Practice Plan Management | Process-Centered Management Comes to Health Care

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By David Hefner, Harry Bloom, and Dwight Monson

This article explores how four academic institutions have successfully implemented process-centered management and the benefits achieved. These examples provide practical approaches to back up the buzzwords.

Over the last decade, two important lessons particularly important for the health care industry have been learned, and relearned. in corporate America:

1) customer satisfaction is best managed around end-to-end processes , not in fragmented departmental encounters; and, 2) sustainable gains in efficiency and growth are realized by optimizing end-to-end processes, not functions. Health care provider organizations have begun to grapple with these powerful concepts, with greater focus on managing total patient stays around service lines and major support processes (see Figure 1). Predictably, the primacy of process orientation threatens traditional, department-focused leadership. Nevertheless, a growing body of evidence suggests that process-centered operations result in higher quality outcomes for patients and lower costs for payers. It is wise to ask: What lessons can the medical profession draw from experiences in other industries and how can the transition to process-centered management be accelerated while preserving many of the benefits of departmental structures?

Process-Centered Management in the Business World

Back in the 1980s. increased foreign competition, deregulation, quantum leaps in information technology, and more demanding customers presented challenges and opportunities to U.S. industry. Leaders in corporate America came to recognize the importance of organizing around core processes for greater efficiency and better service to customers. A frenzy of reengineering (or radical process redesign) appeared, between the late ‘80s and the mid-90’s. Despite well-publicized failures of reengineering, it is clear that intense focus on redesigning core work “processes” and integrating these redesigns with information technology has benefited the competitiveness of American industry in the last half of this decade. In fact, industry’s preoccupation with work redesign and technology has arguably helped fuel the longest peacetime cycle of sustained expansion for the U.S. economy in this century.

Today, there is general recognition that traditional. functionally organized management alone is simply not adequate to sustain a competitive cost position and high customer satisfaction. Leading organizations such as Procter & Gamble, American Standard, GTE, and Citibank have markedly shifted the focus of management to define “process-focused teams.” These teams utilize end-to-end performance measures and operational clout in actively guiding outputs across departmental barriers to meet and exceed the expectations of customers. In many cases, functional departments have not been dismantled; rather, they have been transformed into specialized centers of excellence oriented to the broader goals of the organization through process management. In its most developed state, financial performance for the entire organization is being measured by process, in addition to more traditional revenue and cost centers.

The Role of “Process Champions” In this transformation, a new role, the “process champion” or “process owner,” has been defined as part of a matrix organization. At Procter & Gamble, the “product delivery process champion” ensures that key customers such as Wal-Mart receive exceptional service with a single point of customer contact. The GTE “customer service process champion” makes certain that telephone service is activated promptly for new customers. At Progressive Insurance, the “claims process champion” oversees claims settlement quickly and efficiently, often at the accident site and always to the delight of the insured. In each case. process champions are accountable for achieving pro – cess goals, cutting across departmental lines to meet or exceed the performance expectations of customers.

Process-Centered Management in Healthcare: Four Vignettes

Recently, similar success stories have begun to emerge in health care institutions. Here, we will illustrate the experiences of four health care providers with process-centered management. While each of the institutions has made the transition to a process focus to a differing extent, all have used this powerful technique to break through traditional barriers and achieve higher performance for patients, while lowering costs.

CASE STUDY #1

HENRY FORD HEALTH SYSTEM’S SUPPLY CHAIN PROCESS

Henry Ford Health System, long regarded as a progressive model of organizational and operational integration, is a giant health system comprising several large hospitals, a medical group of 800 physicians, an expansive ambulatory care network, and a market leading health plan. In response to continued pressure on reimbursement, Henry Ford has mounted a concentrated effort to reduce non-labor expenses and improve cash flow, by optimizing two key processes: supply chain management and billing and collection.

For both processes, Henry Ford’s senior leadership has set improvement targets , defined key sub-processes, and appointed process champions from among respected administrative and clinical leadership. These process champions have been asked to galvanize their peers across traditional departmental and organizational boundaries, questioning past practices, identifying production bottlenecks, assessing options for improvement and advancing new models of organizational and operational design.

