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Ingredients for effective team-based care
Changing times for U.S. health care
The current health care environment is undergoing a rapid transformation. In evolutionary biology, a theory exists called punctuated equilibrium. This theory suggests there are long periods of little or no morphological change amongst species and then, geologically speaking, short periods of rapid change in response to pressures within the environment. This rapid period of change adds significant diversity to the landscape of existing species. In health care, we are undergoing a period of “punctuation.”
A testament to the degree of change is a scan of the various consolidation activities occurring across the health care space. Some are more traditional, such as mergers of health systems with different or competing geographical footprints or hospitalist management companies that provide similar services and desire to increase their market share. Others that are more interesting are those that include mergers of seemingly different business lines or offerings, like CVS Health and Aetna; Humana and Kindred; or even organizations such as Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan hiring Atul Gawande as the CEO of their newly formed health care venture. The latter examples serve as an illustration of the reorganization that is occurring within health care delivery. This represents, at the very least, a blurring of the lines – if not a deconstruction and complete rebuild – of traditional lines of separation between payers, providers, employers, and retailers.
In other words, the silos are coming down, significant diversity in the landscape of existing species. A common theme across these changes is that most – if not all – participants will share some portion of the financial risk associated with these evolving models. High-deductible health plans, alternative payment models (APMs), and advanced APMs are examples of tactics and models that distribute the financial risk. The consolidations referenced above will likely continue to encourage distribution of the financial risk across patients, providers, employers, and payers.
A key theme coming into focus is that the evolving care delivery system will not be defined by bricks and mortar. Rather, it will follow the patient and go wherever he or she goes to meet his or her specific needs. This is why we’re seeing mergers comprised of a variety of assets, including personnel, technology, critical supplies (such as pharmaceuticals), and funding resources. This very purposeful and deliberate melting pot phenomenon will restructure and reformat the care delivery model.
To be successful within this new landscape, there will need to be a renewed focus on working within a collaborative model. The days of a single entity or provider being able to serve as the “be all” or “do all” is over, and the days of practicing medicine as the Lone Ranger are anachronistic. Instead, there is a need for health care providers to embrace and lead a team-based care model. Team-based care should have the patient at the center of the care delivery model and leverage the expertise of the various team members to practice at the “top of their expertise.”
In hospital medicine, this includes a variety of team members – from physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical pharmacists to case managers, physical therapists, subject matter experts in quality improvement, and analysts – who identify operational priorities from the data rather than reporting predefined goals on dashboards. Although possibly a good start, this is by no means an exhaustive list of team members. The team will be defined by the goals the health care team aspires to achieve. These goals may include closer alignment with payers, employers, and post-acute partners; the goals will influence the composition of the team. Once the team is defined, the challenge will be to effectively integrate team members, so they are contributing their expertise to the patient care being delivered.
Some ingredients for effective team-based care include the following:
- Developing an effective process for engagement and providing a voice for all team members. Interdisciplinary team rounds where there is an established time for team members to plan and operationalize their plans around patient care can serve as an example of this type of structured process.
- Creating well-defined roles and responsibilities with key performance indicators to promote accountability. The team will have outcomes they are measuring and striving to impact, and each team member will have a role in achieving those goals. Being able to parse out and measure how each team member contributes to the overall outcome can be beneficial. This provides an opportunity for each team member to play a meaningful role in accomplishing the overall goal and allows for a measurement process to track success. For example, an overall team goal may be to have a specific percentage of eligible discharges completed by 11:00 a.m. To accomplish this goal, there may be specific objectives for the clinicians to have discharge orders in the chart by 9:30 a.m. and for case management to have communicated with any post-acute services the day before discharge. These specific accountability measures facilitate accomplishing the larger team goal.
- Developing a culture of safety and transparency. Effective teams promote an environment where all members are empowered and encouraged to speak and share their perspective and knowledge. Communication is based on the value it provides to accomplishing the team’s goals rather than based on a hierarchy which determines who contributes and when.
- Defining and then redefining the competencies required of the team to promote continued development and growth. In this time of dynamic change, the skill sets that helped us get where we are today may be different then the skill sets that are needed for success in the future. There will continue to be a need for functional and knowledge-based competencies in addition to the need to focus on competencies that engender a culture of team-based care. For example, hospitalist leaders will need to understand evidence-based medicine to support appropriate management of a septic patient and simultaneously understand evidence-based management/leadership to affect sepsis care across his or her health care system.
With this change in the health care environment come new and exciting opportunities. Hospital medicine has always elected to assume a leadership role in these times of change, these periods of “punctuation.” Development of effective team-based care is a great place for those of us working in hospital medicine to demonstrate our leadership as we care for our patients.
Dr. Frost is national medical director, hospital-based services, at LifePoint Health, Brentwood, Tenn. He is president-elect of the Society of Hospital Medicine.
