Final Exam, Four page paper
Final Exam, Four page paper
Against All Odds: The Successful Hospital Merger that Formed Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta “What do we all have in common?” Introduction James Tally, the then newly appointed CEO of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, had 26 years of experience in healthcare administration in both academic medicine and private practice. Tally was known for his transparent leadership, strategic planning and passionate drive to create relationships within the organization. His appointment as CEO brought unease as concerns arose regarding the nature of the merger and whether it would be one of equals. He found himself overwhelmed with the task of integrating Scottish Rite Children’s Medical Center and Egleston Children’s Health Care System, two pediatric hospitals with a long tradition of competition. Tally questioned his ability to complete his inaugural merger while accomplishing both financial synergies and creating a unified culture. Tally held countless meetings with the stakeholders in an attempt to gain support for the new organization and justify the abundance of changes brought upon on the employees, patients and community. Shortly after the merger was announced publicly, Tally sat down with the new Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta board. The new board comprised of members from both hospitals in hopes of gaining their mutual support. While many board members had a supportive view of the merger, Tally faced opposition as to how to structure this new entity and merge two groups that experienced a discontinuity of opinions. Discussions broke out on how to create a cohesive culture and create efficiencies to make a better organization, but this only exacerbated the problem as more opinions were shared and no course of action could be decided upon. It became very clear that the two hospitals had fundamentally different philosophies and histories ingrained in the respective organizations that would be difficult to merge. Tally began to question if the two hospitals would ever overcome their differences for the common good. © 2012 by the Georgia Tech Research Corporation. This case was prepared by Professor William J. Todd and Kristin Watkins, Scheller College of Business, Georgia Tech. Cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management. 1 Tally sat at the board table patiently listening to the discussions and feedback, trying to unify these leaders. As time progressed, Tally noticed that progress and decisions regarding how to move forward with the merger were not being made as the two sides were not ready to compromise. He stood up, and in a caring tone voiced to the board, “We are here for the kids.” This phrase resonated so well with those involved in the merger that it became a sort of battle cry for Tally whenever conflict arose. The board was there for the betterment of the children, but this fact required reiteration from time to time as a reminder that the details were insignificant with respect to the bigger picture. Tally felt at ease that there was hope that those involved in the merger could see his vision. Feeling that there was sense of support, he began to focus on the changes in the organization that would have to occur for the merger to be deemed a success. The Environment From 1994 to 1997, the number of not-for-profit hospital mergers and acquisitions in the United States increased fivefold.1 Hospital consolidation during this period was driven by the assumptions that: 1. Hospitals needed to join integrated healthcare systems or risk losing patients to larger providers. 2. Hospitals could achieve major economies of scale by rationalizing capacity and consolidating functions such as information technology and purchasing. 3. Hospitals would be better able to negotiate with other players in the vertical chain, such as payers a
ORDER A PALGIARISM FREE PAPER NOW
nd physicians, if they could create scale based structural advantages.2 McKinsey & Company conducted a study from 1984 to 1998 analyzing 300 hospital mergers and discovered that, “the economic advantages local hospital networks were expected to derive from consolidation have largely eluded them.”3 Of the chief executives involved in these mergers, 75% indicated that the results of the merger failed to live up to expectations. History of Hospitals Scottish Rite Scottish Rite opened in 1915 about six miles east of Atlanta in the Oakhurst area of Decatur. The hospital was unlike any other hospital in the Southeast at the time. It was a place where children could recover after surgery regardless of their family’s financial standing. For this reason, funding was a constant focus of the hospital in order to ensure sustainability. The hospital grew to 165 beds and more than 2,000 employees in 1997 and was now a comprehensive pediatric care center. Thousands of volunteers supported Scottish Rite and developed an allegiance to the hospital. Scottish Rite had a private practice orientation and was affiliated with private physicians. From this standpoint, the hospital operated as an effective business with an economic and financial mindset. Physicians were highly involved in management and governance. 1 Joanne M. Todd, “The Trouble with Mergers: Why are so many nonprofit hospital partnerships crumbling?” Healthcare Business, Sept./Oct. 1999. 2 Grace Colόn, Ajay Gupta, and Paul Mango, “M&A Malpractice,” The McKinsey Quarterly, 1999, Number 1. 3 Ibid. 2 Egleston Thomas Robert Egleston, a colonel in the Confederate Army, had lost four of his five children to childhood diseases. His only surviving son left a provision in his will to create a children’s hospital providing $100,000 for its construction and $12,500 each year in support. This was the largest single gift given to a nonsectarian charity in Atlanta at that time. In 1928 Egleston opened with a total of 52 beds and eight private rooms. Strong relationships with the Atlanta community and foundations allowed Egleston to grow quickly and gain market share. Egleston aligned itself with Emory University and was staffed primarily with Emory physicians. The hospitals physicians were generally focused on patient care, research and teaching. Egleston believed that management and the board should be left to run the hospital while the physicians exercised their medical knowledge. Leading Up to the Merger Financial Position Weakening Healthcare economics in the 1990s posed a threat to the financial viability of charity hospitals. Egleston and Scottish Rite developed a dependency