Selecting the right kind of leadership to lead these efforts is critical. For example, Dr. Douglas Weaver, Department Chair of Cardiology and the champion for the “Manage Demand” sub-process within the supply chain process, has a two-pronged program :

■ work with clinical leadership to standardize duplicative products (e.g., stents, pacemakers, catheters. and contrast media) and
■ negotiate with a small number of suppliers across multiple product lines to achieve highly significant price reductions.

Dr. Weaver has managed to engage his physician colleagues in a way that administrative leadership was unable to achieve.

CASE STUDY #2

WINTHROP/SOUTH NASSAU HEALTH SYSTEM’S CUSTOMER FOCUSED PROCESSES

Roughly 18 months ago, Winthrop University Hospital, a highly re g a rd e d teaching hospital located on Long Island, New York, redesigned its departmental management structure in favor of a cross-departmental process model (see Figure 2). The institution faced intense competition from an aggressive local delivery system, plus significant reimbursement cutbacks. Winthrop needed to improve efficiency and strengthen relationships with community physicians, who supply 70% of admissions, without jeopardizing its deserved reputation for high quality.

Previous attempts at process redesign convinced leadership that a successful effort would require a new paradigm, one engaging both clinicians and staff. Winthrop’s leadership team began by defining its key processes, setting targets (cycle time, cost and quality) and enlisting new leadership to be responsible for process outcomes. Process owners led efforts to redesign virtually every process across the medical center, including:

■ customer-focused processes (e.g., Manage Patient Flow and Deliver Patient Care)
■ growth-oriented processes (e.g., “Develop New Products and Services”)
■ support-processes (e.g., “Manage Supply Chain”)

A significant number of newly appointed process owners were physicians, who interjected a strong market-focused perspective to the leadership.

Process-centered management had a dramatic effect at Winthrop:

■ Three champions were appointed to lead “Develop New Products and Services” a staff physician, a voluntary physician, and a senior nurse. Each champion was selected because he/she demonstrated an aptitude for entrepreneurial activity. Their first priority was to redesign the approval process for new product and service offerings to reduce cycle time and improve the odds of success in the market.

■ The head of Cardiovascular Surgery teamed with a senior nurse manager to co-lead the “Deliver Patient Care” process. This team succeeded in introducing innovations in the Winthrop care model promoting active teamwork between nurses and the physicians to improve patient care significantly. Process-centered redesign at Winthrop has resulted in a 10% to 12% reduction in controllable cost. One-half of these identified savings have already been implemented. More important, a new spirit of genuine cooperation and entrepreneurialism now characterizes the culture of the organization, resulting in better services to patients and their families.

CASE STUDY #3

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND’S PATIENT ACCESS PROCESSES (FRONT-END)

For most practice plans and hospitals, it now takes more staff more time to collect less revenue. Designing the front-end of a patient encounter to preregister and verify insurance coverage is critical to improving cash collections.

At University of Maryland, these front-end processes are moving from a highly decentralized departmental focus to a highly centralized process-centered model within its practice plan, University Physicians Inc. Initial estimates showed that ineffective front-end processes were lowering collections by $10 million to $15 million per year (15% of predicted net revenues). A respected associate professor of Internal Medicine, Dr. Louis Domenici, was appointed by the Dean and the Clinical Affair’s Committee to oversee the redesign of critical frontend processes. By using interdisciplinary teams, a new operating model was developed and is being implemented. The organization has already improved annual revenues by $11 million, the run rate increase, as compared with previous 12 months’ run rates.

Moving from a highly decentralized organization to a more centralized operation is challenging. as many former practice plan administrators can attest. By putting in place performance measures and involving both faculty and staff, the University of Maryland has derived operating models that draw the best from department and process managers. “High touch” customer service provided by the departments is preserved, while pre-registration and insurance verification are centralized to improve consistency and accuracy. Process champions, both physicians and administrators, are held accountable for producing enterprise-wide, quantifiable results, with a portion of compensation tied to actual performance

CASE STUDY #4

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA’S “ACTIVITY CAPTURE T H ROUGH COLLECTION” PROCESSES (BACK – END )

Faced with declining payments and increasing rejections and denials, the University of Florida Faculty Practice Plan embarked on a two-step process to improve collections. First, design teams grouped departments into billing and collection units according to volumes and common operational characteristics (see Figure 3). Second, leadership reconnected the front-end and back-end of the collection processes by establishing team process owners with a single point of accountability and agreed-upon team targets. Now, clinicians and staff know who to turn to in resolving patient financial concerns. Department chairs can work with the same individuals to improve collections and assist in meeting or exceeding departmental budgets. With these process managers in place, annual collections have improved by $15 million over the last two years. At the same time, customer service has been improved with more accurate bills and more timely resolution of problems.

