How to Discourage a Doctor (Repost)

hopeless-discouraged-signThis comes from The Health Care Blog.  It’s brilliant – well worth the 5 minutes you need to read it (1200 words).

Read the article and replace ‘hospital’ with ‘government’ or ‘regional health authority’ to the same effect.  I encourage you to check out the site for other great content.

Here’s the full article:

How to Discourage a Doctor

by Richard Gunderman MD

Not 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 paper bulging from both pockets – feel out of place.

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 well-dressed man’s employer. Fearing that he would return any moment to retrieve it, I perused it as quickly as possible. My recollection of its contents is naturally somewhat imperfect, but I can reproduce the gist of what it said.

“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 account for as much as 80% of the nation’s healthcare budget. To maintain a favorable balance sheet, hospital executives need to gain control of their physicians. Most hospitals have already taken an important step in this direction by employing a growing proportion of their medical staff.

“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 have invested many years in learning their craft, they hold their professional autonomy in high esteem, and they take seriously the considerable respect and trust with which many patients still regard them.

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 one of the dimmer peripheral planets, a Neptune or perhaps Uranus.

“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 coding and billing software. Ensure that such systems are very costly, so that solo practitioners and small groups, who naturally cannot afford them, must turn to the hospital. And augment their sense of incompetence by making such systems user-unfriendly and unreliable. Where possible, change vendors
frequently.

“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
to feel beholden to hospital administration for what they manage to eke out.

“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, but instead to apply broad practice guidelines to the care of all patients. Hiring, firing, promotion, and all rewards should be based on conformity to hospital-mandated policies and procedures.

“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 benchmarks in comparison to which their output is subpar. On the off chance that their productivity compares favorably, cite numerous reasons that such benchmarks are biased and move the bar
progressively higher, from the 75th

“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 do, they cannot meaningfully influence healthcare, which is to say the operations of the hospital.

“Above all, introduce barriers between physicians and their patients. The more directly
physicians 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 hospital, and when patients realize they need care, they should turn first to the hospital, not a particular physician. One effective technique is to ensure that patient-physician relationships are frequently disrupted, so that the hospital remains the one constant. Another is. . . .”

The sound of a door roused me again. The man in the three-piece suit emerged from the office, he and the hospital executive to whom he had been speaking shaking hands and smiling. As he turned, I looked about. Where was “How to Discourage a Doctor?” It was not on the table, nor was it on the chair where I had first found it. “Will he think I took it?” I wondered. But instead of stopping to look for it, he simply walked out of the office. As I watched him go, one thing became clear: having read that document, I suddenly felt a lot less discouraged.

Photo credit: money.cnn.com

Doctors’ Protest Misguided?

bc-health-clinics29Doctors take an oath to work for patients’ needs. Doctors advocate when no one else will…at least docs like to think they do.

Most people probably don’t associate physicians with public demonstrations, marches or chanting.  When physicians finally get inflamed enough to walk the streets waving placards, what do they protest?

Probably some terrible patient suffering, right?

Guess which of the following problems pulls physicians into a protest march:

Current Problems Doctors Could Protest

No, doctors do not march against any of these.  Many would argue that protest marches don’t help, but some doctors think they do.

So what makes doctors-who-march angry enough to protest?

Last week some Canadian physicians joined a protest march because patients paid for medical care in Canada:

B.C. doctors urge provincial ministers to take a stand on public health care.

“…urging [politicians] to protect medicare…”

Protesters allege “…the profit that you can make from illness and suffering is absolutely tremendous.” The “absolutely tremendous profits” some make in Medicare were not mentioned.

Dr. Vanessa Brcic of the B.C. Health Coalition admits “Wait lists are unacceptably long in some cases… but for-profit health care is not the answer.” As if profit does not exist in the current system.

A Personal Story

My friend living out west needed spine surgery.  He couldn’t work and suffered daily.  He got referred to an Orthopedic surgeon (orthopod).

He waited for an appointment.  And waited.  And waited…

Finally, he paid for spine surgery at the Cambie clinic.  His financial losses from disability dwarfed the surgical fee.  He went to work pain free soon after surgery.

Much later – after being back at work for weeks – a secretary called with an appointment for the orthopod.

Blind Numb Misguided

Patients at the Cambie clinic get pain relief, go back to work and return to normal life.  They access care on their own terms.

Why will some physicians march against clinics like Cambie but say little about patient suffering due to system failure?

Have we become blind or numb to morbidity caused by Medicare malfunction?  After 45 years of rationing and controlled services, have we forgotten outrage when it causes patient harm? How will those in the future view our complacency when they look back on us now?

What do you think: Does it seem misguided when doctors protest to protect a system that pays them well but lets patients suffer?

photo credit: Globe and Mail

Big Business Created Big Labour

unionistsBig Labour wouldn’t exist if big business hadn’t incited it.  The balance of power swings back and forth between them.

Before big business, peasants’ labour made wealthy Lords richer.  They say the feudal manor system grew by robbery and usurpation.

The industrial revolution widened the gap between owners and peasants creating Dickensian dystopia.  The state supported concentration of power and enforced work discipline.

Unrestrained greed kept workers under heel.  It’s no wonder Marx’s ideas flourished.

Finally workers united.

They struck back with clenched fists.  Workers fought against greed and usurpation.  They held high moral ground.

They got laws changed.

Big Labour Won!

Unions gave us 

  • Weekends
  • All Breaks at Work, including your Lunch Breaks
  • Paid Vacation
  • Sick Leave
  • Social Security
  • Minimum Wage
  • Civil Rights Act/Title VII (Prohibits Employer Discrimination)
  • 8-Hour Work Day
  • Overtime Pay
  • Child Labor Laws
  • Occupational Safety & Health Act (OSHA)
  • 40 Hour Work Week
  • Worker’s Compensation (Worker’s Comp)
  • Unemployment Insurance
  • Pensions
  • Workplace Safety Standards and Regulations
  • Employer Health Care Insurance
  • Collective Bargaining Rights for Employees
  • Wrongful Termination Laws
  • Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967
  • Whistleblower Protection Laws
  • Employee Polygraph Protect Act (Prohibits Employer from using a lie detector test on an employee)
  • Veteran’s Employment and Training Services (VETS)
  • Compensation increases and Evaluations (Raises)
  • Sexual Harassment Laws
  • Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA)
  • Holiday Pay
  • Employer Dental, Life, and Vision Insurance
  • Privacy Rights
  • Pregnancy and Parental Leave
  • Military Leave
  • The Right to Strike
  • Public Education for Children
  • Equal Pay Acts of 1963 & 2011 (Requires employers pay men and women equally for the same amount of work)
  • Laws Ending Sweatshops in the United States

“History became legend.  Legend became myth…”

Time has passed.  Society changed.

Today, Big Labour acts like manor Lords.  Closing factories means nothing if Labour doesn’t get its way.  Unionists inflame workers with Dickensian tales.  Unions control politicians even more than the industrialists before them.

Big Labour appeals to envy and greed.

“Not fair!” comes out of a child’s mouth hardly a year after learning “No!” and “Mine!”  Unions appeal to atavistic passion inciting guttural cries over our peers.

Another Revolution?

Like so many revolutions before – Russian, French, Cuban – despots get dispatched to make room for dictators.

Do we need a movement to limit Big Labour?

Who will save us?  Who will restore balance to the insatiable greed driving unions to put self before customer?  Who will speak for patients?