Friday, February 26, 2010

Find a Successor

Almost no one starts a new job by trying to find a successor. Most people start by organizing their files and defending against any potential successors. However, the practice will clarify your role, define desirable characteristics for this role, highlight ideas for your personal development and that of your successor, and provide ample time to recruit and mentor protégés who may be successors. Your protégé can assist with activities, and you will enjoy mutual encouragement.

What prevents you from developing a successor right now?

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Finding a Physician Champion

As you consider possible medical staff members, look for important characteristics. Your candidates should demonstrate personal integrity. Confirm your impression of their personal integrity with other physicians, partners, nurses, patients and sometimes the grapevine. Physicians who are medical staff leaders would seem to be a good choice and often are. Remember that medical staff leaders have generally been politically active. Leaders may compromise to make deals and put “spin” on reports. This is not to say that politically active physicians are unacceptable, but be circumspect. Ask yourself, do they have the respect of the medical staff? Have they alienated segments of the medical staff during political battles? Can they build respect and trust? Are they empathetic with the members of the medical staff? Can they meet the expectations and needs of their sponsors and supervisors?

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Where to Start

Start your project with the goal in mind. The hospital has a mission that is theoretically its overriding goal. Keep in mind that the institution may not be doing what it says it’s supposed to do. Among the reasons for this non-alignment are that the mission statement may not match the thinking of principle leaders. The mission statement may have been designed by a committee years before and relegated to an unused box of documents. There may be a disparity between the stated mission and the way the institution is functioning. The stated mission may be on target while the institution is off course. The stated mission may never have been properly designed or both the action and mission could be inappropriate. All too often the mission has drifted from the enlivening purposes of the founders.

What goal are you trying to achieve?

Monday, February 22, 2010

Forum's Purpose

I hope that this Forum provides a starting point on this battleground and an approach for attending to the medical staff, aligning physicians on the institutional mission and fostering a spiritually nourishing environment. I shall try to write to that physician in the hospital who will lead the work; I will call that person a physician champion. However, I also want to write for hospital administrators, nursing staff, hospital chaplains, and health policy planners. I shall try to keep the concepts consistent with Christian theology. Nevertheless, I want to honor people from all faith traditions. As I worked for ten years with physicians at St. Vincent Hospital in Indianapolis, I tested these concepts repeatedly. They are generally well received. Finally, these ideas are not doctrine, a cookbook or the only possibility. It is simply one place to start. I know that there are many other directions to take and I hope that readers will share those with an interested and concerned community.

Do you have any suggestions about the format?

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Barriers to Collaboration

Physician Formation emphasizes the good news. Every physician resistance is a teaching opportunity. Opportunities abound. Physicians are passionate people. They do amazing work, and most physicians entered the profession with high idealism and compassion. Physicians who choose to work in faith-based hospitals often do so precisely because they possess very admirable personal qualities. These are powerful qualities and more than adequate to counter the daunting barriers.

Have you noticed any differences between physicians working in a faith-based hospital compared to those in a non-faith based hospital?

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Barriers to Collaboration

Ironically, issues of faith are often the greatest barriers to physician formation. The prevailing attitude in the United States is that faith and its expressions have no role in the work place. Perhaps this attitude derives from a mistaken interpretation of the constitutional separation of church and state. Others feel that expressions of faith are imperative, but may not express themselves appropriately. Some physicians, like other hospital workers, have preconceptions about spirituality that arise from their faith traditions. Others have no faith tradition or possibly exhibit antagonism toward God, faith or a particular faith tradition.

Where does faith get in the way for you?

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Barriers to Collaboration

Physicians themselves create barriers to a healing collaboration with the hospital. Foremost they are incredibly busy. The demands of practice administrators, the electronic medical record, and the growing detail of required documentation insures that physicians will be busier yet. Physician lives are not generally very well balanced. Rest, recreation, and family relationships fall victim to the demands of the practice.

What is the state of "life-balance" for the physicians you know personally? If their lives are out of balance, why is it so? What should be done?