Changing times for U.S. health care
Changing times for U.S. health care
The current health care environment is undergoing a rapid transformation. In evolutionary biology, a theory exists called punctuated equilibrium. This theory suggests there are long periods of little or no morphological change amongst species and then, geologically speaking, short periods of rapid change in response to pressures within the environment. This rapid period of change adds significant diversity to the landscape of existing species. In health care, we are undergoing a period of “punctuation.”
A testament to the degree of change is a scan of the various consolidation activities occurring across the health care space. Some are more traditional, such as mergers of health systems with different or competing geographical footprints or hospitalist management companies that provide similar services and desire to increase their market share. Others that are more interesting are those that include mergers of seemingly different business lines or offerings, like CVS Health and Aetna; Humana and Kindred; or even organizations such as Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan hiring Atul Gawande as the CEO of their newly formed health care venture. The latter examples serve as an illustration of the reorganization that is occurring within health care delivery. This represents, at the very least, a blurring of the lines – if not a deconstruction and complete rebuild – of traditional lines of separation between payers, providers, employers, and retailers.
In other words, the silos are coming down, significant diversity in the landscape of existing species. A common theme across these changes is that most – if not all – participants will share some portion of the financial risk associated with these evolving models. High-deductible health plans, alternative payment models (APMs), and advanced APMs are examples of tactics and models that distribute the financial risk. The consolidations referenced above will likely continue to encourage distribution of the financial risk across patients, providers, employers, and payers.
A key theme coming into focus is that the evolving care delivery system will not be defined by bricks and mortar. Rather, it will follow the patient and go wherever he or she goes to meet his or her specific needs. This is why we’re seeing mergers comprised of a variety of assets, including personnel, technology, critical supplies (such as pharmaceuticals), and funding resources. This very purposeful and deliberate melting pot phenomenon will restructure and reformat the care delivery model.
To be successful within this new landscape, there will need to be a renewed focus on working within a collaborative model. The days of a single entity or provider being able to serve as the “be all” or “do all” is over, and the days of practicing medicine as the Lone Ranger are anachronistic. Instead, there is a need for health care providers to embrace and lead a team-based care model. Team-based care should have the patient at the center of the care delivery model and leverage the expertise of the various team members to practice at the “top of their expertise.”
In hospital medicine, this includes a variety of team members – from physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical pharmacists to case managers, physical therapists, subject matter experts in quality improvement, and analysts – who identify operational priorities from the data rather than reporting predefined goals on dashboards. Although possibly a good start, this is by no means an exhaustive list of team members. The team will be defined by the goals the health care team aspires to achieve. These goals may include closer alignment with payers, employers, and post-acute partners; the goals will influence the composition of the team. Once the team is defined, the challenge will be to effectively integrate team members, so they are contributing their expertise to the patient care being delivered.
Some ingredients for effective team-based care include the following:
- Developing an effective process for engagement and providing a voice for all team members. Interdisciplinary team rounds where there is an established time for team members to plan and operationalize their plans around patient care can serve as an example of this type of structured process.
- Creating well-defined roles and responsibilities with key performance indicators to promote accountability. The team will have outcomes they are measuring and striving to impact, and each team member will have a role in achieving those goals. Being able to parse out and measure how each team member contributes to the overall outcome can be beneficial. This provides an opportunity for each team member to play a meaningful role in accomplishing the overall goal and allows for a measurement process to track success. For example, an overall team goal may be to have a specific percentage of eligible discharges completed by 11:00 a.m. To accomplish this goal, there may be specific objectives for the clinicians to have discharge orders in the chart by 9:30 a.m. and for case management to have communicated with any post-acute services the day before discharge. These specific accountability measures facilitate accomplishing the larger team goal.
- Developing a culture of safety and transparency. Effective teams promote an environment where all members are empowered and encouraged to speak and share their perspective and knowledge. Communication is based on the value it provides to accomplishing the team’s goals rather than based on a hierarchy which determines who contributes and when.
- Defining and then redefining the competencies required of the team to promote continued development and growth. In this time of dynamic change, the skill sets that helped us get where we are today may be different then the skill sets that are needed for success in the future. There will continue to be a need for functional and knowledge-based competencies in addition to the need to focus on competencies that engender a culture of team-based care. For example, hospitalist leaders will need to understand evidence-based medicine to support appropriate management of a septic patient and simultaneously understand evidence-based management/leadership to affect sepsis care across his or her health care system.
With this change in the health care environment come new and exciting opportunities. Hospital medicine has always elected to assume a leadership role in these times of change, these periods of “punctuation.” Development of effective team-based care is a great place for those of us working in hospital medicine to demonstrate our leadership as we care for our patients.
Dr. Frost is national medical director, hospital-based services, at LifePoint Health, Brentwood, Tenn. He is president-elect of the Society of Hospital Medicine.
