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Page 1: Private practice–  your next adventure

Private practice– your next adventure

Tom Archer, MD, MBAUCSD Anesthesia

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What Do All of These Jobs Have in Common?

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We are all workers in service industries!

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Does This Fact Make You Uncomfortable?

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Competition Implies That the Customer is Free to Choose Between Competing Alternatives

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Competition

• Aren’t we doctors above that?

• Doesn’t competition lead to haste and errors?

• Isn’t competition grubby?

• Shouldn’t the public just trust us to do the right thing?

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Competition• A fact of life in private medicine.

• You are competing with other anesthesia groups and with other anesthesiologists in your own group.

• The challenge is to maintain a high level of service without compromising safety.

• Whether you like it or not, personal relations are every bit as important as technical or “medical” skill.

• The 3 “ables” of the anesthesiologist: Available, Affable, Able.

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Arrogance or Apathy– Not an Option

• You will be expected to be a “team player.”

• If you are apathetic or unresponsive…

• Your customers will take their business elsewhere.

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The Patient as Customer

• Patients are more demanding than 30 years ago.

• Scrutiny of medical practice (by everyone) has intensified.

• Physician is still a respected authority figure, but…

• Physician must realize that she has to please customers and is part of a team.

• The days of prima donnas are over.

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Are We In Business?Or Are We Practicing Medicine?

• Isn’t business all about money?

• Doesn’t business subordinate quality, ethics and patient care to the Almighty Dollar?

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Are we in business?Or practicing medicine?

• Is there a conflict between business and medicine?

• NO!

• Good medicine implies good business, and vice versa.

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The business of medicine

• Efficiency, quality and customer service never go out of style.

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The Business of Medicine

• In a competitive health care environment, providers will give the best care they can at the lowest price.

• Competition fosters improvement and innovation.

• State health care monopolies foster slow, inefficient and bureaucratic care.

• Academic medicine frequently lacks incentives for production (monopolistic mind-set).

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Good doctors and good business people:

• Give the best customer service they can (technical care, bedside manner, punctuality, courtesy).

• Don’t waste time or resources.

• Know their customer’s needs and wants.

• Know how to work in teams.

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Service and safety issues• Safety Issues are sacrosanct and must not be

compromised.

• Service issues (start times, cases on Saturday and Sunday, after midnight, etc.) are negotiable.

• You need to clearly understand the difference.

• Monopolies (us?) often camouflage a desire to avoid service as a safety issue.

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Customers and the Golden Rule

• Modern business philosophy: patients, family, surgeons, nurses, administration, technicians– these people are all our CUSTOMERS.

• This is really a restatement of the GOLDEN RULE:

• Treat your customers– your fellow human beings-- with respect and with consideration for their aspirations, needs and fears .

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Private practice– what will it be like?

• Possible contrasts with academic medical centers:

– Faster pace (no one is in training).

– Great emphasis on good interpersonal relations (being nice) and consistent, good results. No rewards for originality or extra frills.

– Emphasis on collegiality rather than conflict (everyone’s earnings depend on everyone’s actions).

– Pay is based on cases performed– not on salary.

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Anesthesia groups are not all the same!

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Anesthesia Groups

• Look at more than just:

– Types of cases and how much money you will earn.

– Work hours, call schedule, vacations and CRNAs supervised.

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Anesthesia Group Culture

• Some groups are healthy and promote the happiness and prosperity of their members.

• Other groups are dysfunctional and full of psychopathology.

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What Does Your Gut Say?• Do people seem happy?

• Do group members seem to like one another? Or do they gossip with a newcomer like you?

• Do members appear over-worked, unhappy, and yet greedy for more cases?

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Are New Group Members Treated Barbarically?

• They get poorly paying cases.

• More nights and weekends.

• Buy-ins are excessive.• Many new hires don’t

make partner. They get booted out before they become eligible for partnership.

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How are the MDs compensated?

• What is the incentive structure?

• What behaviors are rewarded?

• What behaviors are penalized?

tarcher
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Straight Salary• You get paid the same whether you

do a lot of cases or not.

• More common in academic settings.

• Does NOT reward production or efficiency.

• Disadvantage: slackers can slack off.

• Big advantage: allows time for teaching, research, innovation and careful, methodical care.

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“Eat What You Kill” (Type 1)• “Fee for Service” from

individual patient.

• You receive specific collections from patients whom you anesthetize.

• If you have indigent patients, you earn ZERO!

• If you have all insured patients, you earn mega-bucks.

• FTC: Price-fixing via sham corporation?

• Fraught with abuse potential– schedule manipulation, etc.

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“Eat What You Kill” (Type 2)• “Fee for Service”

(Based on Group Average Unit).

• Money is pooled for entire group. Your month’s income = Group’s Total Collections X (Your Units / Total Group’s Units)

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“Eat What You Kill” (Type 2)

• In my opinion, EWYK Type 2 is the best system for private practice.

• This system rewards work and efficiency and ignores payer mix.

• Schedule manipulation and lies just stop.

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Do You Hear About Conflicts Over Anesthesia Service?

• Do surgeons want more night and weekend coverage than group wants to provide?

• Do the anesthesiologists have a “can-do” service orientation?

• Does the group work with nursing and administration to provide service as a team?

• Or does the group blame nursing or other hospital employees for inadequate service?

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Who runs the group?

• A group of old cronies, in a murky and capricious manner? Or…

• An elected Board of Directors?

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How does the medical community view the anesthesia group?

• As money-grubbing technicians? Or…

• As team players?

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Is the “group” really a group, with a clear business purpose?

• Yes, the group takes care of all the patients in an efficient and compassionate manner.

• No, the so-called group is a loveless marriage of convenience between competing individuals.

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A Good Anesthesia Group

• Healthy, happy individuals, who enjoy caring for their patients.

• Internally, the group functions as an anesthesia team, with a clear business purpose.

• Minimal to no schedule manipulation, cheating and lying.

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A Good Anesthesia Group

• Externally, the group works constructively with nursing and hospital administration to provide care as a hospital-based team.

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A Good Anesthesia Group

• The compensation structure aligns individual incentives with business goals.

• Best system is income pooling with individual compensation proportional to services provided.

• Individuals who participate on Medical Staff and hospital committees are respected and rewarded.

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The New Member (You)

• Well trained.

• Knowledgeable.

• Eager.

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Advice for the new member:• Be humble– there’s more than one way to

skin a cat.

• Ask lots of questions– and learn!

• Try to understand why they do what they do– it MAY make sense! (Or it may not!)

• Ask the established and respected practitioners how they would do things.

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One Final Note

• Try really hard to be respectful, pleasant and courteous to EVERYONE.

• I am VERY serious about this and this is VERY important.

• Arrogance and being a jerk is our most common mistake.

• This point has nothing to do with your “technical” care, but it has everything to do with your success in your new work environment.

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Good Luck!