Title: Board of Commissioners ORIENTATION
1Board of Commissioners ORIENTATION
- Presented by the Lakes Group
2Purpose
- To gain an understanding of the responsibilities,
accountability and relationships needed by the
board of commissioners (directors trustees) as
a whole to effectively meet the districts
mission and vision - To provide access to resources that can help
answer commissioners legal, regulatory or board
effectiveness questions
3Sample Advertisement for a district
commissioner/board member
- WANTED creative, dynamic, intelligent, open
minded individual with superb listening skills to
engage in strategic planning, lively debates,
voting and occasional dining out. Must be able to
toe the line, rock the boat, feed the fire,
strike a balance and take the heat. Multiple hat
collection a plus.
4BOARD ORIENTATION IN GENERAL
- Nose In, Hands Off (NIHO)one of the hardest
functions of a board of commissioners - BENCHMARK GOVERNANCE Identify best practices
and use them to fit the local need. Benchmarks
will change over time and so will individual
board policies, strategies and dashboard
monitoring
5BOARD TIME SPENT ON CORE FUNCTIONS
- TYPICAL
- Finance 40
- Operations 35
- Credentials 5
- Quality Service 5
- Strategy 5
- Other 10
- Source Pugh, Ettinger McCarthy, MGMA October
2001
- BALANCED
- Finance 20
- Operations 10
- Credentials 10
- Quality Service 25
- Strategy 30
- Other 5
6Client Board Meeting Actions Compared to
Typical and Balanced
Typical (Hospital Name) Balanced
Finance-40 20
Operations-35 10
Credentials-5 10
Qual/Svc-5 25
Strategy-5 30
Other-10 5
7BOARD REVIEW EXAMPLES
- Nearly all hospitals regularly review the
hospital operating statistics, financial
statements, capital planning data and patient
survey results - 80 of boards review adverse medical events,
medication error rates and infection rates - Only 50 of the boards review community health
issuesa key component of their mission and
social responsibility - 42 of the hospitals use a balanced scorecard or
dashboard system to monitor performance - The Governance Institute-Biennial Survey of
Hospital Boards, July 2001
8COMMANDMENT OF GOOD GOVERNANCE THE BOARD WILL
- Keep up-to-date on the organization from an
external viewpointmaintain objectivity! - Ask all its questions and state all its concerns
as they arise - Make its perspectives, experience and judgment
available to management to improve the
performance of the organization - Seek to improve its own performance and keep its
composition evergreen - Create an atmosphere conducive to dialogue and
discussion
9COMMANDMENTS OF GOOD GOVERNANCE MANAGEMENT WILL
- Help the Board in understanding the changing
external environment ( industry, competition,
global factors) from different viewpoints - Tell the Board what management is trying to
accomplish in the longer term - Provide sufficient, efficient information to
allow the Board to assess whether the goals are
being achieved - Put good and bad news on the table
- Create an atmosphere conducive to critical
discussion of key business issues - Source MGMA Presentation by F.K. Ackerman, FACHE
October 24, 2001
10COMMUNITY REPRESENTATION AND THE EFFECTIVE BOARD
- Richard Umbdenstock, the author of So Youre
on the Hospital Board and President/CEO of
Providence Health Services in Spokane has
succinctly defined governance as fulfilling the
function of responsible ownership on behalf of
the community and involves the responsible
stewardship and allocation of health resources to
produce a sustained benefit to the communities
served.
11SUCCESSFUL BOARDS HAVE EXPECTATIONS OF THEIR
MEMBERS
- A few illustrations
- Board and committee preparation, attendance
participation - Education (Local Statealso consider national
if cost effective) - Attendance at board retreats
- Enhance a spirit of partnership and communication
- Confidentiality
- Avoid conflicts of interest
- Participation in organization events
- Source Dennis Pointer, PhD, WSHA 24th Annual
Rural Summer Workshop
12ENHANCING BOARD EFFECTIVENESS AS A WHOLE
13REASONS FOR INEFFECTIVE GOVERNANCE
- Board members who represent the interest of
specific constituencies, not the organization as
a whole - A focus on short-term issues because the Board
lacks a clear sense of the organizations purpose - Time spent monitoring the past instead of
planning and creating the future - Reviewing information that is largely irrelevant
to the critical, strategic issues confronting the
organization
14REASONS FOR INEFFECTIVE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED
- Non-performing or dysfunctional Board members
that create a negative dynamic and ultimately
diminished effectiveness - Maintaining unwieldy, inefficient governance that
waste the Boards and Managements time - Confusion about roles, responsibilities and
relationships with management, the medical staff,
committees and other Boards - Source Systems Thinking in Governance, Adapted
TrusteeJanuary 1999
15ASSESSING THE NEED FOR CHANGEBOARDS SHOULD
ASSESS THE CURRENT GOVERNANCE PROCESSES AND ASK
- Is our current governance process designed to
drive the values and goals of a health system of
the future, or a hospital, group practice based
system of the past? - Is our governance structure streamlined to make
efficient decisions? Does it use the Board member
and managements time efficiently? - Do we have a lot of overlapping and duplicate
committee meeting and governance reports? - Are we more involved in policy and big picture
decisions or in operational detail? - Have we been conducting routine self-evaluations?