Process – Centered Management “Lessons Learned”

What are the common themes, principles and “lessons learned” from these diverse organizations?

■ Define an operating model that maximizes process performance potential for each process. Traditional solutions of centralizing or decentralizing operations are ineffective in improving service and reducing costs. A more pragmatic, process – centered approach will utilize both organizational models to best accomplish defined tasks. For instance, registration and insurance verification lend themselves to centralization, while other activities in the patient access process are performed more effectively in a decentralized or hybrid structure. Giving careful consideration to each sub-process can significantly enhance the overall process.

■ Establish and build consensus around key measures of success. Defining specific measures of performance (e.g., percentage of gross revenue collected and number of days in accounts receivable) is essential to long-term success. Building consensus a round performance measures enables process champions to assume responsibility for improving outcomes across institutional boundaries and provides a performance-based focus for the entire organization.

■ Appoint physicians and respected administrators as process champions
who have the capacity to influence behavior in areas beyond their direct control. Physicians are looking for more substantive involvement in managing the entire clinical enterprise. Appointing credible leaders and charging them with accountability for achieving desired results is essential for generating organizational support to make process – centered management successful.

■ Link process performance to process champion compensation. Introducing new kinds of measures and rewards is the quickest way to shift the attention of leadership to what really matters. A significant portion of the process champion’s compensation should be linked to specific quality and cost performance measures for which he/she is responsible.

■ Transition the budgeting process of the organization to reflect core processes of the organization. As the process champions and their associated process teams become active, it becomes increasingly important to mirror process organization in budget and financial systems. Generally, this is a drawn-out process that takes several years, but it is effective in shifting focus away from cost centers and departments to the new central organizing structure of a process-centered enterprise.

Harry Bloom is a director and leader of the Performance Improvement practice at CSC Healthcare Group in New York 212- 903-9300. David Henfer, principal, and Dwight Monson, director, are co-directors of the School of Medicine Reengineering practice at CSC Healthcare Group in Chicago 312-470-8600. 

C-Suite Recruiting Practices in Academic Medical Centers

William T. Mallon, Ed.D., David S. Hefner, M.P.A., and April Corrice
Association of American Medical Colleges

Summary of Findings

1. Teaching hospitals are constantly searching for new leaders. See page 4.

2. The average leadership search in major teaching hospitals takes seven months and most frequently results in an external candidate being selected for the position. See page 5.

3. Teaching hospitals have professional guidance and regularly use search committees in the search process for C-suite executives. See page 6.

4. CEOs appear satisfied with many aspects of the leadership search process, but less so with outcomes in achieving a more diverse leadership team. Yet teaching hospitals might not tap into all the resources at their disposal to reach out to diverse applicants. See page 7.

5. Identifying candidates with the best “fit” is the most vexing challenge in the leadership search process for major teaching hospitals and health systems; building systems of talent management and leadership development is a potential solution. See page 9.

6. Almost 4 in 10 medical school deans have no active role in the search and recruitment process for C-level executives at integrated teaching hospitals.
See page 10.

For each of the findings, we provide an analysis of the data and offer a promising practice, adapted from the AAMC’s Finding Top Talent handbook, on how to search for leaders in academic medicine.

AAMC-C-Suite-Recruiting-Practices-Mallon-Hefner

Fulfilling the Promise and Potential of Our Academic Health Enterprises

A Guidebook on Major Design and Implementation Guidelines

A Breakthrough for Managing Academic Health Centers

By David S. Hefner Senior Advisor Healthcare Innovation American Association of American Medical Colleges

The world that we have made as a result of a level of thinking we have done thus far creates problems that we cannot solve at the same level of thinking we created them at.

