Spring,01

All the King’s Horses And All the King’s Men

By James R. Teeter, President and CEO, Arkansas Hospital Association

We’re not into reading tea leaves, but we did predict ¾  what, about three years ago? ¾ that yet another hospital calamity would one day emerge from the haze. Not a crisis of the more common sort ¾ financial, legislative, or regulatory ¾ but a nightmare of workforce shortages.

Those shortages are quickly becoming a reality. The percentage of hospital executives who cited labor/staffing as one of their “key worries” nearly doubled in 2000. HSM Group Ltd. interviews of 948 hospital administrators found 58% mentioning labor/staffing concerns last year compared to 34% who mentioned them in 1999.

While the shortage of nurses has received the most public attention, hospitals are also experiencing thinning ranks of pharmacists (off to Wal-Mart for $30K a year more!), technicians and technologists of almost every kind (better work hours at clinics!), and medical record coders, housekeepers, and food service workers, some of whom are paid $5.54 to $6.97 an hour (Burger King pays eight).

Hospitals in Arkansas and throughout America cannot possibly meet the healthcare needs of a growing and aging population without sufficient number and quality of caregivers and support staff, a fact of which the public and the politicians are becoming increasingly aware.

With labor and patient safety concerns as a backdrop, the U.S. Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee’s Subcommittee on Aging, chaired by Senator Tim Hutchinson of Arkansas, held a hearing in Washington February 13 to talk about the dwindling numbers of nurses and other caregivers and the effects of this on the nation’s health. The hearing room was jam-packed. In fact, people stood in the corridors.

Among those testifying was Linda Hodges, dean of the College of Nursing at UAMS. She said what she’s been saying for months: The labor shortage, particularly in nursing, grows worse every day; the image of professional nursing has changed from one that offered job security to one that is uncertain, sometimes dangerous; nursing is viewed as “low tech” and salaries as low compared to other professions; the number of nurses under age 30 has declined by 41% since 1983; the average age of the nursing workforce is increasing at twice the rate of other professions; and Arkansas schools will graduate fewer nurses in 2001 than in 1990.

Another individual testified that we must identify strategies to bolster recruitment, retention, and development of caregivers and support staff. But he said the problem cannot be solved by hospitals alone, it demands a collaborative approach among all affected parties. He and Hodges and others testifying recommended nurse recruiting programs for young people, higher wages, and more flexible hours.

Later Sen. Hutchinson said he plans to introduce legislation focusing on some of those recommendations. He announced his intent after subcommittee members unanimously agreed on the need for immediate action to address the country’s nursing shortage.

Closer to home, the Arkansas State Board of Workforce Education and Career Opportunities met February 8. It approved three high-demand fields for which the state will, during the 2001-2002 school year, continue helping college students repay up to $10,000 in school loans. Those programs are computer/information technology, advanced manufacturing, and biomedical/biotechnology.

The best news, however, was that in April the board will consider adding nursing to the list of high-demand fields in which students can qualify for the Arkansas Technical Career Student Loan Forgiveness Program.

All of this is well and good. But government efforts to expand and strengthen the labor supply will be wasted time and money if hospitals don’t alter their ways. Some ideas to consider:

