2014年09月27日

How To Discourage a Doctor
RICHARD GUNDERMAN,
MD
http://thehealthcareblog.com/files/2014/09/Screen-Shot-2014-09-18-at-2.28.53-PM.pngNot accustomed to visiting hospital executive suites, I took my seat in the waiting room somewhat warily.
Seated across from me was a handsome man in a well-tailored
three-piece suit, whose thoroughly professional appearance made me
– in my rumpled white coat, sheaves of
dog-eared
Within a minute, an administrative secretary came out and escorted him into one of the offices. Exhausted from a long call shift and lulled by the quiet, I started to doze off. Soon roused by the sound of my own snoring, I started and looked about.
That was when I spotted the document on an adjacent chair. Its title immediately caught my eye: “How to Discourage a Doctor.”
No one else was about, so I reached over, picked it up, and began
to leaf through its pages. It became apparent immediately that it
was one of the most remarkable things I had ever read, clearly not
meant for my eyes. It seemed to be the product of a healthcare
consulting company, presumably the
“The stresses on today’s hospital executive are enormous. They include a rapidly shifting regulatory environment, downward pressures on reimbursement rates, and seismic shifts in payment mechanisms. Many leaders naturally feel as though they are building a hospital in the midst of an earthquake. With prospects for revenue enhancement highly uncertain, the best strategy for ensuring a favorable bottom line is to reduce costs. And for the foreseeable future, the most important driver of costs in virtually every hospital will be its medical staff.
“Though physician compensation accounts for only about 8% of
healthcare spending, decisions that physicians strongly influence
or make directly – such as what medication to prescribe, whether to
perform surgery, and when to admit and discharge a patient from the
hospital – have been estimated to
“Transforming previously independent physicians into employees has
increased hospital influence over their decision making, an effect
that has been successfully augmented in many centers by tying
physician compensation directly to the execution of hospital
strategic initiatives. But physicians
As a result, the challenge of managing a hospital medical staff continues to resemble herding cats.
“Merely controlling the purse strings is not enough. To truly seize
the reins of medicine, it is necessary to do more, to get into the
heads and hearts of physicians. And the way to do this is to show
physicians that they are not nearly so important as they think they
are. Physicians have long seen the patient-physician relationship
as the very center of the healthcare solar system. As we go
forward, they must be made to feel that this relationship is not
the sun around which everything else orbits, but
rather
“How can this goal be achieved? A complete list of proven tactics and strategies is available to our clients, but some of the more notable include the following:
“Make healthcare incomprehensible to physicians. It is no easy task
to baffle the most intelligent people in the organization, but it
can be done. For example, make physicians increasingly dependent on
complex systems outside their domain of expertise, such as
information technology and
“Promote a sense of insecurity among the medical staff. A
comfortable physician is a confident physician, and a confident
physician usually proves difficult to control. To undermine
confidence, let it be known that physicians’ jobs are in jeopardy
and their compensation is likely to decline. Fire one or more
physicians, ensuring that the entire medical staff knows about it.
Hire replacements with a minimum of fanfare. Place a significant
percentage of compensation “at risk,” so that physicians
begin
“Transform physicians from decision makers to decision implementers. Convince them that their professional judgment regarding particular patients no longer constitutes a reliable compass.
Refer to such decisions as anecdotal, idiosyncratic, or simply
insufficiently evidence based. Make them feel that their mission is
not to balance benefits and risks against their knowledge of
particular patients,
“Subject physicians to escalating productivity expectations. Borrow
terminology and methods from the manufacturing industry to make
them think of themselves as production-line workers, then convince
them that they are not working sufficiently hard and fast. Show
them industry standards and
“Increase physicians’ responsibility while decreasing their
authority. For example, hold physicians responsible for patient
satisfaction scores, but ensure that such scores are influenced by
a variety of factors over which physicians have little or no
control, such as information technology, hospitality of staff
members, and parking. The goal of such measures is to induce a
state that psychologists refer to as “learned helplessness,” a
growing sense among physicians that whatever
they
“Above all, introduce barriers between physicians and their patients. The more directlyphysicians and patients feel connected to one another, the greater the threat to the hospital’s control.
When physicians think about the work they do, the first image that
comes to mind should be the
The sound of a door roused me again. The man in the three-piece
suit emerged from the office,