I would like to propose the year of 2013 be so called "The Year of Repositioning". No doubt, this year is a gold mine of sorts for any strategic executive innvolved in healthcare.
I was speaking to an acquaintance of mine this week as I noticed on a social media link his title had changed from CEO of a prominent company here in Denver to something like CEO of "X" Healthcare Coop and Creative Stuff. I couldn't help but hit "reply" and congratulate him giving himself this extraordinary title. However this is a guy who showed up on the golf course with me last year wearing toe socks...
What makes this litle story noteworthy is he has started a healthcare cooperative and we were talking about the impending changes. We touch base from time to time as he comes from the broker/payer side and he was wondering if his actuaries had made an error in their numbers with the changes coming by the end of 2013. I said I truly believe some of us might be underestimating what the ACA will do to the market. It is exciting to imagine the majority of previously uninsured patients having coverage. It is more daunting from the supply side to envision the waves of patients who have not had access or means to care showing up with their shiny, unused proof of insurance in the marketplace and in our waiting rooms.
This brings me to a personal question I have of myself and my colleagues. I think we are on the brink of a redefintion or at least a deconstruction of the word "care". Patient who have never experienced regular health"care" will now be regulars at our doorstep. This concept will either push you professionally to the brink or will bring about a corporate and individual creativity never seen before as our medical communities we manage will need to see more patients with the same number of providers and staff. (CEO of "Creative Stuff" is sounding much more aligned with my job description...)
The real question will be how all providers (regardless of size and model of practice) reposition to accomodate the mandates of the ACA. How will this all shake out? Will we simply see the smaller practices get absorbed into the large healthcare mainstream? Will those relationships that physicians were trained to cultivate as a means to their production ends matter anymore?
If you have a moment (ok, a few priceless minutes) take a read at Robert Bellah's compelling article Understanding Care in Contemporary America, where he states "I want to argue that we need to limit market forces as well when they become imperialistic and threaten to dominate our lives. Indeed I would argue that there is such a thing as market totalitarianism that parallels state totalitarianism and is a real threat to us in America today." I would also add this is a real threat to the healthcare landscape.
If we apply this to the impending changes (much of which is truly unknown), it is my hope that we can still deliver care with integrity and create relationships that have meaning and point to the only thing that matters: taking care of the patient. I believe the old strategies of gaining marketshare will be replaced by how to handle the enormity of marketshare.
And finally...in the words of Mr. Bellah, "that human beings are not auto-nomous atoms, that human beings exist in and through relationships and institutions or they don‘t exist at all." I think I will have new business cards made. I am really liking the "creative stuff" idea...
Reference
http://www.robertbellah.com/Understanding_Care_in_Contemporary_America.pdf
Dea Robinson, MA, CMPE, CPC
Administrator
Inpatient Medicine Service PC
MGMA Assembly/Society Steering Committee
dea.robinson@inpatientmedicineservice.com