BY: ALAN M. ZUCKERMAN
Mr. Zuckerman is president, Health Strategies & Solutions, Philadelphia.
Not Just for Successful Hospitals, Strategic Thinking Can Also Help One
Trapped in a Downward Spiral
Articles about health care frequently tout the theoretical benefits of strategic
planning, or, on the other hand, describe process improvements that could make
strategic planning more effective. Although strategic planning is a common management
practice in today's health care organizations, its practical application
often diverges from its theoretical benefits. Strategic planning in not-for-profit
organizations should improve financial performance and mission effectiveness.
But it often doesn't, which leads to disagreement among health care professionals
about its value.
Most health care strategic planning appears to take place in organizations
that are already successful and in which the impetus behind such planning is
to manage and focus future growth. It is sometimes hard to measure the contribution
strategic planning makes to future organizational success in these situations.
Far less common is strategic planning in an organization caught in a downward
spiral, perhaps already in financial difficulty. The management challenge in
these organizations is quite acute and short-term in nature: It is to reverse
the losses before they are fatal to the organization, stabilize a shaky situation,
or sell the organization or merge it with another organization. Managers facing
these choices rarely have the time or inclination to think critically about
anything other than the immediate problems. In such situations, strategic planning
is largely impractical.
However, there are instances when financially troubled health care organizations
should consider using strategic planning along with operations improvement to
stabilize their situations. Organizations that exhibit the following characteristics
may be viable candidates for this approach:
- The organization is firmly entrenched in the community, with strong ownership/governance,
community support and recognition, and significant position in the market.
- The organization has a sizable patient base (even if it is diminishing).
- The organization has a new CEO and leadership team.
In such cases, strategic planning and operations improvement should be carried
out concurrently and continuously. In contrast to the situation common in health
care organizations today, neither strategic planning nor operations improvement
is a one-time event with a start date and finish date. Rather, both are instituted
as ongoing management processes, so that the disciplines of strategic management
(rather than strategic planning) and continuous improvement of operations and
financial management (rather than periodic cost cutting and crisis management)
replace the less effective traditional approaches.
Also in contrast to the usual and customary practices in health care today,
strategic planning or strategic management must include a strong orientation
to near-term operations and financial improvement, so that the processes overlap,
interrelate, and are synergistic for optimal organizational benefit. The continuous
nature of these processes should be incorporated into the workflow of regular
management routines, although some unpredictable peaks and valleys in time and
effort will occur.
A Case Study
Let's hypothesize that an organization we will call the Christian Healthcare
System (CHS) is an integrated delivery system operating in a midsized metropolitan
area. CHS's experiences are quite similar to those of an actual health
system. Our fictional system belongs to a larger system that has members in
three states. CHS is the largest member of this overall system, and its fortunes
therefore have a disproportionate effect on the system as a whole.
CHS consists of five hospitals, a multispecialty medical group, and a continuing
care division. It has a broad scope of services, including nearly all tertiary
services. Four of CHS's hospitals are located in the city itself, which
means that the system is somewhat underrepresented in the growing suburban areas
to the north, west, and south of the city. CHS's total operating revenue
in FY2004 was approximately $800 million.
There are 20 hospitals in the four-county metropolitan area, and the local
health care market is highly competitive. Over the past decade, it has experienced
a shrinking acute-care patient base similar to that found in other aging, declining
northern cities. As a result, 17 of the 20 hospitals now belong to one of five
different systems. CHS's primary competitor—which also has five hospitals
in the market—owns facilities in a number of other locations in the state.
Lagging Behind the Competition
CHS was outperformed competitively throughout the late 1990s and saw its market
share decline precipitously. In a five-year period ending in 2002, CHS's
inpatient share dropped from 30 percent to 24 percent. Each of the other four
competing systems implemented successful strategies that negatively affected
CHS. CHS's financial position also deteriorated, culminating in a $15 million
loss on operations in 2001. To compound matters, CHS had underinvested in its
physical plants and faced enormous capital expenditures to upgrade its facilities
to increase its competitiveness.