What have been the results? - Source Orlikoff/Totten Trustee Magazine
November-December 1998
16A SUCCESSFUL BOARD ENSURES ITS ACTIONS PROTECT
AND ADVANCE THE INTERESTS OF THE STAKEHOLDERS
- Have you identified your stakeholders?
- Are you familiar with what your stakeholders
expect of, and want from the organization? What
was your method of identification and time frame
utilized? - Does the Board decide and act on the
stakeholders behalf?
17Sample Table of Contents Frontier Hospital
Community Survey
18DASHBOARD OVERSIGHT
- Using an automobile analogy, what dashboard
gauges are needed to monitor the organization
from a governance perspective? There are five
recommended areas to monitor - Ends the extent to which the vision is being
fulfilled and key goals are being accomplished - Management the extent to which the CEOs
performance is in line with Board expectations - Finances the extent to which financial
performance is in line with board specified
objectives and expectations - Quality Does the quality of care meet Boards
standards? - Self the extent to which the Board is fulfilling
its responsibilities and executing its roles
19Board Oversight as Steering the Ship
- In a more basic definition of dashboard
indicators, you can separate into two categories
lagging indicators results of past
performance and leading indicators drivers of
future performance. - As to the Boards role of steering, not rowing
the ship Keep a balanced view of the
organizations performance and keep management
focused on adhering to the navigational plan,
e.g. chart the course (high level plan) ensure
the deck is clean (details) check the wake of
the ship (lagging indicators) and keep an eye on
the horizon ahead (leading indicators).
20DASHBOARD OVERSIGHT CONTINUED
- For Dashboard Oversight to be effective, a
standard needs to be attached to each indicator,
e.g. the board specifies it expects net operating
margins from inpatient operations to exceed
3--the indicator is net operating margin and the
standard is 3. Indicators must be quantitative,
or quantifiable. - Data presented across time (preferably in graphic
format), juxtaposed against a standard internal
or external benchmark trends and patterns are
more easily identified, interpreted and addressed - Source Board Work Dennis Pointer/James Orlikoff
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26Narrative Executive Summary Report
- Narrative summary reports by the C Team (CEO,
CFO, CNE, Chief of Staff) that highlight, in a
one page executive summary the areas of concern
and actions in place or being developed to
address the areas in question are extremely
valuable to board members. It is important that
the dashboard indicators and the executive
summary are provided to the Board in advance of
the Board meeting. Timing of financial and other
statistical data is frequently in conflict with
historically established board meeting dates. - Of course areas of significant improvement or
accomplishment should also be included in this
Executive Summary Report
27CONSENT AGENDA
- The consent agenda consists of items that can
be approved without expressive action by the full
board. These items are combined into a single
section and included with the full agenda packet
for members to review prior to the meeting. If
there are no questions or concerns, the entire
block of issues can be approved with one board
vote and no discussion. Any member can ask that
an item be removed from the consent agenda for
full discussion - Board Room Press, The Governance Institute, La
Jolla, CA June 20012
28Comments on Client Board Minutes (dates reviewed)
29Sample Board Agenda to Consider
- Call to Order
- Reports and Presentations (establish time
parameters for reports) - A. CEO Report
- B. Finance Report (with predetermined dashboard
indicators) - C. Medical Staff Report (General
issues/Quality/Credentials) - D. Patient Services Report (Quality/Training/Staf
fing etc) - E. Performance Improvement Activities
- F. Other
- 3. Consent Agenda
- A. Vouchers Warrants
- B. Write-offs
- C. Other
30Sample Board Agenda to ConsiderContinued
- 4. Old Business
- A. Strategic Goal X Status/Actions in
progress - B. Other List item and action requested at the
board meeting - 5. New Business
- A. List item and action requested at the board
meeting - B. Other
- 6. Adjourn
31GENERAL EFFECTIVENESS CONSIDERATIONS
- ANNUAL MEETING SOCIAL FUNCTION OR STRATEGIC
IMPERATIVE? Annual meetings/retreats to review
accomplishment of previously established goals,
mission and vision statements and establish
direction for the future are one of the keys to
successful governance - BOARD ORIENTATION Is your orientation a process
or an event? Orientation should assist board
members over time to learn, to do and to lead. - JOB DESCRIPTIONS Does your board have job
descriptions for individual commissioners and the
Chairperson? Are they reviewed periodically?
