If it’s not busy, one or more doctors may leave early. “This is nimble and responsive to the day-to-day workload,” says Dr. Nelson.
To move from a seven on, seven off schedule to this model, Dr. Nelson recommends that every doctor in the practice work 30 to 40 more days annually. A seven on, seven off schedule would have a physician work 182.5 days per year; if you decrease the hours per day and boost the number of working days to 220 a year, your physicians will be working the same number of hours, but in shorter days—even if the practice workload stays the same and each individual doctor’s annual productivity stays the same.
“It’s more realistic to work more days when they’re not so grueling,” says Dr. Nelson. “Plus, you have a built-in capacity to meet a sudden increase in workload. Imagine an eight-man group, where four doctors each work 12-hour shifts. Now imagine that instead of four, you get a fifth doctor to show up every day. [You can get this fifth doctor without adding staff if each doctor works more days annually.] When a day is unpredictably busy, the physicians won’t be absolutely overwhelmed. If it’s not busy, you can send someone home early. You get a lot more flexibility.”
For a hospital medicine group, implementing a flexible schedule such as this generally requires payment for production, which ties individual physicians into the economic health of their group. Compensation matches workload, allowing individual physicians to work to their values—more money or more free time.
“I think it’s better to pay on production,” says Dr. Nelson. “That way each person has the opportunity to choose. If one values money, he can volunteer to stay and work more and make more money. Each works to their own sweet spot, whereas a seven on, seven off schedule with rigidly defined shifts forces everyone to do the same thing.”
Physicians working on a flexible schedule still need to get their work finished each day, but they have more autonomy in how and when they get it done. “Doctors who work fast can go home early; physicians can decide for themselves the right balance for spending time each patient,” says Dr. Nelson. “As long as they understand there are economic consequences … and act with reasonableness. In our group, we get the work done. There’s no official start or stop time. Each of us chooses an individual work style. There are boundaries; the work needs to be done. There are costs as well, but I believe this system is healthy and liberating.” TH
Jane Jerrard regularly writes “Career Development.”