Launching an Organizational Turnaround
In early 2001, a change of leadership occurred at CHS. A new CEO was in place
by late spring. After a brief evaluation period, he began rebuilding and upgrading
the system's management team so that it would be in a position to attack
the operational, financial, and strategic problems CHS faced.
Concurrent interdependent strategic, operational, and financial improvement
processes were begun. Although the strategic process was largely oriented toward
reversing the market-share losses that the system was experiencing, and the
operational and financial processes were focused on near-term financial improvements,
there was considerable overlap and interrelationships among the three processes.
The major near-term initiatives carried out in the operational/financial planning
process included:
- Revenue Cycle Management CHS's new leaders instituted a series
of changes to both the "front end" (e.g., coding, collection of
co-pays) and the "back end" (e.g., management of significantly overdue
accounts, managed care contracts, compliance) of revenue capture.
- Rate Recalibration CHS's new leaders revised the rate structure
considerably, so that rates comparable to those of the system's competitors
were charged and inconsistencies in the rate structure were eliminated.
- Managed Care Contract Modifications CHS's new leaders scrutinized
each contract, and as contracts came up for renewal, renegotiated their terms
and rates; one capitation arrangement was eliminated.
- Medical Group Losses CHS's new leaders implemented many changes
to trim the substantial losses incurred by the medical group, including a
myriad of expense-reduction measures; by far, the most substantial changes
were revisions in incentive contracts with physicians.
- Agency Staffing CHS's new leaders launched ongoing efforts to
replace agency staff with employed staff, with significant reductions in agency
use to date.
- Program Divestiture and Reduction CHS's new leaders reduced
some programs in scope and restructured or eliminated others. For example,
they outsourced dialysis, eliminated pain-management services, and downsized
behavioral health programs.
These short-term initiatives aimed at operational and financial improvement
have been supplemented by a broad range of longer-term initiatives, the most
significant of which involve:
- Instituting a comprehensive fund-raising program
- Implementing quality improvement in major clinical areas and in each operating
unit
- Launching efforts to heighten employee sensitivity to patient and customer
concerns, thereby increasing patient satisfaction with both the care provided
and the CHS experience overall
- Introducing a new human resources and organizational development program
- Improving the appearance of CHS facilities in the context of campus-specific
master plans
All these operational and financial changes are occurring within the framework
of a total CHS-wide strategy for improvement and are being managed on a continuous
basis both at the system level and within each operating unit.
Incorporating Strategic Planning
CHS's new leaders also carried out strategic planning with short-term
and longer-term emphases. Deficiencies in emergency services, medical/surgical
services, obstetrics, and ambulatory care made it difficult to stop CHS's
market share slide. In each case, these deficiencies were reflected in an unusually
weak market position in the "backyard"—the surrounding zip codes—of
the hospital involved. CHS's leaders focused their near-term efforts on
recapturing share in those "backyards," putting particular emphasis
on strengthening core business areas. They:
- Made operational improvements that increased the efficiency of the system's
emergency services
- Persuaded physicians who split their time between hospitals to provide more
care at CHS facilities, and began to adopt a physician-friendly culture and
set of behaviors to support this effort
- Developed a network of easy-to-access, off-site ambulatory care centers
that complemented operational improvements in hospital-based ambulatory care
In their strategic planning, CHS's new leaders identified a number of
areas in which sustained, longer-term effort would be needed to improve competitive
position. They launched major strategic initiatives in the following areas.
Medical Staff Development CHS's new leaders launched a multiyear,
multifaceted effort to address primary care shortages, inadequate business from
physicians who split their practices among multiple hospitals, and numerous
specialty needs. In particular, they began to recruit physicians new to the
market, including graduates from the system's own residency programs, and
instituted a comprehensive medical staff-relations program to improve satisfaction
and increase utilization by affiliated physicians.
Program Development CHS's new leaders launched a campaign to build
strong programs in the important areas of cardiovascular disease, oncology,
and women's health.
Ambulatory Care CHS's new leaders discussed plans to develop a
significant presence in the high-growth, suburban markets in the region.