–Albert Einstein

Download PDF of Presentation

Fulfilling-the-Promise-and-Potential-of-Our-Academic-Health-Enterprises-David-S-Hefner

15 Essential Steps of IT Project Management

Hefner, D., & Malcolm, C. (2002). 15 essential steps of IT project management. Healthcare financial management : journal of the Healthcare Financial Management Association56(2), 76–78.

Healthcare CFOs often experience trepidation when presenting major information technology (IT) initiatives to their organizations’ boards for approval. The CFOs typically are concerned about whether such a project can be completed on time and within budget.
There is good reason for concern. A survey examining the results of 175,000 major IT projects in diverse businesses worldwide found that only 16 percent were completed on time and within budget. (a) Moreover, fewer than half of all projects (42 percent) delivered the intended functionality and nearly one-third (32 percent) were cancelled before completion. The survey report identifies poor project management as the largest factor contributing to the high failure rate.

Confronted with such low odds of success, a healthcare CFO should be circumspect when
considering which major IT projects to present to the board. Before promoting an IT initiative, the CFO needs to understand what project-management steps will be needed to optimize the chances for success. Effective IT project management generally depends on implementation of 15 essential steps.

1.Thoroughly evaluate project feasibility. Too often, haste to gain approval and begin a project may cause management to give minimal attention to this step, leading to unexpected problems in implementation, substantial cost and time overruns, and the tarnishing of the implementing department’s reputation. Requiring that a thorough project-feasibility assessment and informed-consent process be performed for all IT projects may slow the approval process, but it will help avert project failure later.

The feasibility analysis should include a list of preliminary architecture and design
specifications and a project-management plan proposal enumerating assumptions, required resources, constraints, and timelines. The informed-consent process should be conducted to obtain commitments from affected individuals and departments regarding staff and space availability, training schedules, approval processes, and competing priorities. Such a process also allows project designers to consider potential political and user-acceptance issues that could impede progress.

2. Clarify the project objectives and scope. Before initiating an IT project, the proposed timeline, cost and quality objectives, scope, and deliverables should be clearly defined and accepted by all potential participants. Failure to verify that all stakeholders agree to these basic project parameters can lead to confusion, wasted effort, needless duplication, and ultimately, project failure.

3. Make a single sponsor accountable for project success. Reporting to large steering
committees does not foster personal accountability among project participants. A clearly
identified executive sponsor should be responsible for the success of the overall project
implementation. The sponsor should be charged with monitoring progress constantly and
resolving issues that impede progress. This person should be supported by a steering
committee that provides oversight and serves as a forum for communications and problem
solving.

4. Appoint a full-time project manager. One individual should oversee the day-to-day
management, execution, and delivery of the project. The project manager should track progress and report results to the project sponsor. The appropriate candidate for this position should have broad experience with similar projects and should utilize well-tested processes and tools. A common mistake is to make a top performer in another area the project manager as a reward for good service. Without a manager experienced in IT implementation, a major IT initiative is almost certain to fail,

5. Establish a project-management team that can exercise real authority. A project management team should be formed as soon as the project sponsor is authorized to proceed. Although team membership will vary according to the specific project, the team should include interdisciplinary senior staff with sufficient analytical, technical, and project-related expertise to guide the project to completion.

Team members also should be capable of accessing the enterprise resources needed to ensure the project conforms to enterprise architecture from the applications, infrastructure, and technology perspectives. This team should have sufficient authority to control the activities and resources necessary to complete the agreed-upon deliverables within the set time frame.

Initially, such authority should be granted by the CEO and the board upon plan approval.
Obtaining the additional authority required to successfully complete a major IT initiative,
however, will depend upon the team’s ability to negotiate effective agreements with vendors and suppliers and build organization-wide acceptance over time by meeting commitments, recognizing and rewarding people for exemplary work, and developing trust with individual and department stakeholders.

6. Create a detailed project plan. A comprehensive project plan should be developed as a guide to all major activities (ie, those requiring 80 hours or more to complete), project deliverables, rollout timing, roles of team members, key risks, interdependencies, and approval processes.

The plan document should incorporate all formal, written agreements with external suppliers, internal suppliers, resource owners (eg, department managers), and end-users regarding their roles in the project.