on revenue generating patients to balance their obligation to serve all patients irrespective of their financial position. Technological advancements and more sophisticated service offerings were changing the dynamics of the hospitals. From 1990 to 2000, the average length of stay by patients under the age of 18 had shortened by 10%.4 From 1987 to 1997 the percentage of fee-for-service patients dropped to 15% from over 60%. The shift towards a greater number of Medicaid and managed care patients meant that the hospitals saw a decline in the percentage of billed charges being collected (Exhibit 1). While these trends were beneficial for patients, they disrupted the business models of Scottish Rite and Egleston. The declining bottom lines of these respective hospitals brought into question the viability of their operations moving forward. In response to managed care organizations taking a larger share of the payment mix, both Egleston and Scottish Rite began to negotiate for exclusive insurance contracts. The companies identified the struggle for the hospitals to maintain profitability and took this situation as an opportunity to negotiate payment terms that were in the best interest of their company. These forces left both hospitals concerned with their ability to operate over the long term. Competition among Hospitals As the two hospitals aimed to increase their market share and presence in the Atlanta area, competition between Egleston and Scottish Rite developed. The dynamics of the healthcare industry were drastically changing. Although both hospitals sought to provide sound medical care to children in the Atlanta community, downward pressure on margins in conjunction with reliance on philanthropic capital led to intense competition. A combination of expensive marketing campaigns and unnecessary satellite networks took a toll on the limited financial capacity of each hospital. The battle for patients had the potential to be detrimental for either or both of the hospitals in the long term. 4 “Remembering the Bullpups!,” The Atlanta Journal Constitution, Nov. 19, 2006. 3 Trustees of the Egleston and Scottish Rite grew uneasy with the pressing situation as many board meetings revolved around competition for patient loyalty and marketing tactics. This took the hospitals away from their goal of improving the lives of sick and injured children. Joe Rogers served as an Egleston board member and chief executive officer of Waffle House during this period. In an interview, Rogers remarked that, “I was friendlier with my competitors in the food service business than the leaders of these two charitable children’s hospitals were with one another.” It became clear that this competition was hindering the hospitals from achieving their goal of aiding sick children. Philanthropic Community Pushback The combination of changing healthcare economics and unhealthy competition between Scottish Rite and Egleston caused donors, physicians and parents to grow frustrated with the system. The community had a significant investment in these two hospitals and believed their competitive actions were detrimental to the community. Parents showed a clear preference for pediatric hospitals over general hospitals. This is highlighted by the fact that 45 out of every 100 children in metro Atlanta were taken to one of the two organizations. The competition between the two hospitals posed a threat to both Scottish Rite and Egleston if they betrayed the confidence that parents had entrusted in them. Physicians grew increasingly frustrated with the current system and began to question whether they were providing the best possible care for their patients. Egleston and Scottish Rite developed Physician Hospital Organizations and pressured pediatricians to pick sides. The concern was that by belonging to one, a pediatrician had to refer patients to specialists within that system. Pediatricians on the other hand, were far less concerned with allegiance to an organization, and wished instead to focus their efforts on the best interests of their patients. This dilemma created frustration between hospital management and physicians. Donations from the community and foundations were instrumental in allowing these hospitals to thrive and grow over the years. Both hospitals received significant funding from the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation, Joseph B. Whitehead Foundation, and the Lettie Pate Evans Foundation. The foundations began to step in and indicate that enough was enough, pushing for the intense competition to cease. Duplicative marketing and other expenditures were not in the best interest of the Atlanta community. Scottish Rite and Egleston were at risk of damaging their relationships with the foundations that they relied upon for funding. Merger Strategic Options Pressure from the community and financial uncertainty left both Scottish Rite and Egleston with a limited number of strategic options: continue with current operations, collaborate with an adult hospital, develop alliances with other hospitals or merge with another children’s hospital. Both hospitals looked into these options in an attempt to identify the best opportunity from a business perspective that would also benefit the community at large. In evaluating prospective mergers, three factors must be considered regarding the degree of organizational resistance: relationships between physicians and hospitals; the assets, governance, and leadership of the hospitals; and the drivers of performance.2 4 Egleston and Scottish Rite had clinics at a number of community hospitals and quickly saw that a merger with one of these organizations was not in their best interest. They found a lack of commitment to pediatrics in these clinics as this service line consisted of roughly 10% of the community hospital. Tally and CFO Donna Hyland visited the leadership teams on behalf of Scottish Rite to discuss joining a large hospital alliance; however it became clear that an alliance would not add the most value. Fundamentally, adult hospitals and pediatrics have two differing roles and their viewpoints do not inherently converge. Leadership from Scottish Rite was not convinced that an alliance would create the necessary efficiencies, as many hospitals had failed to do. The number of hospital mergers and alliances in the US, in response to the expansion of managed care systems, has hindered hospital prices and utilization rate. Multihospital systems may not outperform independent hospitals, however, due to their limited ability to capture economies of scale, falling demand and excess capacity, and high relative fixed-cost structures.5 Merger talks began in 1996 as Egleston and Scottish Rite realized that the current financial situation was not sustainable and the other options were not appealing or in the best interest of the community. Guiding Principles Trustees took note of the financial positions of the hospitals as well as the philanthropic pushback and began to look for common ground for further merger discussions. Members of Scottish Rite and Egleston boards met to speak about the possibility of a merger between the two pediatric hospitals. Each hospital was concerned with the perceptions and tactics of the other. The merger was built upon three fundamental principles: 1. Sick and injured children are better off in a pediatric hospital than on a pediatric floor of an adult hospital. 