32GENERAL EFFECTIVENESS CONTINUED
- BOARD SPEAKS WITH ONE VOICE Board members need
to support decisions or actions taken by the
Board as a whole, even if they have voted against
the action or disagree with the action taken. It
is imperative that the Board be perceived as
together, not at odds over a decision that has
been approved by the majority. For those tempted
to discuss board actions with others outside of
the district, remember what our Mothers told
usIf you cant say something nice, dont say
anything
33EFFECTIVE MEETING TIPS 1
- BOEINGS CODE OF COOPERATION FOR EFFECTIVE
MEETINGS - Attend all team (board) meetings and be on time
- Listen to and show respect for the views of other
(board) members - Criticize ideas, not people
- The only stupid question is the one not asked
- Pay attentionavoid disruptive behavior
- Carry out assignments on schedule
- Avoid disruptive side conversations
- Always strive for win-win (I prefer gain-gain)
situations/solutions - Every (board) member is responsible for the
teams (boards) progress/success
34EFFECTIVE MEETING TIPS 2
- IS IT A GROUP OR A TEAM?
- Are discussions fully open?
- Are core values, e.g. respect tolerance upheld?
- Is debate based on honest differences rather than
turf battles? - Does the team (board) make decisions through
consensus?or is majority adequate? - Are there full contributions from everyone?
- Do team (board) members hold each other
accountable?
35CONFIDENTIALITY
- CONFIDENTIALITY Confidentiality of board working
discussions by board members is a key factor in
board effectiveness and credibility with the
board as a whole, executive management and
organization staff. If there is a question about
the confidentiality of specific information, err
on the prudent side and ask the Board Chair or
CEO - Confidentiality, particularly involving patient
information is a very serious issue in all health
care organizations, with penalties up to
termination of employment for discussion of such
information outside of authorized channels
36COMMUNICATIONS
- Quote from a supervisor, Fortune 100 company
We know communication is a problem, but the
company is not going to discuss it with the
employees. - Although we hear communication is the key,
it may not be the problem, and more communication
may not be the solution. With so many options in
communication methods, we tend to pay more
attention to how we are going to communicate,
rather than what we are going to communicate,
i.e. communication is an activity rather than an
outcome.
37Communications, Continued
- Another reason for communications failure or
static in transmission is that we have
forgotten communication is a two-way process. - To build understanding, support and acceptance,
we need to make a shift and think of
communication as an outcome. - To do that we must look at the communication from
the receivers perspective. We should ask the
question, What is my desired outcome with this
communication. What do I want my employees,
board members, medical staff and/or service area
community residents to think, feel and do after
receiving my message?
38COMMUNICATIONS Administrator, Board Medical
Staff Leadership
- Can the Board be wired for flow of information?
- Identify Board and Medical Staffs preferred
means of communication for routine information,
heads up and educational bulletins, e.g. memo
in the chair - Does the Administrator have regularly scheduled
meetings with the Board President prior to
scheduled board meetings? - Is there some sort of Joint Conference
Committee to discuss clinical and medical staff
issues/concerns between the Board, CEO, CNE/DNS
before action is requested by the full Board?
