An important cri de coeur just appeared in the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine, by Thomas F Lansdale III MD [Lansdale TF. A medical center is not a hospital. Cleveland Clinic J Med 2008; 75: 618-619. Link here.] Dr Lansdale dealt mainly with poor leadership of teaching hospitals that threatened the core clinical and academic mission.
The leadership was poor in that it was ill-informed about health care and its values, and perhaps incompetent:
Now the medical center, riddled with 'centers of excellence' instead of departments, answered only to administrators who cared nothing about medical education, except for the Medicare dollars they would lose if they cut the training programs. They spent enormous amounts of money marketing the centers of excellence, and they cut everything else to manipulate the bottom line.
Poor hospital leadership was abetted by poor leadership of accrediting agencies and insurance companies.
We struggled to keep up with the unending deluge of arcane demands from the accreditation organizations watchdogging our teaching efforts.
we capitulate to the for-profit insurance industry that informs us they won’t pay for day 4 of Mr. Jones’ hospitalization because he has failed to meet some arbitrary criteria in their manual.
The effects of the poor leadership were mediated through a stifling bureaucracy that ignored the health care and educational mission.
Nurses now cared for their patients by managing their own support staff, and spent much of their time entering useless information in the computer.
I couldn’t stand the management retreats in which we obsessed about 'customer service' while the waiting time in the emergency department ballooned to 12 hours because there were 'no beds.' There were plenty of beds, but no nurses to staff them.
Furthermore, as we have seen time and time again, managers were quick to suppress any criticism of their power.
I was marginalized when I protested the budget cycles bleeding out support of medical education in favor of the annual purchase of new scanners and surgical gizmos.
The results were:
Medical education slowly slipped from being a calling to folks like me, finally succumbing to bureaucratic lunacy. The pace of teaching and caring for acutely ill patients became intolerable.
The biggest casualty, of course, was the nursing staff. Underpaid, depleted of leadership and morale, they simply disappeared. They were replaced by agency nurses who worked their shifts and didn’t know the doctors or the patients.
We lurch toward physician computer order entry, clinging to the false belief that software programs will prevent adverse drug reactions and delivery of the wrong dangerous drug to the wrong patient. We understaff our pharmacies so that they can’t get the medications to the patients on time or alert us to our own prescribing errors. We burn out our nurses despite years of loyal service
So finally,
Read the whole thing, and weep.
My real job is to do everything in my power to keep my patients out of the medical center. I walk the halls now and don’t recognize the institution I grew up in and came to love. Everywhere I look, I see not magic and promise, but dirt and danger.I'm not a hospital guy anymore.
So I get to say again: health care is reeling under poor leadership of increasingly large and dominant health care organizations, enabled by poor governance structures. We need to make health care governance more representative of its constituencies, accountable, transparent, and subject to ethical standards. We need health care leaders who are informed about health care and understand its values, are committed to the mission ahead of personal gain, and are unfailingly ethical and honest. Meanwhile, demoralized doctors and nurses succumb to foolish bureaucracy piled up by self-interested managers, and it is the patients finally who suffer the most.