2. Egleston and Scottish Rite belong to the community, not the board of trustees. 3. Specialized pediatric care in a children’s hospital is a precious community asset that must be preserved. The development of these principles provided a justification for the merger and allowed people to align their ideals and move away from the rivalry. It allowed for the creation of a common ground for merger discussions moving forward. Throughout the integration of the hospitals, these principles were used to make decisions and push the hospitals in the right direction. Intent and Efficiency Study On August 8, 1997, Inman Allen and Richard Hiller, respective chairs of the two hospitals, signed a memorandum of intent (MOI) for the hospitals to merge. It began by identifying the common mission of the organization as serving “the pediatric healthcare needs of the Atlanta metropolitan area and surrounding region.” 5 Milt Gillespie and Aileen Lee, “Building hospital market power through horizontal integration – is it working?,” The McKinsey Quarterly, 1996. 5 Both sides saw the benefit the combination would have on the community through: “Assuring the availability of high quality clinical services and facilities with a sound fiscal foundation; stabilizing or lowering the cost of care by avoiding duplicate investment in expensive technology and facilities, reducing the cost of capital, better deploying excess capacity and other measures; providing healthcare in a cost effective manner under a variety of managed care arrangements; and integrating research, training, information technology and academic medicine to realize the full value of affiliation with an academic institution.” The MOI had an expiration date of less than 90 days after signing due to concerns that opposition to the merger might cause significant interference. A consultant was hired to identify possible cost savings and synergies of merging Scottish Rite and Egleston. The consultant worked with management as data was collected, reviewed and analyzed. Total annual operating expense savings were estimated to be between $26.1 and 30.6 million in five years. Cost savings were identified from the consolidation of administrative, marketing, physician, and education services; unification of financial functions, consolidation of support services, coordination of hospital based patient care services; reconfiguration of ambulatory delivery (Exhibit 2). These synergies, if achieved would help the merged hospital to mitigate the effects of declining margins and ultimately provide a higher level of care for children. Structural Changes in Team and Board The chairmen of Egleston and Scottish Rite prepared a slate of trustees for the new board. A provision in the MOI indicated that the board would consist of ten trustees from each hospital, three external members, a chair approved by both boards, the medical directors from Scottish Rite and Egleston as well as the CEO (Exhibit 3). Those trustees who were truly committed and dedicated to the hospitals were those that stayed on the new board, which led to a board that was ambitious and heavily involved in the integration of the hospitals into one new entity. After its creation, the board was tasked with choosing a CEO. An international executive search and leadership consulting firm was hired to help identify a CEO. Both Tally and Alan Gayer, respective chief executive officers of their hospitals, were encouraged to apply. Gayer served 17 years at a top management consulting firm and was CEO of Egleston for eight years. He was known for his focus on strategy and strong analytical decision making skills. The new CEO would have significant recourse on the result of the merger as Tally and Gayer had different goals and leadership styles. External candidates were considered, however the committee identified Tally as the best candidate for CEO. This choice was met with apprehension and concern by Egleston on whether Tally would promote the unification as a merger of equals or show preference toward the Scottish Rite tendencies. Tally’s selection had to be approved by the board before it would go into effect. Larry Gellerstedt III, chair of the new board, recalled after the merger, “We saw Jim Tally as especially strong on the administrative side with communicating with the board and the physicians groups. We knew that success or failure would be determined in the first five years, and would depend on blending cultures, blending medical staffs and physicians, and doing it all in a way that the volunteers and the community felt was 6 right. Everything was complicated, and we believed Tally would be good at playing a statesman-like role.” Upon appointment of CEO, Tally spent ten weeks building a leadership team and attempting to create unity and understanding between Egleston and Scottish Rite (Exhibit 4). Tally wanted to speak to the employees at Egleston and used forums as a way for the other side to get to know him. He was overcome with anxiety and nerves as he was asking the opposition to accept him as their new leader. This would be Tally’s first merger and his aptitude of such matters had yet to be tested. He took these meetings as an opportunity to listen and try to understand the needs of the employees. Gayer, made an effort to endorse Tally throughout these meetings, however there was still a great deal of skepticism and uncertainty at this time. At this point, uncertainty was building and people began to question their place in the hospital. Tally wanted to eliminate as much of this ambiguity as early as possible. He had thought about defining senior positions prior to his selection, so he quickly brought on a recruiting firm to develop descriptions for the positions. The executive