“We still find hospital
administrators more interested in market dynamics, mergers, and the like than
improving the quality and safety of care. We still find doctors untrained
in the use of the scientific method to achieve clinical processes. We
still see medical schools and residency training programs as woefully deficient
in such matters.”
And
from an article in Kaiser Health News today:
A recent study by researchers
at the Yale School of Medicine found that only a third of 400 elderly patients
were discharged with a follow-up doctor's appointment and 25 percent were
handed instructions written in impenetrable medical jargon.
Right. When I read about this, I am outraged. It gets to the core of professionalism.
I
learned this in internship. On rounds at UCSF, I said to my attending
pediatrician that the lab was very slow and unresponsive, and that as a result
the patient would just have to suffer. I was being passive aggressive,
and I knew, provocative.
He
turned to me with heat He said, "You will not do this! You will go
down to the lab and get those results personally!" (The attending was Henry Shinefield, a wonderful man and clinician, with whom I developed a very warm relationship.)
Structurally,
he was wrong. I would be enabling the lab's poor service. A system
correction was needed, and all the clinicians should have gone to
administration and demand they get the damn lab fixed.
But
his doctor's solution was also correct. The patient, the individual
patient, comes first, and the doctor's job is to get it fixed for the patient,
right now.
In
fact, to be successful, both views are needed, the clinician's impatience to fix the individual situation, and the the administrator's view to fix the system for everyone once and for all.
In
our 10-office practice, I taught our managers, "Patience is not a
virtue! Insist that things go right, right away. If you don't get a
fix on something, call me directly. That will be my job." I taught them not to have an "off
my plate" mentality. It's not off your plate if the problem is
simply on some else's plate now -- it's only off your plate when the problem is
fixed.
How successful was I at Bayside
in teaching organizational professionalism? I truly don’t know.
I think I changed some of the managers’ attitudes, maybe. I know they admired my point of view,
but how much could they adopt it themselves? Some did.
How successful was I with the
clinicians? I’m pretty sure they
were professionally responsible to their patients, one by one. How much were they responsible for
seeing that a system got changed?
Some, but not so much. This
depends a lot on leadership. I had
quarterly meetings in each office with an agenda that featured systemic
problems in the office from both the clinician’s and my own (leadership's) point of view. After each meeting I made sure to effect improvements
within a week, demonstrating to the clinicians that it was a responsible system. But since I sold the practice I
understand that the meetings have been sporadic at best and the Medical
Director does not attend. Leadership
is key.
It is hard to overstate
the importance of responsibility and persistence as ingredients of
success. As an executive, one
thinks: who takes the job seriously?
Professionals take it seriously; that’s what is meant by being a professional. Economics mixes us up by distinguishing
an amateur and a professional by accepting money or not. But the deeper meaning is the degree of
responsibility accepted. A true professional is someone who figures a problem is off his plate only when a problem is solved
systemically.
It is
so easy to talk about an "uncoordinated system," but within that
system are real people, who are taking responsibility or not. A system
will hold the individuals accountable, but a real top-quality professional will hold not only him or
herself accountable, but will hold the system accountable as well.
As in the above hospital example
with poor follow-up and undecipherable patient instructions, where are the
professional members of the system headed to the offices of the administrator
and the chief physician saying, how can you let this happen? Where is
your leadership in fixing this? Do we only see individuals doing their jobs with their patients,
heading down to the lab to get the results that should have been there at
morning rounds, enabling a poor system? Do we see ER docs readmitting patients, knowing they didn't have follow up appointments, knowing their instructions were indecipherable, and not insisting the leadership improve this performance? I don't think so. They might being a professional in the narrow sense, but it’s not
enough.
On the other hand, the profession called attention to the problem some 14 years ago (the Institute of Medicine report on safety), professionals conceived of this study and someone gave a grant for it, and a journal published it. In my view it's too much time and the cumbersomeness reveals a lack of true interior professionalism -- if everyone were professional in the system the research results would have been different -- but at least we're on the right road. It's just bumpy and meandering while people die and money is wasted, is all.
Budd Shenkin