  • Despite all the financial reverses and pressures, hospitals simply must find a way to increase employee compensation. If money can be found for other hospital improvements, it must be found for workers. Hospitals have no greater assets than their human resources. Hospital careers are demanding and often require advanced education and continuing training. Until hospital pay is comparable to what other employers pay workers with similar credentials, our workers will continue gravitating to alternative workplaces. This is not textbook theory, it is labor market reality.
  • Workplace satisfaction among hospital caregivers and support personnel is essential if a hospital is to be successful. Human resource issues are today, were yesterday, and tomorrow will be, issues that should be heard and considered by a sensitive hospital executive team rather than matters routinely delegated to supervisors. Ask any union organizer.
  • Hospitals must invest in those things that will help establish a competitive, if not preferred, work environment, including (a) work schedules that provide more worker flexibility; (b) work assignments and roles that emphasize a profession’s competencies and contributions rather than assignments defined by regulatory requirements and administrative procedures; and (c) information technologies that reduce repetitive administrative tasks and manual documentation.
  • Continuing education, which hospitals have always encouraged for physicians and nurses, must be extended across all occupational groups. Hospitals must develop effective programs through collaboration with one another and/or with state hospital associations, colleges, and universities. Clinical and non-clinical education and career development programs that upgrade skills and help hospital workers transition from one career to another are becoming critical success factors for hospitals.
  • Hospitals must broaden their workforce initiatives to reach populations not traditionally employed by hospitals. Society is becoming increasingly diverse. Hundreds of Little Rock School District students, for example, come from homes in which English is spoken second to 52 different languages from around the globe, up from 29 such languages five years ago.

Meanwhile, between 1990 and 2000 Arkansas’ Hispanic population (with its strong work ethic) mushroomed by 337% to 87,000 while the state’s population as a whole grew by 14.2%, according to 2000 Census data. As society becomes more diverse from an increasing number of racial, ethnic, and national backgrounds, we must train and recruit a more diverse workforce by tapping into those populations.

Chances are that no hospital workforce challenge is more critical than the need to develop and test new work designs for both caregiver and support services. Developing, testing, and sharing new work designs can be achieved sooner and with better results if approached on a more global basis than by individual hospitals.

The American Hospital Association’s newly appointed Commission on Workforce for Hospitals and Health Providers is expected to play a critical role in this endeavor. But the Commission is in need of and will look to us for our ideas, for – if I may paraphrase the old nursery rhyme – it’s going to take all the king’s horses and all the king’s men to put our workforce back together again.

Arkansas Newsmakers and Newcomers
Tom Siemers, FACHE, CEO of Rebsamen Medical Center in Jacksonville, was installed as Arkansas’ Regent for the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE) during the organization’s Annual Congress on Healthcare Management March 25-29 in Chicago. Siemers succeeds Steve Lampkin, President, Washington Regional Health System in Fayetteville, who has completed two terms as the state’s Regent.

Eva Applegate became administrator of Stone County Medical Center in Mountain View February 5 succeeding Kaye (Korky) Mallory who has taken on other hospital-related responsibilities. "I look forward to the continued growth and improvement of Stone County Medical Center under the direction and capable leadership that Ms. Applegate will provide," Mallory wrote in a letter to the AHA. The Mountain View facility is part of the White River Health System headquartered in nearby Batesville. Gary Bebow, FACHE, is system CEO.

David G. Blackburn, president of the Arkansas Heart Hospital since its opening in Little Rock, will retire this spring, but stay on the job until his successor is named and actually on site.  The success of the hospital, says Blackburn, is an obvious source of pride to him. "And I have been privileged to serve this last 5 ½ years in our state with a fine group of hospital executives as colleagues. Arkansas is very fortunate to have such dedicated men and women serving their communities. In 35 years in hospital administration, I’ve never worked with as fine a team as we have at the Arkansas Hospital Association."

Brian Holt has been named president and chief executive officer of Northwest Arkansas Radiation Therapy Institute (NARTI) in Springdale. For the past eight years, Holt was vice president of finance at NARTI before serving as interim president following former president Eddie Bradford’s retirement last summer.

Brian J. Hargis has been named executive vice president and chief financial officer of Wadley Regional Medical Center in Texarkana, Texas, effective January 22, 2001. He previously served as administrator of the Prattville Medical Park, a subsidiary of Baptist Health/HCA Healthcare Corporation in Montgomery, Alabama.

David Cicero, executive vice president and chief financial officer of Ouachita County Medical Center since 1978, has been named president of the Camden facility. Former president C. C. McAllister will take the helm as chief executive officer of Ouachita Valley Health System, the hospital’s parent corporation.