The current health care environment is undergoing a rapid transformation. In evolutionary biology, a theory exists called punctuated equilibrium. This theory suggests there are long periods of little or no morphological change amongst species and then, geologically speaking, short periods of rapid change in response to pressures within the environment. This rapid period of change adds significant diversity to the landscape of existing species. In health care, we are undergoing a period of “punctuation.”
A testament to the degree of change is a scan of the various consolidation activities occurring across the health care space. Some are more traditional, such as mergers of health systems with different or competing geographical footprints or hospitalist management companies that provide similar services and desire to increase their market share. Others that are more interesting are those that include mergers of seemingly different business lines or offerings, like CVS Health and Aetna; Humana and Kindred; or even organizations such as Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan hiring Atul Gawande as the CEO of their newly formed health care venture. The latter examples serve as an illustration of the reorganization that is occurring within health care delivery. This represents, at the very least, a blurring of the lines – if not a deconstruction and complete rebuild – of traditional lines of separation between payers, providers, employers, and retailers.
In other words, the silos are coming down, significant diversity in the landscape of existing species. A common theme across these changes is that most – if not all – participants will share some portion of the financial risk associated with these evolving models. High-deductible health plans, alternative payment models (APMs), and advanced APMs are examples of tactics and models that distribute the financial risk. The consolidations referenced above will likely continue to encourage distribution of the financial risk across patients, providers, employers, and payers.
A key theme coming into focus is that the evolving care delivery system will not be defined by bricks and mortar. Rather, it will follow the patient and go wherever he or she goes to meet his or her specific needs. This is why we’re seeing mergers comprised of a variety of assets, including personnel, technology, critical supplies (such as pharmaceuticals), and funding resources. This very purposeful and deliberate melting pot phenomenon will restructure and reformat the care delivery model.
To be successful within this new landscape, there will need to be a renewed focus on working within a collaborative model. The days of a single entity or provider being able to serve as the “be all” or “do all” is over, and the days of practicing medicine as the Lone Ranger are anachronistic. Instead, there is a need for health care providers to embrace and lead a team-based care model. Team-based care should have the patient at the center of the care delivery model and leverage the expertise of the various team members to practice at the “top of their expertise.”
In hospital medicine, this includes a variety of team members – from physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical pharmacists to case managers, physical therapists, subject matter experts in quality improvement, and analysts – who identify operational priorities from the data rather than reporting predefined goals on dashboards. Although possibly a good start, this is by no means an exhaustive list of team members. The team will be defined by the goals the health care team aspires to achieve. These goals may include closer alignment with payers, employers, and post-acute partners; the goals will influence the composition of the team. Once the team is defined, the challenge will be to effectively integrate team members, so they are contributing their expertise to the patient care being delivered.
Some ingredients for effective team-based care include the following:
- Developing an effective process for engagement and providing a voice for all team members. Interdisciplinary team rounds where there is an established time for team members to plan and operationalize their plans around patient care can serve as an example of this type of structured process.
- Creating well-defined roles and responsibilities with key performance indicators to promote accountability. The team will have outcomes they are measuring and striving to impact, and each team member will have a role in achieving those goals. Being able to parse out and measure how each team member contributes to the overall outcome can be beneficial. This provides an opportunity for each team member to play a meaningful role in accomplishing the overall goal and allows for a measurement process to track success. For example, an overall team goal may be to have a specific percentage of eligible discharges completed by 11:00 a.m. To accomplish this goal, there may be specific objectives for the clinicians to have discharge orders in the chart by 9:30 a.m. and for case management to have communicated with any post-acute services the day before discharge. These specific accountability measures facilitate accomplishing the larger team goal.
- Developing a culture of safety and transparency. Effective teams promote an environment where all members are empowered and encouraged to speak and share their perspective and knowledge. Communication is based on the value it provides to accomplishing the team’s goals rather than based on a hierarchy which determines who contributes and when.
- Defining and then redefining the competencies required of the team to promote continued development and growth. In this time of dynamic change, the skill sets that helped us get where we are today may be different then the skill sets that are needed for success in the future. There will continue to be a need for functional and knowledge-based competencies in addition to the need to focus on competencies that engender a culture of team-based care. For example, hospitalist leaders will need to understand evidence-based medicine to support appropriate management of a septic patient and simultaneously understand evidence-based management/leadership to affect sepsis care across his or her health care system.
With this change in the health care environment come new and exciting opportunities. Hospital medicine has always elected to assume a leadership role in these times of change, these periods of “punctuation.” Development of effective team-based care is a great place for those of us working in hospital medicine to demonstrate our leadership as we care for our patients.
Dr. Frost is national medical director, hospital-based services, at LifePoint Health, Brentwood, Tenn. He is president-elect of the Society of Hospital Medicine.