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![]() ![]() An Inadequate Supply of Qualified People Will Slow the Pace of Health System ChangeIssue Brief No. 07
Shifts in Leadership and Skill Needs
First, there is an inadequate supply of qualified people who have the breadth and depth of skills needed for a changing health system that demands the ability not only to manage costs, but to manage care as well. As a result, there will continue to be much turmoil in the health system, and real changes in the delivery of health care are expected to be slow. Much of the effort today is focused on market positioning and less on re-engineering processes of care to reduce costs and improve outcomes. Second, it is exceedingly difficult to introduce innovation. Health care organizations are limited in their ability to recruit people from other fields because health care is so different from most other industries. This also constrains health care organizations from importing expertise, even in areas where other industries are more advanced, such as information technology. Recruitment primarily from competitors results in strategies being duplicated among organizations. Managing Costs and Managing Care
Managed care, in all its forms, is growing nationally and is influencing every aspect of the health system. In many parts of the country, an increasing number of providers are being paid through capitation, demanding that providers manage the cost and quality of care delivered and that they be held accountable for those outcomes. As health care organizations assume and manage risk for enrolled populations, there are pressing needs to manage costs as well as care. As a result, health care organizations are seeking leaders who are fluent in both the business and clinical aspects of health care. According to one recruiter, the need for "people who can balance cost and quality may sound trite, but it’s true." One of the manifestations of this is the pursuit of physicians for administrative positions by a wide range of organizations, including health plans and insurers, hospitals, physician organizations, disease management companies and private employers that provide health benefits to a large work force. The ideal physician executive has the clinical and analytic skills needed to evaluate and guide changes in practice patterns, medical outcomes and quality of care, and the management skills that will help the organization get a better bottom line. According to the executive recruiters, there is a shortage of physicians who have all these skills and an interest in assuming positions of administrative leadership. They reported a small pool of candidates for many open positions. One reason cited for the shortage of physician executives is a general ambivalence among physicians to assume administrative positions, believing that to do so is a "betrayal of their field." There also is a relatively high level of turnover among physician leadership. This is attributed in part to organizations not knowing how to use physician executives after they are hired. For example, a hospital or health plan may recruit a physician executive to be heavily involved in strategic decisions and managing a whole system of care, only to turn around and "dump a pile of charts" onto his or her desk for review. The limited supply of physician executives, plus organizations that do not know how to use them effectively, does not bode well for organizations that want to develop more cutting-edge aspects of care management, such as programs and services that can change practice patterns and be linked to outcomes of care for enrolled populations.
Other new developments in managed care could be shortchanged because of a lack of qualified people. For example, disease management programs generally are data driven. They depend on continuous data collection and evaluation1 and on strong information systems as a way to track costs and care. There is, however, a severe shortage of people with the clinical, management and analytic skills necessary for these jobs. And, according to the recruiters, an inadequate supply of personnel to design and oversee disease management programs is likely to slow their capacity for affecting the delivery and cost of care. "People don’t realize how few [people] are around," stated one recruiter. Information Technology: An Agent for Change
A management information system (MIS) is a major investment for an organization, not only in terms of buying expensive hardware, but also hiring a staff with the necessary technical knowledge. The hardware alone will not do the job, and an organization could spend millions of dollars on hardware and not be able to use it optimally because it did not have the right people trained or recruited to do the work.
According to the recruiters, there is a shortage of people with adequate experience and sufficient skills in MIS for health care to support the changes that health care organizations would like to implement. The management of costs, care and risk all depend on strong a MIS; it is seen as the glue that holds together the many different and sometimes dispersed parties in the health system. Other industries are facing the need for large MIS investments -- even those that are far more advanced in the uses of information technology than health. However, health care organizations are at an additional disadvantage. Because of the clinical applications and specialization within health care, much of the technology and needed talent will have to be developed within the health system, and health care organizations may not be able to take advantage of advances in other industries. New Partnerships in Health Care
The pace at which new, larger and more encompassing health care organizations can develop is linked to the available leadership to do the job. Chief executive officers need negotiating skills to get former competitors to work together in new arrangements and community organizing skills to encourage local groups to buy into the new organizations. To meet management goals, secure a market presence and respond to the needs of the community, the alternative arrangements also could require a sharing of power and joint decision-making.
One stumbling block to building long-term relationships is the high turnover among the leadership of health care organizations. The instability brought on by high turnover could interfere with the ability of an organization to build trust among its various partners, define and pursue a strategic plan and develop the kind of long-term relationships that can benefit the community. The executive recruiters expressed particular concern about turnover in academic medical centers (AMCs). AMCs have to satisfy missions related to patient care, teaching and research, and this three-pronged mandate can make it difficult for them to determine clear strategies in a competitive marketplace. These facilities are faced with what one recruiter termed a "silo effect." They have strong individual pockets of knowledge, but the multiple parties and interests do not always communicate with each other. There also is a built-in conflict in the demand for their physician leaders to have "a long C.V., lots of publishing and still do patient care some percent of time," which leaves little time to deal with the demands of the marketplace and managed care. One recruiter spoke of candidates who turned down chief executive officer positions in AMCs because they were concerned about working in an institution where the priorities and leadership were not worked out. The recruiter did not see this as an isolated incident and noted the many vacant slots in AMCs. It’s a Risky World
Additional evidence of personal risk is the frequency with which some skills become redundant. There are too many traditional line administrators, particularly in hospitals, and in any function that can be outsourced at lesser cost, such as human resources administration. Such individuals are seen by recruiters as lacking the skills needed in health care organizations today because they do not have a sufficient understanding of managed care, capitation and other risk-sharing arrangements and information technology. Implications for Health System Change
In general, efforts to manage costs are moving faster than efforts to manage care. There are a couple of reasons for this:
As one recruiter said, "There is reorganization, but nothing is really changing. Very few companies have made a radical shift and redefined themselves." Despite shortages of people with selected skills, there is little receptivity to recruiting people from outside the health care field and, in some cases, even from outside the local market. According to the recruiters, health care is viewed as being highly specialized. Hospitals tend to look for talent from insurance companies and managed care organizations; health plans are more likely to hire from their competitors. The result is that many organizations in a market end up with very similar services, products and processes of care. Furthermore, the often-heard comment that executives with California experience are in demand throughout the country was not evident to the recruiters at the roundtable. Because health care markets differ by community, they noted that experience in California may not even be the most relevant. This further illustrates how exceedingly difficult it is to introduce innovation into the system. The evolving direction of change, the pursuit of multiple concurrent strategies and an imbalance between available and needed skills suggest slow progress toward changes that ultimately will alter the delivery and cost of care. Also, it is not clear which of the many alternative strategies being pursued today will have any long-term impact. For example, reduction in staff is an immediate way to affect an organization’s bottom line, but it is not likely to change fundamentally how care is delivered. Some strategies may have to be compromised and altered along the way, at least in part because the people needed to implement the changes are not readily available. And as long as the strategies and responses of health care organizations are evolving, the ultimate outcome remains unclear. |
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