committee approved Tally’s organizational chart, and he quickly began interviewing both internal and external candidates. Two key positions were appointed early on in the process. Donna Hyland was selected as the chief financial officer and Susan Sciullo from Egleston as the chief integration officer, a new position devoted solely to merger issues. Due to the talent within both organizations, the new leadership team was split evenly between Scottish Rite and Egleston employees. The only external member of the team came with the addition of a senior vice president of medical affairs. Not everyone was satisfied with the selection process and some attempted to sway Tally’s choices in one way or another. Tally stressed the importance of flexibility and leadership’s ability to take the position that would benefit the organization as a whole. Candidates called board members in attempts to get ahead of the competition. Those who did not receive a position were aided to find positions within the health system or elsewhere. Tally cared about the employees, but also reminded them that the choices were all made with the well-being of the children in mind. The new leadership team members then went to their respective teams to communicate the structure and their support for the unified organization. This was the first step in helping to alleviate the uncertainty and tension within the hospitals. Transitioning to a Unified Organization Employee Satisfaction and Morale While confusion surrounding organizational identity mounted, anxiety was also building due to uncertainty and resistance to change. As a result, employee satisfaction was less than desirable. Two months after the merger, employees were dissatisfied because they felt they were competing with multiple priorities in conjunction with bureaucratic decision-making. Frustration continued to mount as issues with people practices began to escalate. Pay, performance evaluation, career paths, work life balance and development opportunities were concerns of employees that they felt were not being addressed. Tally and his leadership team had to find a way to address these issues quickly; otherwise employee morale would continue to diminish. Emory’s academic orientation and Scottish Rite’s private practice orientation 7 created a difficult situation. Physicians were for the most part not employed by the hospital directly, meaning that the hospital had no control over them. Tally believed that building relationships across the two hospitals would allow his team to address employee satisfaction and morale. His executive team held focus groups, individual discussions, and team meetings all with the hopes of addressing the issues and building relationships with employees. While the communication efforts appeased some, many still felt a sense of unease and dissatisfaction with the changes being made. As the hospital continued to evolve, people questioned if the changes were for the better. Tally remarked that a degree of employee satisfaction relied on employees seeing the result of these changes over time. Mission, Values and Vision A year after the merger, the strategic planning committee pushed for the development of a mission, vision and values. Along the way, Tally and others within the leadership team stressed that the two hospitals could have a larger impact together than could be accomplished separately. Key stakeholders including trustees, corporate leaders, physicians, employees and volunteers were approached regarding their feedback and opinion on the goals of the organization. The focus remained on the big picture and aspirations. In November 1998, the strategic planning committee presented their ideas after speaking with various stakeholders and opened the floor for discussion at the board retreat. After this discussion, Tally was not satisfied that all of the trustees had the opportunity to express themselves. In December and January, Tally sat down with each board member to get their input. The development of the mission, vision and values was a defining moment in allowing the hospital to outline who they were and who they wanted to become. These conversations helped to identify future goals and direction for the hospital to begin strategic planning. Tally strived to gather more than just board and leadership input, but also stressed the importance of employees having a say as they create one organization. It served as an opportunity for employees to create the values that would govern their organization. Additionally this brought to light that although there were differences between Egleston and Scottish Rite, fundamentally everyone had a passion for providing excellent pediatric care. As people started to accept this principle, more synergies and a better workplace began to develop. In February 1999, the board approved the mission, vision and values (Exhibit 5). Corporate Identity The extensive histories of Scottish Rite and Egleston created high brand awareness within the community and loyalty to their respective hospitals. The logos and mascots of the hospitals had sentimental value to patients, volunteers and employees. After the merger, employees and volunteers were not ready to let go of their brand and continued to wear clothes that identified with their hospital. Following the merger the new entity was called Egleston Scottish Rite (ESR) for 18 months, but it became clear to the management team that this name was not a long term solution. The new ESR brand did not resonate with the community and did not unify the organization. In order to create a new corporate identity moving forward, both the hospital names had to change entirely. The temporary ESR branding 8 allowed for the leadership team to focus on the integration of the hospitals, and put the emotional issue of a unified brand aside. As time progressed, it became clear that the ESR branding would be detrimental to the organization over the long term. Tally and his team operated under the presumption that this was a merger of equals and Egleston and Scottish Rite would have to relinquish their old identities. The team went in search of sponsors, one major influential donor from each hospital who could provide support and aid in the unification of the hospitals. Though sponsors that were chosen took a big risk in supporting the unification of the hospitals, they ultimately believed that their actions should reflect what is best for the children. Sponsors developed relationships with both hospitals and pushed for volunteers and donors to support the merger. These key players were assembled and tasked with developing the new identity for the hospital. They worked to engage and involve others in the merger as the branding of the hospital progressed. This process began with apprehension, but the two sides began to recognize that they were not that different from one another. In September 1999 the newly named, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, presented its logo to employees and guests at the Atlanta Civic Center (Exhibit 6). Hope and Will were chosen as the names of the children in the logo as per the suggestions of employees. Donna Hyland said, “It was a key moment getting the same logo on our badges and t-shirts. If you asked a nurse two years after the merger where she worked, she’d say ‘I work at Children’s at the Egleston campus.’ Previously she would have said ‘I’m a nurse at Egleston.” Donors and Volunteers Responses to the merger from donors and volunteers varied greatly. Many saw the bigger picture and believed that a unified children’s hospital was in the best interest for the community. This sentiment was far from universal though. The rich histories of Scottish Rite and Egleston led to deep alliances for a single hospital. The thought of merging with another hospital that was previously a competitor did not sit well. Some donors and volunteers had been long time supporters who grew up in this competitive atmosphere and were reluctant to support the merger. Kenneth Phelps, the first chair of the merged foundation board said, “Egleston had their volunteer groups and Scottish Rite had theirs, and they wanted to keep doing what they’d been doing so reverently.” The reliance on volunteers and donors was fundamentally key to the success of a non-profit organization. Without the support of these two constituents, Tally would struggle to make this merger a success. The Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Foundation, under the leadership of Gene Hayes, made an effort to understand the concerns of these people. Hayes and Tally often traveled to the houses of key donors to explain the vision of the unified organization and try to gain their support. This was often met with resistance resulting in frustrations for many in the process. Support from these individuals, was not easy to establish. Time was required for people to come to terms with the merger. Management and the foundation would recruit volunteers and donors to visit the other hospital. Their hope was that those involved would realize that the other side was not all that different from them because at the end of the day everyone was there to help the kids. Over time, most people began to accept the merger. 9 Developing a Better Relationship with Emory Egleston served as a teaching hospital for Emory University since 1959, and despite being staffed by Emory employees, Egleston was independent from the University. In the 1990s tension arose between Emory and Egleston as the changing financial world of healthcare affected both organizations. Egleston increased the hostility by offering higher compensation packages to physicians that worked directly for them. Many programs funded by the philanthropic community relied on the relationship between the two organizations. The philanthropic community was concerned that if the relationship continued to deteriorate, the future of the programs would be jeopardized. Emory preferred to be in a position of control, and the merger left Emory in a state of ambiguity regarding their relationship with the hospital moving forward. Tally met with leaders at Emory to discuss the future relationship and how to optimize their effectiveness with a shared goal (Exhibit 7). After many discussions, the two organizations were able to develop the following shared objectives: 1. Develop research and programs that would push medical boundaries and have direct patient application. 2. Increase outside funding for research. 3. Attract top talent including post-doctoral fellows, successful researchers, graduate students and technical staff. 4. Target the Hematology/Oncology, Cardiac and Transplant programs for national preeminence. While these objectives would efficiently allow for the unification of efforts, the organizations would have to develop ways to convey this to the community and delineate responsibilities between Emory and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Operating as One Integration Team A board transition committee was developed to ensure that Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta achieved the synergies identified in the efficiency study. Joe Rogers chaired the committee and worked with staff teams to identify plans for expense reductions. Susan Sciullo chief integration officer and her team established a matrix of priorities, time schedules, and savings and revenue enhancements. Her team met weekly to assess the current financial situation and did not waste time to cut costs. Five staff teams were created to develop integration plans: administration, network, finance and information systems, care support and clinical support. Many of the synergies that were realized came from leadership consolidation and staff reductions. The decisions on reductions were made quickly to decrease the uncertainty of employees and to cut costs quickly. Decisions were made with the objective of being thoughtful but moving quickly. Efficiencies from care support and clinical services were identified, however these areas were not the core focus of cutting costs as the goal was to not hinder the quality of patient care. Despite this, the integration team cut over $8 million dollars in inefficiencies between the two departments. 