The Risky Health Care Business

SpringParker
The Risky Health Care Business

Welcome to The Risky Health Care Business Podcast, where we help you prepare for the future by sharing stories, insights, and skills from expert voices in and around the United States health care world. The purpose is to inform, educate, and help organizations and individuals throughout the dental, medical, and veterinary health care industry with risk, while hopefully having some fun along the way. What is risk in health care? Where is it? How can you prepare for risk and overcome it? Why does it exist and why must it be addressed? We are in a transformational time in health care. Have our models evolved to meet the moment? Risk can no longer be ignored in health care. A risk vs reward mentality must also be coupled with risk vs regret. Gambling that an adverse event will never happen is not a viable approach to running a health care business. It is time to transform the model from reactive to proactive. In this podcast, you will hear in-depth interviews, powerful insights, resourceful skills, and more from people at the forefront of this exciting time in the health care industry. A new episode is published every 2 weeks, a long form guest interview around 30 minutes. Each episode has show notes to help you navigate the episode along with a full episode transcript. Accelerating healthcare performance is creativity...not just productivity

  1. SEP 24

    Paul Clark, PhD, Health Care Labor & Employment Relations Professor and Researcher

    What he does:  Dr. Clark is a Professor of Labor and Employment Relations at Penn State University where he regularly teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on employment relations.  His research has focused on employment relations in U.S. healthcare, with interests including unions, union organizing, collective bargaining, labor-management partnerships, and labor-management relations in healthcare. His research has appeared in the leading scholarly journals in industrial and labor relations, applied psychology, and international labor issues. He is the author or editor of six books about unions and collective bargaining; and has worked on training programs and research projects for over fifty national unions, and many local and regional unions. On risk: "Workers don't bring in a union to wreak havoc and make a hospital or a clinic work less well. They want to have a greater voice in how care is delivered. Administrators have a tough time with that, because they've largely been taught that they're in charge. They're the ones that make decisions, but by giving up a little bit of that control, there really can be great benefits … Management still has to decide, or gets to decide, what its positions will be in bargaining.  If they don't come to agreement, however, then unions do have the right to strike.  A strike is a pretty traumatic thing, and that's part of the collective bargaining process that doesn't exist when unions aren't present in a workplace … Collaboration on a large scale can work.  There are other smaller hospitals and smaller medical centers I've worked with, and we do see really, really positive results from that, because workers see their role as not just doing what they're told, but always looking at how they can make the workplace better. And they know that if they see something that can be improved on, there are mechanisms to talk about what's going right, what isn't, what ideas do people have, and then there's a mechanism where they work together as equals to try to decide whether to implement things, and then they measure them afterwards to see if they've had positive results."

    1 hr
  2. AUG 13

    Nadeem Kazi, MD, President of Arizona Medical Association and Practicing Gastroenterologist and Independent Private Practice Founder-Owner

    What he does: Dr. Kazi is the President of the Arizona Medical Association.  Dr. Kazi is also a practicing gastroenterologist and independent, private practice founder-owner in Casa Grande, Arizona.  In his role as President of the Arizona Medical Association, Dr. Kazi works with local, state, and federal government officials as well as local, state, and national organizations on various issues that impact independent physicians. On risk: "Number one issue is the lack of providers, physicians, nurses, paramedical staff throughout the country, and we are behind, especially in the rural area. We don't have specialists, we don't have even primary care. And the biggest problem that I am seeing is the lack of private practices.  Private practice is dying away. So that's a big risk that I see lack of provider and private practice slowly, gradually diminishing in the whole country … Lack of patient physician relationship and that's a big risk that I see in medical practice these days. If you don't have a relationship with patient, it's very difficult to manage chronic disease … If something negative outcome is there, what happened, you have to take a proper, appropriate action for that negative outcome. Negative outcome is always there in medical practice, but it's how you approach them, how you solve them, how you resolve them that's the key."

