonymously. Just like blogs and comments on posted newspaper articles, the vast majority of people are civil, polite, and appropriate; but then there are a few people who take some pleasure in being nasty to their fellow workers, or sarcastic, or mean.

This is the dilemma facing a CEO or other top administrator who chooses to set up an open process of employee involvement. In an effort to make the forum open to all, without fear of reprisals for anything said, some people will take advantage of the situation and be nasty or otherwise inappropriate. If this gets out of hand, these kinds of attitudes can spread and poison the atmosphere for all.

Some people in my hospital have already asked me to take down the chat room because they have been offended by some things that have been said. For example, one person said, "Take this brainstorming session down. I am embarrassed to say I work with these people!!" Others have asked me to delete those kind of comments. I have refused to do either. My response to the above post was:

"Hey, it's a free country. Unfortunately people who are commenting anonymously sometimes say things that are ill conceived or mean. But the forum is still useful to those of us who are taking it seriously and trying to learn from one another. To take it down would let those who misbehave steal an opportunity from those of us who want to participate."

Also, I post a comment right after each nasty comment suggesting to the author that he or she is engaged in bad behavior, is insulting their fellow workers, or is otherwise undermining the spirit of openness and collaboration that we seek to foster.

Meanwhile, staff members, too, post their own comments encouraging better behavior. Here's a sample: "Before you scoff at an idea presented, think about how fortunate we are to have this forum in which to 'vent' and to present ideas. Most companies just make decisions regarding cutbacks and notify their employees once the decisions are made. We are being given a unique opportunity here to be part of the conversation and ultimately the solution. Be mature and show some respect to everyone that at least comes to the table with something."

All in all, I have been pleased and heartened by the response of our staff. Having worked at BIDMC for seven years, I am not at all surprised by their involvement and helpful ideas and their desire to support one another. To the bad eggs in the crowd, I offer a simple suggestion, "Please don't post anything that your mother would find objectionable!"

Monday, March 09, 2009

The backyard on a moonlit snowy night

Diabetes design contest

One of my blogging heroines, Amy Tenderich of Diabetes Mine, writes and asks for help publicizing the following contest:

Hi Paul,

This week we opened the 2009 DiabetesMine Design Challenge, a web-based competition calling for innovative design concepts (devices or web applications) that will improve life with diabetes.

This year, the contest is sponsored by the California HealthCare Foundation (CHCF), with a Grand Prize of $10,000. It’s also supported by global innovation firm IDEO and by Medgadget.com, the Internet journal of emerging medical technologies.

The contest is hosted here.

Here's the press release:

DiabetesMine™ Kicks Off 2009 Design Challenge;

Fostering Innovation to Improve Life with Diabetes

Sponsored by the non-profit California HealthCare Foundation, leading community website DiabetesMine™ offers $10,000 Grand Prize to best new creative tool that will transform life with diabetes

San Francisco, Calif., March 2, 2009 -- DiabetesMine™, a leading informational and community web site for people with diabetes, today announced kickoff of the 2009 DiabetesMine Design Challenge, a competition designed to foster innovation in diabetes design and encourage creative new tools that will improve life with diabetes.

This annual web-based competition is hosted at www.diabetesmine.com/designcontest, and is underwritten by the California HealthCare Foundation (CHCF), an independent philanthropy organization committed to improving the way health care is delivered and financed in California and beyond. It is also endorsed by Medgadget.com, the Internet journal of emerging medical technologies, and supported by the global design and innovation firm IDEO, with headquarters in Palo Alto, CA.

“CHCF is committed to improving the quality of care for patients with chronic conditions,” said Veenu Aulakh, senior program officer for the Foundation's Better Chronic Disease Care program. “The Web is becoming a major platform for patient interaction and improved self-care through increased access to relevant health information and support. We’re excited to support this interactive, web-based design contest fostering innovation in such a prevalent and challenging condition as diabetes.”

This competition is open to any individuals or organizations passionate about diabetes and product design – whether you're an enterprising patient or parent, a startup company, a design student, an independent developer or engineer, or a pharma R&D pro. Entries from participants under age 18 are also welcome, and will be judged in a separate category.

To help refine and realize their design concepts, three winners will be selected to receive the following prizes:

· $10,000 in cash for the Grand Prize winner;

- plus a mini-workshop with Health and Wellness experts at the global design and innovation firm IDEO;

- and one free access ticket to the “innovation incubator” Health 2.0 Conference planned for October 2009 in San Francisco, CA

· $5,000 cash for the “Most Creative Idea” category winner;

- plus a consulting session with IDEO design experts

· $2,000 cash for the winner of the Kids’ Category (under age 18)

(total cash prizes $17,000)

"We can’t overemphasize the impact of design innovation in the lives of people with diabetes. Desirable form factor, ease of use, and potential incorporation of diabetes tools into other devices – like cell phones – all have the potential to transform diabetes management and quality of life for millions of people,” said Aaron Kowalski, Research Director of the Artificial Pancreas Project at the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF).

The Design Challenge concept was born in Spring 2007, when creator of DiabetesMine Amy Tenderich posted an Open Letter to Apple CEO Steve Jobs, calling for the gurus of consumer design to help revolutionize design of diabetes devices. In the weeks and months that followed, numerous individuals and organizations came forward with compelling new prototypes, designs, and ideas. These included new concepts for glucose meters, insulin pumps, lancing devices (for testing blood glucose), devices for transporting medical records or tracking glucose results, diabetes supply carry cases and more.

This year, a seven-member judging panel includes some highly influential individuals in healthcare and diabetes treatment:

§ Veenu Aulakh, senior program officer for the California HealthCare Foundation's Better Chronic Disease Care program, with deep experience in diabetes care

§ Michael Ostrovsky, MD, editor of Medgadget.com, the online journal of emerging medical technologies

§ Steven Edelman, MD, a distinguished endocrinologist living with Type 1 diabetes himself, and creator of the nationwide TCOYD (Taking Control of Your Diabetes) conference series

§ Robert Oringer, an entrepreneur and angel investor in the diabetes industry who pioneered private-label diabetes products such as lancets and glucose tablets (Robert also has two young sons with Type 1 diabetes)

§ Ross Jaffe, MD, a board-certified internist and eminent venture capitalist with Versant Ventures in Silicon Valley, leading investments in medical devices, drug delivery, and healthcare information systems companies

§ A senior designer with the global design and innovation firm IDEO, in their Heath and Wellness practice — which helped design Eli Lilly’s Kwikpen product and packaging for GlaxoSmithKlein’s Alli diet product

§ Amy Tenderich of DiabetesMine.com, blogger, author, patient advocate, Health 2.0 consultant, and contest creator

Submissions are accepted in the form of a 2-minute video to be uploaded to the DiabetesMine YouTube channel, or a 2-3 page written "elevator pitch" plus supporting graphics, also to be uploaded online. The deadline for entries is Friday, May 1st, 2009, at 11:59 pm Pacific time. Winners will be announced on Monday, May 18th, 2009.

"We look forward to all kinds of creativity. Good design can be applied to anything, even something as 'low-tech' as a special container for disposing of used glucose test strips. Let the innovation begin!" Tenderich said.