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Physician Recruitment

Physician Recruitment. Mark Murray, MD. Recruitment. Currently based on an opinion about needs Multiple opinions Local “community” Local medical community “Government” Recruiters Needs are not subjective but objective, based on a formula. Considerations.

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Physician Recruitment

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  1. Physician Recruitment Mark Murray, MD

  2. Recruitment • Currently based on an opinion about needs • Multiple opinions • Local “community” • Local medical community • “Government” • Recruiters • Needs are not subjective but objective, based on a formula

  3. Considerations • One physician FTE does not equal another • Dependent upon an objective measurement of work capability or capacity • Physicians’ office time is “diluted” by other chosen activities and duties • Objective formula

  4. Formula • 4 variables • Panel (unknown or known), times • Patient visits per year (can be determined) equals • Providers’ days worked per year, times • Visits delivered per day

  5. Panel: Demand and Supply Equation Demand Supply 5

  6. Influences on Equation • Each of the 4 variables is influenced by the other 3 • Any change in the other 3 variables can change the panel • Tool in excel

  7. Influences on Equation • We can work either from the known panel/population or to the panel/population to drive an objective determination for physician recruitment • Work backwards from the population and provider behaviors toward panel or caseload • For example, if we know the population, we can determine physician recruitment needs; or if know the physician “population,” we can determine how much of a patient population they can manage

  8. Caution! • Local urgent care, after-hours, Locums, etc, all constitute a form of hidden supply • That hidden supply is less effective than “regular” supply

  9. How Do We InfluenceVisits Per Year? • Continuity • Return rates • Non-visit care • Telephone • Max packing • Group visits • Care team

  10. How Do We InfluenceProvider Days Per Year? • Expectation • Other chosen duties • Current physician behaviors

  11. How Do We InfluenceProvider Visits Per Day? • FTKA • Support • Space • Appointment length • Documentation templates • Bookable hours • Velocity

  12. Caution! • By reducing the appointment length, we increase the provider visits per day; but since less is done, the number of visits per patient per year on the other side of the equation will increase • The current standard reimbursement system affects the willingness of providers to influence or change the variables • The “system” is blind to the incentives and behaviors

  13. Why is Panel Important? • Patient satisfaction • Panel defines workload and limits to workload • Panel determines and helps predict demand • Allows a view or provider variability • Panel drives continuity; continuity drives cost, revenue and outcome

  14. High-Level Effects on the Formula • Population changes • Rise in total population • Demographics of the population • Provider population • Aging and retirement • Burnout • Contraction

  15. Demographic Issues • Knowing the population and the projections for that population, and given current performance, we can predict physician recruitment needs • “Current performance” is current population behavior • Per 100,000 population how many of…… do we need? • Population behavior is driven by system and provider behavior: habits, culture, expectations, reimbursement • Changing behaviors and expectations changes recruitment needs • If we cannot recruit, we may have to change the system behavior • Service Agreements define the work, packaging of the work

  16. What is the Panel/Population Size? • Population measurement • Billing code • Unique, unduplicated patients seen over 12, 18, or 36 months • Start at practice or “department” and then use the 4-cut method to determine individual panels

  17. 4-cut method • Unique, unduplicated patients seen by anybody • How many seen by one only • How many seen predominantly by one • Tie: sentinel exam • Tie and no sentinel exam: who saw the patient last

  18. What it is – the Second Step • Determined total # of pts and clinical FTE • Divide pts by FTE to determine “share” • Compare current panel by 4-cut method to share and look at over and under

  19. What Should the Panel Size Be? • Use the equation • Equation can be influenced • Isolate the variables

  20. Acuity/Demographic Adjustments • Critical in salaried environments • Less critical in revenue environments • Triangle and corridor • Zero-sum game

  21. Panel Size Limit • Set by the equation • If panel is greater than worker, there are consequences: increasing expanding wait time and then line-cutting to others

  22. Consequences of Delay • More calls • More no-shows • More walk-ins • More overtime • More cost due to triage and rework • Reduced satisfaction • Poor outcome

  23. Consequences of Overflow • Reduced satisfaction • Increased visit length • Reduction of productivity • Adverse outcomes • Increased return visit rate (demand)

  24. Reality • If a provider is over-paneled, then that provider is saying “no” • “I don’t want to say no to any patient” is a myth and a dangerous one

  25. Recruitment • Must be driven by objective, not subjective, criteria • There are variables, and they can be quantified and influenced • The formula applies to both Primary Care and Specialty Care • A population will create varying levels of need through Primary Care into specific Specialty Care practice types

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