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Abstract
The rate of change in combination with the scope and magnitude and the need for increased efficacy in healthcare operations are on the rise, especially with the advent of a plethora of patient needs in the post-COVID-19 world. Senior leaders in the field are faced with various operational and financial challenges on account of the new and rapidly rising patient requirements in the healthcare sector, and, instead of optimising existing resources to meet current challenges, they are often persuaded to just add on new programmes, leaving the existing programmes to languish. Thus, to circumvent some of the major issues in healthcare operations, a more effective strategy has to be pursued than the usual one of simply buying and implementing a new productivity system with updated targets or performance benchmarks. The solution is to assess the efficacy and profitability of existing improvement programmes and resources in the advent of a new set of requirements: deploying burst versus incremental improvement; engaging middle managers to enable their solutions; and achieving organisation speed, spread and scalability across the organisation [Caldwell, C., Cook, K., (2020), ‘Achieving speed, spread, scalability, and sustainability in health systems’, American College of Healthcare Executives-Cluster Session, Clearwater, FL, 17–20th January]. This paper describes how Dignity Health East Valley was able to optimise the use of existing performance improvement resources and deploy an accelerated improvement structure to achieve rapid gains, followed by incremental improvement to both sustain and further the gains made. The approach included mentoring middle managers to become adaptive change agents and achieve 5 per cent improvement in margins in six months. The burst method described in this paper is based on the findings from the research undertaken by top-performing hospitals that identified five essential characteristics that healthcare’s frontline leaders are expected to possess and which are a clear mark of their leadership skills and competence [Caldwell, C., Cook, K., (2020), ‘Achieving speed, spread, scalability, and sustainability in health systems’, American College of Healthcare Executives-Cluster Session, Clearwater, FL, 17–20th January]. The paper presents the background to this research as well as the structure that builds these top-performer capabilities in the front-line team in order for them to lead change and drive its implementation. The positive results that emerged from the leadership training provided to frontline leaders are substantial, including improved margin, higher patient experience and higher employee engagement.
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Author's Biography
Tim Alba , FACHE, is a partner of Caldwell Butler & Associates. As a leader in an innovative firm specialising in the deployment of adaptive leadership strategies that improve hospital performance, he conducts research on enablers of top-performing organisations and serves as a senior-leader coach for client hospital executives seeking to establish a transformational management culture. Formerly as vice-president of strategic partnerships with Aramark Healthcare, Alba developed and managed third-party relationships with Group Purchasing Organisations (GPOs), consulting firms, shared services organisations and leading industry professional associations. Also, he has held leadership roles at Premier and SunHealth Alliance where his experience included operational and clinical performance improvement, cost accounting, patient throughput, benchmarking; and pay for performance at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. His publications include papers in the Journal for Clinical Engineering, Managed Care Quarterly, Topics in Health Care Financing, Journal of Cardiovascular Management and Quality Management in Healthcare. Alba is an advisory board member for organisations seeking to resolve and manage disruptive innovations in healthcare. His current board appointments include Glenn Llopis Group (author of Leadership in the Age of Standardization) and co-chair for the Association of Innovation in Integrated Healthcare.
Mark F. Slyter , DSc, FACHE, served as president and chief executive officer for General Health System, in Baton Rouge, LA, a three-hospital system with 686 beds, two regional-referral and academic-medicalcentre campuses, a rehabilitation facility and clinics. During his tenure, Baton Rouge General Mid-City Hospital transformed into a post-acute specialty campus, achieving improved operating margins, reduced costs and high patient-satisfaction and employee engagement scores. Prior to joining General Health System, Mark was president and chief executive officer at Mississippi Baptist Health Systems, in Jackson, MS, where he enhanced operating margins and efficiencies while dramatically increasing patient satisfaction. Mark has served in healthcare administration since obtaining a master’s degree in health services administration at the University of Kansas in 1996. Last year, he obtained a PhD in health services administration from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Citation
Alba, Tim and Slyter, Mark F. (2023, March 1). Harnessing our greatest asset: Solving margin issues by investing in frontline leaders. In the Management in Healthcare: A Peer-Reviewed Journal, Volume 7, Issue 3. https://doi.org/10.69554/GSLE3938.Publications LLP