Step No. 3 mandates that hospitalists capitalize on reform opportunities by designing process-improvement strategies through critical analysis and innovative thinking. Connors and colleagues define this step as “solving it.” Contributing to “solving it” is a fundamental job responsibility of every hospitalist, and not the exclusive province of hospitalist leaders. HM clinicians focusing primarily on bedside care must actively participate in the process of solving the problems that currently plague our healthcare system.
To do so should not necessitate an overly burdensome time commitment. It is often sufficient to simply attend and actively participate in your team and hospital staff meetings. At other times, it might be necessary for you to volunteer an hour or so once a month in service to a hospital committee or a team activity. Contributing your observations and thoughts in these forums is essential to creating effective solutions. Although you might not be the ultimate decision-maker, you have an obligation to build a broad collective understanding of the issues through the voicing of your opinions.
According to “The Oz Principle,” “solving it is not an extra activity, but part of the job.” Each of us has a professional obligation to identify better methods to deliver high-value healthcare. Doing so necessitates that we each identify improvement opportunities by critically evaluating the success of our current situations. We must then, at a minimum, share our thoughts with the decision-makers responsible for enacting improvement strategies.
The fourth and final step on the road to accountability requires that hospitalists successfully implement solutions and ensure that the desired results are achieved. Connors and colleagues define this step as “doing it.” Successfully “doing it” to enhance healthcare quality and efficiency necessitates hard work, because rarely is it sufficient to simply implement a healthcare improvement project. In order to achieve true results, projects must be actively managed after initial deployment, tweaked to become better, then redeployed and reanalyzed to ensure effectiveness.
In healthcare, it is tempting to become satisfied with simply deploying processes, as much of the healthcare reform work done to date has focused on payment for process improvements. This, however, will change in the near future. For example, Medicare’s hospital value-based purchasing program (see “Value-Based Purchasing Raises the Stakes,” January 2012, p. 1) will incorporate outcome measures as soon as 2014. We must, therefore, get into the habit of aggressively managing the processes that we operate through diligent data collection and subsequent decision-making that is informed by actionable information.
Conclusion
Holding ourselves accountable for enacting healthcare reform initiatives to improve the care of our patients will be difficult. The task is made easier by employing a process to guide our efforts. “The Oz Principle” teaches us a succinct, four-step approach. Applying this approach to changes mandated by healthcare reform will make it easier for hospitalists to transcend their current dysfunctional situations and achieve demonstrable healthcare system improvements for the betterment of patient care.
Dr. Frost is president of SHM.