10 Satellite locations and marketing expenses also proved to be a significant source of cost savings for the merged entity. Both hospitals had significant expenditures in satellites and marketing campaigns that were a result of competition with one another. Six of the original 28 satellite locations were closed in order to eliminate redundancies while still reaching customer segments. Since Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta was able to cut extra marketing expenses from duplicative marketing campaigns, it allowed them to spend money on new campaigns for the branding of the new entity. The core technological systems of Scottish Rite and Egleston were out of date and not cohesive. There was two of everything: data networks, financial and billing systems, telephone systems and data repositories. The information systems and technology team worked as much as possible to integrate the systems immediately, and also developed longer-term information systems and technology plan. Significant investment into technology and infrastructure made business process improvements possible. Over a ten year time span, the company invested over $122 million in capital expenditures. The standardization of technology allowed for the creation of increased efficiencies. Financial efficiencies were one of the metrics the philanthropic community was counting on with the merger. Looking forward to the future, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta would have to establish that they could blend the institutions successfully, create economies of scale, and attract the top medical talent. Accomplishing these goals was essential in the effort to gain funding from the philanthropic community. The integration team identified $38 million in synergies in 18 months, primarily coming from reductions in administration and network cost savings (Exhibit 8). TUMS: Medical Staff After the merger, the unification of the respective medical staffs was not immediate. It was clear that an adjustment period was needed for the physicians before they could operate as one. In the same manner as the board structure and the leadership team, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta needed one staff and one standard of care. In January of 1999, the Task Force to Unify the Medical Staff (TUMS) was created and consisted of medical personnel from both campuses. The integration was a daunting task as the two medical staffs were structured very differently. Egleston was set up with six departments while Scottish Rite operated under two. After much debate, the leadership team decided on four departments: Medicine, Operative Services, Emergency/Urgent Care and Hospital Based. Physicians were not ready to give up their positions for fear that their voice would no longer be heard. A national healthcare-focused law firm was brought in to assist with the integration of governance. The levels of integration that were developed required slow changes to the system over time (Exhibit 9). Management believed that the medical staff integration should belong to the physicians rather than leadership dictating time lines and tasks for their unification. The TUMS group focused their efforts on developing a common set of bylaws and credentialing process as one of the first steps in the integration of medical staff governance. As the task force began to address the peer review system, many issues were encountered. Due to the nature of peer review, physicians could not agree on a committee. Even with standard peer review processes in place, physicians still believed that reviews by their rivals at the other campus could be detrimental. Even as the physicians developed 11 relationships with one another, many found it difficult to put their distrust for one another behind them. Privilege requirements and a common leadership team were the final parts of integration to occur. This was the result of physician reluctance to operate under medical governance system. Physicians were not without their hesitation and resistance toward unification. Many saw their process and way of doing tasks as superior. No one was ready to completely change the processes that they had been accustomed to for years. Several physicians at Scottish Rite didn’t want a relationship with Emory and saw it as a source of inefficiency. While some areas were open to integration and flexibility, many did not want to work at the other hospital. Moving Forward Three years after the merger, Tally sat at his desk reminiscing on how far Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta had come. He looked at baseball caps from Egleston and Scottish Rite that employees had worn and then glanced at the cap for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Tally was proud at what they had accomplished from financial synergies and a new culture, to a better relationship with the community. While some functions within the culture integrated well, others were not up to the expectations his team was hoping for. Tally identified five aspects of the business, known as the Children’s Star that moving forward the organization would have to focus on: people, quality, service, growth and financial success. The merger had been successful, but he wondered how they could develop a national presence. Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta identified that it wanted to focus on centers of excellence in: hematology/oncology, cardiac and transplant. The board evaluated the strengths, weaknesses and opportunities for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. They believed that the hospital had made significant strides, but knew that a capital campaign was necessary to demonstrate how the hospital would invest its money. The hospital had reached a point where strategic planning was instrumental in obtaining national preeminence. The board looked for a plan that would build upon the foundation of community support and people. What can Tally do to leverage the strengths of the combined hospital to be the best Children’s hospital in the country? 12 Exhibit 1 Financial Positioning: Reimbursement Challenges Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 13 Exhibit 2 Efficiency Study Efficiency Study, 1997 Category 1 2 3 4 5 Description Consolidation of administrative, marketing, physician and education services Unification of financial functions Consolidation of support services Coordination of hospital based patient care services Reconfiguration of ambulatory care delivery Total Annual Operating Expense Savings Range of Annual Savings ( in millions) $12.5 – $14.2 $2.8 – $3.3 $3.3 – $4.2 $2.6 – $3.2 $4.9 – $5.6 $26.1 – $30.6 Note: Totals vary slightly due to rounding. Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 14 Exhibit 3 Egleston Scottish Rite Board of Trustees, Feb. 1, 1998 L.L. Gellerstedt III (chair), American Business Products H. Richard Hiller (vice chair), Coca-Cola Enterprises John G. Alston, JGA Corporation Daniel P. Amos, Aflac William R. Boydston, M.D. James M. Caswell, PC Associates Winifred Storey Davis, Community Volunteer Paul J. DeNicola, Southern Company Services Rene M Diaz, Diaz Foods Sylvia L. Dick, Community Volunteer Kenneth J. Dooley, M.D. Thomas K Glenn, Hilda and Wilbur Glenn Family Foundation Douglas J. Hertz, United Distributors Inc. Ingrid Saunders- Jones, The Coca-Cola Company Paul E. Manners, Paul Manners & Associates Earle Mauldin, BellSouth Enterprises Jackie E. Montag, A Montag & Associates Jean A Mori, Mori Luggage & Gifts Raymond T. Morrissy, M.D. Egbert L. J. Perry, The Integral Group Kenneth J. Phelps, Reliance Trust Company Grace Geer Phillips, Community Volunteer G. Joseph Prendergast, Wachovia Corp. Joe Rogers Jr., Waffle House Inc. Charles M. Shaffer Jr., King & Spalding John W. Spiegel, SunTrust Banks James E. Tally, Ph.D. Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 15 Exhibit 4 Executive Organizational Structure President, Chief Executive Officer James E. Tally, Ph.D. SVP, Chief Financial Officer SVP, Chief Integration Officer Donna Hyland Susan Sciullo SVP, Admin. Services SVP, Medical Affairs Mike Farrell Vacant President, CEO Family Plus SVP, Network SVP, Operations Clinical SVP, Operations Care Support President, Foundation Mike Brohm Mary Rosenberg Becky Webster Pat Kern Gene Hayes Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 16 Exhibit 5 Mission, Vision and Values Mission To enhance the lives of children through excellence in patient care, research and education. Vision To be the model for addressing children’s health needs by defining, then providing or advocating for: 1. Accessible, innovative and excellent patient care 2. Integrated teaching and research 3. Partnerships in wellness and prevention programs Values Integrity Respect Nurturing Excellence Teamwork Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 17 Exhibit 6 Hospital Logos Scottish Rite Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Egleston Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 18 Exhibit 7 Relationship between Children’s and Emory University Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 19 Exhibit 8 Economic Benefits and Cost Savings Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 20 Exhibit 9 Medical Staff Integration Levels of Integration 1998 2000 2006 Status Quo: 2 Med. Exec. Com. 2 Different Bylaws 2 Separate Credentialing Processes 2 Peer Review Com. 2 Sets Officers/ Leaders Integration in Process: 2 Med. Exec. Com. 1 Set Bylaws 1 Credentialing Process 2 Peer Review Com. 2 Sets Officers/ Leaders Full Integration: 1 Med. Exec. Com. 1 Set Bylaws 1 Credentialing Process 1 Peer Review 1 Set Officers/ Leaders Source: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta 21 The Rollins School of Public Health: Strategic Business Decisions in the Academic Realm In early September 2010, the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University celebrated its 20th year anniversary. Coinciding with the celebration, the Claudia Nance Rollins Building opened as the second facility to be built exclusively to house the premier public health institution in the southeastern United States. What had begun within the well-established Emory School of Medicine as a Master of Community Health program with 16 students in 1975 had evolved to become a successful public health school with more than 1,000 students. Despite the quick rise of Rollins to the top of academic rankings for public health institutions, the realization of the school was not an overnight endeavor, nor was it painless at a university that hadn’t seen the creation of a new school in over 70 years. In the late 1980s, Dr. Charles R. Hatcher, Jr. – Emory’s Vice President for Health Affairs and Director of the Robert W. Woodruff Health Sciences Center, was charged with weighing the strategic value of an independent public health school against the risk of financial and functional failure that might follow a departure from the tradition and support of the School of Medicine. © 2012 by the Georgia Tech Research Corporation. This case was prepared by Professor William J. Todd and Francis LaRossa, Scheller College of Business, Georgia Tech. Cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management. Public Health Beginnings Beginning as the Office of Malaria Control Activities, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is one of the first nationalized institutions for the advancement of disease and health related knowledge. Having been headquartered in Atlanta in since 1942, Georgia was a logical location for the center as a significant number of military personnel received basic training in the southeastern United States. The natural environment of the area was similar to those in which American soldiers encountered malaria and other tropical diseases. With the aid of former Coca-Cola president and Atlanta philanthropist, Robert W. Woodruff, the CDC was expanded via a land donation in 1958 from nearby Emory University. The physical proximity to Emory and its renowned Woodruff Health Sciences Center was an obvious opportunity for collaboration with the CDC. During the Vietnam War, an increasing number of young physicians joined the U.S. Public Health Service as commissioned officers to fulfill their duty at a time when all newly graduating medical students were subject to the draft. Many were assigned to the CDC, providing an influx in talent that was quite beneficial to the organization. Many were retained by the CDC after their term of service expired. By the late 1980s, the CDC was established as the global authority on many public health areas with primary focus on the prevention, control, and eradication of diseases that plague populations from San Francisco to Shanghai. The CDC also employed hundreds of health specialists and researchers within the metro Atlanta area, a number of whom had become adjunct professors at Emory. Emory’s own history predated that of the CDC by over 100 years. Founded originally by members of the Methodist faith seeking to establish a seminary school, Emory grew to become a top 20 national university that offered undergraduate and graduate studies in business, law, and 2 medicine. The School of Medicine traces its origins back to 1915 with the merger of three other area medical colleges. Along with its CDC affiliation, the school maintains partnerships with Grady Memorial Hospital, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, and the American Cancer Society. In the 1970s, the concept of community or public health was an ill defined and relatively new field that dealt with the health of populations, as opposed to that of the individual. Often, established physicians who wished to add to their professional acumen might receive a public health certificate or attend an established masters program at a Johns Hopkins or Harvard University. Full time careers in public health (i.e. working in free clinics, practicing disease control abroad, etc) were generally less lucrative and attractive than were medical positions in private hospitals or academic institutions. Realizing that Emory