7. Secure committed staff resources. The project manager should obtain formal, written commitments from department managers to allocate time for their staff to work on the project. Similar commitments regarding time and specific deliverables should be obtained from all assigned staff The need for such commitments should be sanctioned by executive leadership, thereby giving the project manager authority to demand that commitments be met. Managers will need to plan ahead to free up designated staff and secure additional staff resources as necessary to meet daily operational requirements.

8. Obtain commitments from vendors and suppliers. The project manager should be responsible for obtaining contractual commitments from all vendors and suppliers whose performance is required to complete the project and for monitoring vendor compliance with such commitments.

9. Divide project into manageable segments to reduce complexity. Complex projects can be simplified by separating them into clearly defined segments and assigning each to an individual or small group of team members for completion within a designated time frame. The segments should be easily combinable when finished.

10. Establish clear performance measures and report progress regularly. To assess project performance, a specific set of performance indicators should be identified. Useful measures that should be continuously monitored are achievement of milestones by target dates and accomplishment of tasks in accordance with defined expectations. Other performance measures should focus particularly on high-risk areas, such as end-user acceptance, satisfaction of the project sponsor, and whether changes and issues are being resolved expeditiously

Performance generally should be tracked at the task level by team members involved in performing the tasks. Reports then should be combined and summarized for presentation to the immediate supervisor. Supervisors then should present summaries to the project manager, who, in turn, periodically should prepare an overview of performance to the project sponsor and steering committee (with links to details that allow for drilling down again to the task level).

The project manager should be fearlessly honest in assessing and reporting performance and overall progress to the project sponsor. Discrepancies between expectations and actual performance should be discussed with the project sponsor and the team to reinforce personal and team accountability and develop contingency plans to correct problems, as necessary.

11. Take decisive, corrective action sooner rather than later. Resolve any performance variances quickly and decisively When project performance deviates substantially from the plan, the factor causing the problem should be quickly identified and eliminated (eg, an underperforming team member), or if it cannot be eliminated, steps should be taken to mitigate the factor’s negative effects (eg, reassignment of team members to provide additional support in areas where needed). If the problem is insurmountable, changes to the project budget, schedule, and/or deliverables should be negotiated without delay.

12. Establish and manage a formal change-control mechanism. Effective project management depends on diligent management of inevitable changes. All changes should be documented and incorporated into the project plan so everyone knows when and why the change was made. Such documentation should include the date the change was made and its effect on the approved plan. Failure to document changes can lead to confusion and team members working at cross purposes.

Changes beyond certain predetermined thresholds (eg, raising the cost above a designated amount, substantially delaying completion, or redefining deliverables) should require approval by the steering committee and be formalized in writing.

13. Proactively manage risk. IT projects typically involve a number of significant risks and controversial issues that can prevent the team from moving ahead. These issues often tend to be political in nature, reflecting some organizational constituents’ resistance to change or unwillingness to accept some of the facts of the project. For example, physicians may resist accepting an automatic order-entry system simply because they are accustomed to using manual processes.

The project manager should deal with such issues using formal, trackable processes, including escalation processes (ie, from within the project office, to the project sponsor, to the steering committee, to executive leadership, and finally, if necessary; to the CEO). In addition, all team members should be trained to recognize and monitor risks.

14. Develop a communication program to promote organization wide acceptance of the program. Managing organization change is a critical element of any program. Ongoing communication among project participants, stakeholders, and end-users should be promoted throughout the institution using multiple channels, including newsletters, e-mails, department meetings, and user focus groups. Early, clear, and consistent communication with stakeholders is critical to managing end-user expectations. Care should be taken to ensure all communications are audience-appropriate.

15. Celebrate successes. The project should have high visibility throughout its duration, and each milestone should be celebrated organization wide. Publicly acknowledging successes and demonstrating project momentum are effective ways to foster team coherence and the values that are intrinsic to high performance.

Conclusion

Major IT projects are risky for any healthcare organization. It is the healthcare CFO’s responsibility to minimize that risk by ensuring that such projects are managed effectively That begins with implementation of all 15 essential steps to IT program success.

David Hefner, MPA, is vice president, CSC’s Global Health Solutions Group, Chicago, Illinois.

Christine Malcolm, MBA, is vice president, CSC’s Global Health Solutions Group, Chicago, Illinois.

(a.) The chaos Report, west Yarmouth, Massachusetts: The Standish Group, 1994.

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