Post-Acute Care CHS's new leaders recognized that the system's
home care and care management programs were well-known in the local market and
thus represented strengths that could be built on and capitalized on.
Identity/Branding CHS's new leaders, determining that the system's
market image was confused, mandated the development of a clear, consistent image
in its public relations and advertising.
Interdependence of Strategic and Operational Improvement
The area of capital allocation is one where the interdependence of CHS's
strategic and operational improvement processes can easily be illustrated. Strategically,
CHS required capital for a multitude of program investments. It also needed
capital for operational reasons: the upgrading and improvement of aging physical
plants. Unfortunately, when the system's new leadership team assumed control
in 2001, the capital requests from the five CHS entities far exceeded the available
funds.
During the initial capital budgeting process, CHS's new leaders instituted
a fair and rational system for evaluating and assigning a priority to each capital
project request. As a result, they were able to fund the highest-priority needs,
including some projects that had a primary strategic thrust, others that had
a primary operational-improvement thrust, and still others whose contributions
were mainly financial improvement.
Most funded projects made important contributions in two or all three of the
improvement areas. Typical of the funded projects were those at the flagship
hospital, which focused on program development in the critical areas of women's
services, cancer, and cardiovascular care; significant expansion of a subsidiary
facility in an affluent, rapidly growing suburb; and development of six freestanding
ambulatory care centers in highly strategic locations. The capital budgeting
process, which was subsequently refined and improved in 2002 (with continued
improvement annually since then), has made clear contributions to CHS's
recovery.
CHS's new leaders have geared strategic, operational, and financial improvement
toward achieving measurable progress in a number of key areas. Although market-share
targets and volume growth in selected areas constitute the main measures of
market success, improvement in patient satisfaction, designated quality/outcome
indicators, and progress toward the main components of an "A" bond
rating profile provide a series of important indicators against which operational
and financial improvement may be measured. And regular measurement, evaluation,
and redirection are part of the continuous nature of the processes implemented.
Keeping Sight of Mission
Although CHS's new leaders have obviously emphasized critical strategic,
operational, and financial improvements, they have also insisted that mission
integration remain an important and active goal of the system. They have, along
with the strategic and operational initiatives, developed and implemented important
changes in the system's ethics and spiritual service policies. They have
also launched an enhanced and expanded mission and value integration initiative,
involving employees at all levels of the organization. Since the system had
languished for a number of years prior to the arrival of the new CEO, employee
morale and connectedness to the organization were key issues. The spiritual
dimensions of care, which had been deemphasized during the system's downward
spiral, needed to be revitalized.
Tallying the Results
Many of CHS's impressive accomplishments are worthy of mention. Most notably,
significant financial improvement has occurred. The operating margin increased
from -2.5 percent in 2001 to 3.1 percent in 2002, and then to more than 5 percent
in 2003, and was maintained at the 2003 level through 2004. The cash flow turned
positive in 2002, at the same time as the catch-up on capital spending began.
Capital improvements are currently—and visibly—in progress throughout
the system; these improvements, which will result in major upgrades in capacities,
have already generated significant physician and employee interest and approval.
Inpatient market share appeared to stabilize in mid-2003 and modest gains were
recorded in the second half of the year; these continued through 2004. Outpatient
visits in 2003 ran ahead of budget, and the increases suggest market-share gains
in several areas of outpatient service as well; these have continued, too.
The CHS case study is illuminating in many ways, but is especially noteworthy
for its illustration of the ability of leadership to rapidly bring an organization
from financial distress to financial health while, at the same time, refusing
to be so shortsighted as to neglect the need to develop a sustainable strategic
plan of action.
And unlike many other organizations that have demonstrated significant near-term
improvements, CHS has put the processes in place to continue to reap the benefits
of ongoing strategic management interrelated with operational and financial
improvements. These regular, continuous, interdependent processes will allow
CHS to progress on all fronts in the future, creating, developing, and implementing
the improvements necessary for it to remain a vital and progressive health care
provider in the region.