39BOARD/ADMINISTRATORRELATIONSHIPS
- Washington law is quite clear in requiring the
elected board of commissioners to oversee the
hospital districts general policies and
organization. To fulfill this obligation, the
boards role is to adopt the necessary general
policies to achieve these ends and delegate the
day-to-day responsibilities of these policies to
the appointed district administrator. - Source AWPHD Public Hospital District
Commissioners Guide
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41BOARD/ADMINISTRATORRELATIONSHIPS
- It is the boards responsibility to communicate
effectively, frequently and candidly with the
administrator/CEO---the administrator/CEOs
responsibility in turn is to take action and make
changes. - Ensuring that a performance appraisal process is
fair and covers all the bases is a responsibility
of both the board and the administrator - SOURCE PRACTICAL GOVERNANCE, Tyler Biggs
42BOARD/ADMINISTRATORRELATIONSHIPS
- A study done by the authors of Practical
Governance several years ago revealed that 1 in
10 administrators had never received a
performance appraisalone of the key factors
hindering completion of the performance appraisal
was the lack of clarity or agreement over the
organizations vision, goals priorities linked
with a failure to define administrator roles
responsibilities. - SOURCE PRACTICAL GOVERNANCE, Tyler Biggs
43BOARD/ADMINISTRATORRELATIONSHIPS
- Performance appraisal should be based on a
number of quantifiable factors, e.g. financial
performance against budget operating indicators,
e.g. clinic visits, ancillary service
utilization physician employee satisfaction
based on survey scores and other key goals deemed
important by the board. In summary - THE BOARD SHOULD SET CLEAR EXPECTATIONS AS TO
WHAT THE BOARD WOULD SEE AS A GREAT JOB
PERFORMANCE BY THE ADMINISTRATOR - REMEMBER THE GOLDEN RULE
44CEO PERFORMANCE EVALUATION
- 85 of hospitals responding to the 2000 survey
reported that they formally evaluated CEO
performance on predetermined objectives and
criteria (the high response does not indicate
whether these evaluations are done well) - We know that the quality of performance
evaluation is tied to CEO turnoverif there is an
unplanned departure, it is often related to an
ineffective CEO evaluation processBarry Bader,
President, Bader Assoc. - Governance experts recommend that hospitals link
CEO incentive compensation plans to the outcome
of the formal evaluation processThe Governance
Institute
45BOARD/ADMINISTRATOR RELATIONSHIPS
-
- THE OBJECTIVE OF A PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL IS
TO SUPPORT OR CHANGE BEHAVIOR - There are no misunderstandings there are only
failures to communicate. Senegalese proverb
46Some Recommended Informational Sites
- www.wsha.org
- www.awphd.org
- www.whf.org
- www.healthleaders.com (excellent daily/weekly
summary of health care events in numerous
categories-free) - Thank you. Philsandifer_at_verizon.net
47Miracle Slide
48Why Strategic Planning?
- With all the uncertainties in our present
healthcare environment, how can we plan for the
future?
49WHY HAVE A MISSION A STRATEGIC PLAN?
-
- It is critical to not only establish an
organizational mission and strategic plan to make
a business successful, but also to connect that
strategy with the hearts and minds of its
employees. You can never underestimate the
necessity of understanding the core competencies
of a business and how they link up with the
beliefs and values of the staff. HOWEVER, the
strategies adopted need to move employees out of
their comfort zone and toward a different
future. Cheryl Scott, CEO Group Health
Cooperative - Puget Sound Business Journal, February 27-March
4, 2004
50The hospital is not the Business
- Past discussions by hospital CEOs and their
boards have focused on making the hospital more
businesslike, while there has been little
fundamental change in the structure
organization of hospitals for the last 30 years.
In fact, it has been said that the current
organizational format of most hospitals would be
similar to Dell Computer Corporation organizing
around production facilities rather than its
product.
51Hospital is not the Business Continued
- The potential benefits of a real redesign of
delivery systems begins with the understanding
the needs of patient populations and designing
simple systems to move them through the delivery
process (access follow-up which goes beyond
just clinical systems) - The 80-20 rule also applies to hospitals, i.e.
there will be a small number of hospital/district
services that account for 80 of the income of
the organizationthese businesses need to become
the basis for the organizational structure. Dont
rely on instinct-- use data to identify and
confirm the20! - We need to change the historical business focus
on the hospital infrastructure, e.g. staffing,
ancillary services, IT, etc. to focus on the
development of delivery systems focused on
meeting the needs of the patient groups and
stakeholders. Systems should be designed from
the end-user backward through the organization. - IS THIS BOARD AND ADMINISTRATION UP TO THE
CHALLENGE?
52THE FIVE TASKS OF STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
- Developing a concept of the business organization
(hospital district) and forming a vision of where
the district needs to be headed providing the
organization with a sense of purpose, providing
long-term direction and establishing a mission. - Converting the mission into specific performance
objectives - Crafting a strategy to achieve the targeted
performance - Implementing and executing the chosen strategy
efficiently and effectively - Evaluating performance, reviewing the situation,
and initiating corrective adjustments - The completed strategic plan will illustrate the
organizations vision, mission strategy
intended to achieve specific performance
objectives outlined in the plan
53SAMPLE STRATEGIC BUSINESS PLAN STATEMENT
- This ___ (year) Business Plan projects the
performance of organization for the years of
2004, ?, ?. The following work plan represents
the strategy-making and strategy-implementing
process selected by management to meet the
priority goals established by the Board of
Commissioners on date.