Turn-Around Efforts Start with a Look at Operations

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/community-rural/turn-around-efforts-start-look-operations?spMailingID=13157517&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1361851715&spReportId=MTM2MTg1MTcxNQS2

Image result for erosionSt

Even before a hospital shows signs of financial distress, the responsible action is to take a head-to-toe look at hospital operations to fully address financial and performance issues.

Hospital leaders may recognize the need for improvement but may not know where to turn. Since operations span the entire hospital, a head-to-toe operational assessment may be warranted to fully address financial and performance issues.

Following are high-level best practice tips that serve as cost-reduction and revenue enhancement strategies, and can help redirect an ailing situation toward a partial or full turnaround.

Evaluate labor and its costs. 
Labor costs typically account for 50 to 60 percent of a hospital’s operating revenue, so a thorough review of productivity is critical. While a productivity tool can help to set productivity targets, it also integrates a level of accountability toward helping to control labor expenses. Productivity standards, manager involvement, and executive oversight will move you toward your goals of greater efficiency while reducing labor costs.

Analyze supply costs.  
Second only to labor costs, supply spend represents significant expense for hospitals. Often, small hospitals don’t have the negotiating power, so look to the expertise of a group purchasing organization (GPO), or evaluate whether you have the right GPO with your interests in mind. The right GPO relationship can mean supply savings from 10 to 14 percent.

One key area to look at is your supply inventory. Have quantities been adjusted based on volumes, or types of procedures such as those performed in orthopedics or the cath lab? It may be possible to work with vendors to be charged for supplies when they’re needed (just-in-time delivery) versus overstocking for procedures that may be scheduled; this practice helps to free up dollars for other purposes. Also examine inventory “turns,” the number of times per year that supplies are being replaced. Based on our experience, a reasonable level of inventory turn is 9 to 12 times per year.

Examine revenue cycle management. 
Because the revenue cycle is a complex function, points in the process may be overlooked or broken. Your hospital may also face common challenges such as keeping your chargemaster current and competitively priced, and keeping up with each payer’s unique rates and payment methodology.

Additional areas to evaluate and address: ·

  • Have managed care contracts been updated or renegotiated? ·
  • Compare charges to reimbursement. Although you may be charging for an item at a fixed cost, it doesn’t necessarily mean that you will be reimbursed at that level.

Move ahead with greater confidence. 
Your overall action plans should identify who is responsible and accountable for each area of evaluation and opportunity. The discipline of frequent review helps to ensure that you are not drifting off the plan and that progress is occurring across all areas. A new level of accountability across team members is one indication that you have arrived. Be mindful that it does take time and diligence to impact turnaround efforts.

Hospital Chain’s CEO Faces Lawsuit Over Business Practices

http://www.wsj.com/articles/hospital-chains-ceo-faces-lawsuit-over-business-practices-1470021573

Prem Reddy, head of Prime Healthcare, is known for his aggressive turnaround strategies.

Hedge fund-backed Bay Area health system sees C-suite shake up

http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/news/2016/08/02/hedge-fund-healthcare-verity-health-system-c-suite.html

Less than eight months after becoming CEO of Verity Health System, the successor to the former Daughters of Charity Health System, Mitchell Creem, has been demoted to chief administrative officer. Verity also hired a new COO, B. Joseph Badalian, it disclosed today.

The Redwood City-based system’s board of directors replaced Creem as CEO late last week with Andrei Soran, who was initially hired in April as president and COO.

Verity disclosed the “restructuring of the system’s executive team” on July 28. Board chairman Jack Krouskup said the new CEO “will continue to lead the efforts to revitalize our Verity hospitals to ensure that they continue to serve our communities across California for generations to come.”

Badalian, most recently CEO at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital and Medical Center in Southern California, a for-profit Tenet Healthcare Corp. (NYSE: THC) hospital, is set to start in the new job Sept. 1.

Why revamp the leadership team less than eight months in? “A turnaround is all hands on deck,” Soran told the Business Times late last week. “It’s a major effort, a fairly major turnaround.”

4 key factors in a hospital’s financial turnaround plan

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/4-key-factors-in-a-hospital-s-financial-turnaround-plan.html

INTERIM HEALTHCARE CHIEF RESTRUCTURING OFFICER (CRO) – A CEO’S MOST POWERFUL ALLY DURING TRANSFORMATION

http://www.jacksonexecutives.com/2016/07/19/interim-healthcare-chief-restructuring-officer-cro/

Interim CROs

When the survival of the organization is at stake and things have reached crisis proportions, traditional chief restructuring officers are a solid option and best fit. A CRO immediately brings credibility and objectivity to the restructuring process, while stabilizing the ranks and quickly devising a plan to lead the turnaround.

Confidence builders and skilled communicators, they bring deep financial and industry-specific experience. This allows them to identify the root cause(s) of under-performing organizations, and to work in concert with CEOs to transform organizations from the inside out using strong strategic and negotiation skills.

What FDR Knew About Managing Fear in Times of Change

https://hbr.org/2016/05/what-fdr-knew-about-managing-fear-in-times-of-change?utm_campaign=HBR&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social

may16-04-515411440

http://www.history.com/topics/us-presidents/franklin-d-roosevelt/videos/inaugural-address-franklin-d-roosevelt

 

Ellen Auster and Lisa Hillenbrand on “Stragility”: An interview by Bob Morris

https://ffbsccn.wordpress.com/2016/05/01/ellen-auster-and-lisa-hillenbrand-on-stragility-an-interview-by-bob-morris/

Stragility

Success story: Faced with closure five years ago, Florida hospital now in the black

http://www.fiercehealthfinance.com/story/success-story-faced-closure-five-years-ago-florida-hospital-now-black/2014-08-22?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

FierceHealthFinance

MEMO to CEOs Seeking Turnaround Assignments

http://www.johngself.com/self-perspective/2014/10/memo-ceos-seeking-turnaround-assignments/?utm_source=Self+Perspective+from+JohnGSelf+Associates&utm_campaign=fc26e6d860-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_70effc545f-fc26e6d860-88600789