Steven B. Lampkin, president and CEO of Washington Regional Health System in Fayetteville, has been elected to serve as the American Hospital Association alternate delegate to the Regional Policy Board 7, representing the Section for Metropolitan Hospitals. The three-year term began January 1, 2001.

Doug Luckett, vice president for human resources at Crittenden Memorial Hospital in West Memphis, has been appointed by Governor Mike Huckabee to the Arkansas State Board of Nursing. He will serve until October 1, 2003.

Jon Dixon has been named CEO of Select Specialty Hospital in Little Rock, succeeding Brian Williams who was interim CEO. Dixon is a former administrator of Advance Care Hospital in Hot Springs.

John D. Hoffman, M.D., has been named president/CEO of St. Edward Mercy Health Network in Fort Smith. He succeeds Michael Morgan who has accepted the position of president/CEO of St. John’s Mercy Health Care in St. Louis. Hoffman, board-certified in obstetrics/gynecology, was chief operating officer of the Rogers facility for the past three years.

Ray Montgomery, president/CEO of White County Medical Center in Searcy, has been elected to the governing council of the American Hospital Association’s Section for Small or Rural Hospitals from AHA Region 7. His two-year term began January 1, 2001.

In Memoriam
Talmadge Robertson Conway, FACHE, administrator of McGehee Desha County Hospital for 24 years before retiring in 1990, died January 24 at UAMS in Little Rock. A former AHA board member and 1987 recipient of the AHA’s A. Allen Weintraub Memorial Award, Conway served as administrator of Delta Memorial Hospital in Dumas from 1963 until moving to McGehee in 1966.

Rex H. Burton, retired administrator of Carroll Regional Medical Center in Berryville, died January 25 in Spencerville, Indiana.

George W. Jackson, M.D., former superintendent of the Arkansas State Hospital and retired commissioner of mental health in Arkansas, died of cancer January 10 at his home on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs. Following his retirement, he practiced psychiatry in Hot Springs until 1985. Great strides were made in the delivery of mental health services in Arkansas during Dr. Jackson’s years of service.

AAHT Regional Dinner Meetings
Six years ago, the Arkansas Association of Hospital Trustees (AAHT) made the decision to offer a biannual series of regional dinner meetings to be held in several locations across the state. These meetings offer hospital trustees and CEOs an opportunity to meet other trustees from the surrounding area, discuss problems and concerns they experience, and share ideas.

The 2001 AAHT series will focus on the effects of the Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 on Arkansas hospitals and how trustees can convey this information to the community. While it is true that some relief will be gained from the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefit Improvement and Protection Act (BIPA) of 2000, most Arkansas hospitals will never gain what was lost through the severe damage caused by the BBA. It will take years for many hospitals to recover.

Larry Walker of Lake Oswego, Oregon, will lead the discussion at each meeting. Now a consultant to trustee organizations and the American Hospital Association, Walker is a former board chairman of the 107-bed Mt. Hood Medical Center in Gresham, Oregon, and director of Legacy Health System, a large Portland, Oregon healthcare system. 

He has facilitated many healthcare strategic development processes, assisting healthcare organizations ranging from small rural hospitals to metropolitan healthcare systems and physician groups. Prior to developing The Walker Company, he published weekly newspapers and business magazines, and served on local city councils and community boards.

Each of the five regional dinner meetings will begin at 5:30 p.m. and should adjourn around 8:30. Hospital CEOs and trustees are encouraged to attend the session nearest their area. Registration and programming information has been mailed to all CEOs and AAHT members. Call Beth Ingram at the Arkansas Hospital Association, (501) 224-7878, with questions. The meeting dates and locations are:

          April 3 – Holiday Inn City Center, Fort Smith 

          April 4 – Fayetteville Hilton

          May 15 – Camden Country Club

          May 16 – Holiday Inn, Jonesboro

May 17 – Conway Regional Medical Center

 

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