Healthcare Reform, is it Dirty Laundry?


Like the great Don Henley once wrote, "people love it when you lose, they love dirty laundry". It's crazy isn't it. Why are we so drawn to "dirt"? The O.J. trial, Anna Nicole, and now Michael Jackson. While I feel as I'm a professional in my industry, I get consumed by this dirt.

Now it's healthcare reform. While it's a work in progress, I find myself in the same mindset, being consumed by media every time I hear those two words. It's all over the radio (I love talk radio), CNN, CNBC, FOX, you name it. Healthcare reform is "my dirt". Not only will it affect all of us when it's done, it will affect those of us who call the industry home. Healthcare workers, healthcare vendors, healthcare students and of course physicians. One day I'm mad about it, and another day I'm glad about it. But one thing is constant - I'm consumed by it.

Maybe I'll get lucky and some new dirt will come my way soon. "I want a new drug" - thanks Huey Lewis, and R.I.P Jakko...

Dale Hannegan
RadSciences Group
www.mymedport.com
www.radsciences.com

Healthcare Social Network



With the wave of popularity in social media websites like myspace, twitter and facebook over the past 3-4 years, we at RadSciences Group wondered how this newly emerging technology could be wielded to serve the Healthcare industry. Like most organizations right now, hospitals are also faced with reduced recruitment and communication budgets and are turning to social media to keep their workforces engaged.

According to a the International Association of Business Communicators (IABC) "Engagement Survey,” of the 1,500 participants, about 79% of the respondents reported they use social media frequently to engage employees and foster productivity, outranking even e-mail (75%). Company blogs are the most popular social media tools (47%), with discussion boards ranking the highest for future planned use.

We are please that www.mymedport.com is helping the healthcare sector with workforce engagement and offering free job postings for non-profit hospitals. The beta test is almost complete and we are looking forward to launching the first healthcare social network.

MyMedPort Team

Healthcare Reform

There has been lots of talk lately by the President about health care reform. This was a widely debated topic during the most recent election. It seems as if the only thing everyone agreed on was we do need a better system that will provide coverage for the roughly 46 million Americans who do not have insurance, in spite of the $2.4 trillion spent on health care in 2007.

Elizabeth Cohen, CNN Senior Medical Correspondent writes a good article entitled, What you need to know about health care reform
How to do this and at what cost continues to be debated. Of course the Democrats and the Republicans disagree, but what else is new. Other than the Americans who do not have health care the group of people that will potentially be most impacted are physicians. It is still early but I think it is clear there will be general disagreement by this group. For example, AMA President Dr. Nancy Nielsen is quoted in the article and does not feel the President’s proposal is the answer, yet the American Academy of Family Physicians endorses the President’s plan.

I personally think physicians are going to be put in a very difficult position. If they don’t endorse the plan because they don’t believe it is economically viable then they will be portrayed as selfish and greedy. What the general public doesn’t likely understand is that the average physician practice has at least 35% (I am being very conservative with my estimate) of their practice is already government subsidized by Medicare and Medicaid, which reimburses much less than private insurance plans.

Bob Collins
The Medicus Firm
http://themedicusfirm.com/

Physical Therapy Compensation

Information on healthcare jobs and compensation trends are posted in the latest compensation review from RadSciences Group. You can find it at www.RadSciences.com or contact Dale Hannegan at 800-804-2345. The report is useful for anyone who is considering changing jobs in the current recession or pursuing a new career in healthcare. Specifically in the areas of Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Laboratory, or Radiology/Medical Imaging.

Recruit a Physical Therapist

Need a Physical Therapist for your practice? Well join the club. If the job boards are not generating you good candidates for your facility, I can tell you why. People are digging in and waiting out this economic storm that is lingering over their financial houses. Therefore, if you need a Physical Therapist, you better work evenings and weekends to call them and give them a reason to work for you. On the MyMedPort website (www.mymedport.com) there is a good article that will help you gain some leverage when attracting Physical Therapists.

Job boards have made a recruiters job much easier over the years. But what did recruiters do before job boards came along? Have you been in the field long enough to remember? Well I have. They cold called! Yes.. days, nights and weekends to find passive job seekers. My guess is that only the strong will survive this storm.

Employee Retention

StaphIn September, we surveyed some of our clients asking them to rank in order of importance topics they felt were the most important to their organization relating to employee recruitment and retention. By far, employee retention was the topic most managers wanted more information on, followed by reducing contract labor, then reducing their cost per hire.