    36 min
  3. JUL 30

    Laura Coordes, Professor of Law, Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University

    What she does: Professor Coordes is a Professor of Law at Arizona State University's Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law in Phoenix, Arizona.  Her research focuses on bankruptcy and financial distress and includes commercial law, large corporate reorganizations, international and comparative insolvency law, and local government finance and policy. She teaches Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, Advanced Bankruptcy, Secured Transactions, and Contracts.  Professor Coordes is on the board of the American Bankruptcy Law Journal, a member of the American Bankruptcy Institute, and has presented her work and perspectives nationally, including The Wall Street Journal, Yahoo! Finance, and Bloomberg Law.   On risk: "It's important to be looking at the bigger picture, the industry pressures, the interconnectedness of the whole industry, and some of the big challenges that the industry as a whole is facing to try to figure out, okay, how can we really create some stability in health care … Indicators or factors can really impact and pressure the market, and in turn, can then impact and pressure individual health care businesses … Distress or closure of a health care business can cause ripple effects. So even if, on a narrow level, a particular health care business is doing fine, that could change fairly quickly, depending on what's going on in the nearby area or in the industry as a whole. And so I think if you're running a health care business, you have to be concerned, of course, about your own business and its financial health, but also about what's going on and with the other health care businesses in your area … What's challenging for an individual health care business, there's so much that you have to take into account that is outside of just the four walls of your own business."

    37 min
  4. JUL 16

    Beverly Wilburn, DAADOM, Office Manager at Karl A. Smith, DDS, LLC Periodontics and Implants

    What she does:  Beverly is the office manager of Karl A. Smith, DDS, LLC Periodontics and Implants, a multi-site practice with locations in Virginia and Maryland. In addition to managing the practice full-time, she serves as an expert of dental business practices and standard of care in practice administration systems for several law firms across the US. She has provided expert witness testimony on behalf of the prosecution and defense at both the State and Federal level.  Beverly is a Diplomate and Lifetime Member of the American Association of Dental Office Management (AADOM) and awarded the 2022 Dental Practice Administrator of the Year and is a recipient of a Denobi Award. She is the founder of Dental Spouses in Business™, the Executive Director for the Virginia Society of Periodontists, chapter president of AADOM's Dental Spouse Business Network as well as a member of three local chapters, and serves on the board for Dental Entrepreneur Woman.  On risk: "Risk is a possibility. It's not a fact. Risk is a thing, it's a factual thing. It's a possibility of something happening. And I think people have to remember that. A lot of people, when they hear the word risk, they assume it has some kind of negative connotation around it, and it really just means that we need to protect ourselves. It's a possibility that something could happen and we need to be aware of it. It's an awareness around situations that can happen, and it's a bringing to the forefront, a thought about making sure that we protect ourselves … When you're thinking about why do I have to be concerned about risk? It's ultimately because you want to protect your practice. You want to have longevity of the practice. If the practice doesn't survive, we now can't help people and help more patients … Part of the risk, part of where that comes to risk, is now we are having an access to care issue … Awareness is obviously number one, awareness of what risks can be, if things are in line and everybody's ducks are in a row and things are proceeding on, and you've got a good system in place, even when something does adversely happen, it's almost foolproof. You have the resources at your fingertips. You know what to do, when to do it. You're prepared and it helps to simplify knowing that risk is always going to be there. It simplifies the process when something does happen"

    40 min

Trailers

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Welcome to The Risky Health Care Business Podcast, where we help you prepare for the future by sharing stories, insights, and skills from expert voices in and around the United States health care world. The purpose is to inform, educate, and help organizations and individuals throughout the dental, medical, and veterinary health care industry with risk, while hopefully having some fun along the way. What is risk in health care? Where is it? How can you prepare for risk and overcome it? Why does it exist and why must it be addressed? We are in a transformational time in health care. Have our models evolved to meet the moment? Risk can no longer be ignored in health care. A risk vs reward mentality must also be coupled with risk vs regret. Gambling that an adverse event will never happen is not a viable approach to running a health care business. It is time to transform the model from reactive to proactive. In this podcast, you will hear in-depth interviews, powerful insights, resourceful skills, and more from people at the forefront of this exciting time in the health care industry. A new episode is published every 2 weeks, a long form guest interview around 30 minutes. Each episode has show notes to help you navigate the episode along with a full episode transcript. Accelerating healthcare performance is creativity...not just productivity

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