As most of us have seen, employee loyalty is very short-lived, and most hospital employees do not expect to be with the same employer for more than a couple of years. The fact is the employee's basic needs are changing. Finding and keeping good talent is not just about money anymore. Believe it or not, it’s typically third down the line of reasons employees leave.

In most cases, we discovered that candidates do not leave for just more money, or to avoid difficult job circumstances. Research conducted by our organization found that employees usually leave because of human factors such as; greater job appreciation, better working relationship with management, better geographic location to their family, better work environment, more flex-time, etc.

RadSciences Group has tried to keep the formula for employee retention relatively simple, but unfortunately, it’s not. However, we have determined that there are three key ingredients to effective employee retention.

1. Creating a better working environment
2. Develop a career and recognition plan
3. Appreciating employees financially

1. Improving the work environment
FIRST AND FOREMOST, REPLACE/RE-TRAIN BAD MANAGERS: We all have them - Team “leaders” that should not be telling other employees what to do. These individuals do not lead by example, and your employees talk about them behind your back. Most directors know its going on, but do not want to cause conflict by approaching this person about their leadership skills. Eventually, they let things continue until the department eventually turns over. This person may be a good tech and you think you can’t afford to lose them, but that is simply not the case. To put this in perspective, it traditionally takes our firm less than
30 days to fill management/lead tech level positions.

2. Define your career and recognition plan
A CAREER PLAN: Employees like to have clearly defined goals, as well as defined plans and schedules to achieve those goals. Help employees develop a career plan within the organization so that they understand where they are going, and why it makes sense to achieve those goals. For more information on how to create this type of program, please contact us @ 800-804-2345

OPEN DIALOG: Sharing of certain operating and financial information helps build trust between employer and employee. It also helps workers understand how their performance affects results, and encourages their input. This ultimately invests them with a feeling of ownership in the company and a long-term stake in its future. One of the most valuable tools a manager has is the ability to provide regular feedback.

TEAM BUILDING/RECOGNITION: Provide reward and recognition programs that recognize performance and achievement. Hold regular company social outings to build rapport and enthusiasm. The key word here is “regular”. You cannot expect to do something fun once a year and it make an impact on your department. For more information on how to create this type of program, please contact us @ 800-804-2345

3. Appreciate employees financially
PAY MARKET WAGES, PAY MARKET WAGES, PAY MARKET WAGES: Accessing market information on compensation averages has never been easier. Any employee worth keeping is smart enough to monitor these figures to make sure he is getting paid fair market value. If your hospital Administrator or CFO will not approve wages for your department, ask for approval to supplement wages with bonuses and performance-based pay.

Additional benefits may include:
• Trips and weekend excursions (hotel suites, spa packages, etc.)
• Exotic car rentals
• Awards, certificates, plaques, honors
• Memberships in professional organizations
• Subscriptions
• Tickets to sporting events, movies, theater, restaurants
• Additional paid days off
• Birthdays as a floating individual holiday
• Gifts of all sorts
• Health club memberships

Tips to attract quality employees
It is amazing to us that hospitals continue using standard methods of recruitment expecting different results. It is necessary to visit job fairs, colleges, follow up on networking leads, and run ads in the paper, but time should be spent on more creative ideas. Keep in mind that the cost of running newspaper ads, overtime, and contract labor is much higher in the long run than using a specialty recruiting firm to fill the position quickly.

Here are a few tips
• Develop advertising and marketing programs that are more personal, addressing the person, not a specialty.
• Establish an internal referral program that pays employees for referrals that result in a hire.
• Maintain a visible presence wherever the labor pool frequents, such as industry associations and related events.
• Use a specialty recruitment firm to supplement your internal hiring efforts. Some search firms will tell you they can recruit about anyone your hospital needs, but try an organization that has targeted resources. To put this in perspective, most women who have children chose to have an OB/GYN deliver their baby, not a cardiologist….. even though they are both physicians.

While this information may seem fundamental, it is often discussed but rarely practiced by most organizations. I’ve worked for companies myself that were good companies that simply could not put together a plan for retention. Most of the time, it takes a designated employment specialist to create these plans and insure they are implemented and maximized to their effectiveness.


Dale Hannegan
Regional Director
RadSciences Group
800 804-2345