would need to participate in the trend of public health in order to compete with other medical institutions, a Masters in Community Health was created in 1975 and housed within the School of Medicine. The curriculum of the degree was tied closely to the existing fields of study already available to an Emory medical student, which included courses on epidemiology (the study of the distribution and patterns of health-events, healthcharacteristics and their causes or influences in well-defined populations), biostatistics, and behavioral sciences. While the degree offering was expanded and built momentum, there was little to suggest that a separate public health school would be required in the future. For one, the Masters in Community Health degree allowed students to take a significant number of classes at neighboring universities such as Georgia Tech, Georgia State University, and others, but still receive an Emory degree. This exception was critical for attracting potential students early on, but the missed tuition revenue severely limited the capital capabilities for growth. As a result, the program ran a deficit through the 1970s. Also, unlike medical schools at public universities, it was extremely difficult for a private institution to receive federal funding or grants for public health programs. Even with Emory’s relatively large endowment, the notion of re-routing private funding in order to create a new school with no potential donors and few alumni would be an uphill battle in the best of economic 3 times. As the “new kid on the block” the program would be last in line when Emory would appropriate capital from the endowment. The dean of the School of Medicine in particular was skeptical of the success that could be seen from a separate public health school, as it was his belief that fragmentation of medical programs would lead to overall weakened research and academic rigor. Adding to this challenge was the reality that the field was undefined to a degree that experienced faculty members were difficult to recruit. While enthusiasm for the study of public health was nationally trending upwards, there was little precedent for who would be most qualified to teach it. These conditions made the decisions of Dr. Charles Hatcher all the more consequential as the thought of the implications of creating a new school of public health at Emory in the late 1980s. A Surgeon in the Boardroom Dr. Hatcher was no stranger to the pressures and consequences associated with making bold decisions. Having grown up in a small town in south Georgia and gone on to a highly successful career as a heart surgeon, Hatcher had risen through his medical career with a reputation for “cut first, ask questions later.” Despite having little formal business education, Hatcher had become the director of the highly successful Emory Clinic. Under his leadership, the Clinic saw substantial growth towards the treatment of thousands of Atlanta area patients by Emory faculty and the contribution of several million dollars annually to the School of Medicine. Known for his hands on management style, Hatcher simultaneously was Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery and the CEO of the Clinic. This dual role provided Hatcher with an 4 opportunity to run a business responsibly, but also with the unique insight that only a practicing physician can provide to a medical organization. As he refers to it in his memoirs, “Having come up through the ranks, I did not require any of the trappings of authority”.1 With consideration of his success at the Clinic and 20 years of affiliation to the University, Emory President Jim Laney appointed Hatcher in 1983 to Executive Vice President of Health Affairs within the Woodruff Health Sciences Center. The Center was the umbrella organization (Exhibit 1) of Emory health initiatives that included the School of Medicine, School of Nursing, School of Dentistry, the Yerkes National Primate Center, Emory University Hospital, and Crawford Long Hospital. With such diversity of medical programming came a strong reputation, but also the challenge to effectively manage a wide variety of interests and stakeholders ranging from doctors, students, foundations, alumni, and faculty. From a clinic of 400 personnel to a 20,000-person community, Hatcher’s relationship based leadership style was very much put to the test. One of the most difficult issues that a university administrator must occasionally deal with is the closing of a college, school, or department. Often in education, the financial bottom line is marginalized for the sake of a sound academic experience for students. In the late 1980s, Hatcher was presiding over the unfortunate sinking ship that was the Emory School of Dentistry. With southeastern demand for dentists stagnating and declining student numbers, the dental school was losing $2 million annually. With the poor fiscal projections and unfavorable growth projection data in support, Hatcher made the recommendation in 1985 to President Laney and the Emory Board of Trustees to close the dental school. While there was loud disapproval voiced from alumni and current faculty, Hatcher was applauded for keeping the difficult situation from spiraling out of control by keeping the welfare of the current dental students at the forefront of the closing. Despite the costs associated with paying out salaries of faculty and transferring students, the closing of the dental school was a moment where Hatcher’s mettle as a tactful businessman in academia was shown. 1 Pg 248 All In the Timing – From Operating Room to Board Room by Charles Hatcher, MD 5 The fiscal and organizational affirmation for the choice to close the dental school was many years to come. In the meantime, Dr. Hatcher was faced with a potentially even riskier decision on the horizon – the opening of a new school of public health at Emory. Organizational Change – Bold or Brash? Dr. Hatcher sat back in his modest office in the Woodruff Health Sciences Administration building and pondered, “Public Health? At Emory?”. Despite having spent years ascending up the ladder from his days as a cardiac surgeon on staff in the Emory Clinic to now occupying the post of Vice President of Health Affairs, he had sought to retain a physician’s willingness to place people first. His door was always open and he even gave the corner offices in the building to other members of his staff. Hatcher had only come into the position five years prior when the sitting VP, Dr. Herndon, had a stroke and retired on medical leave. After serving as interim director for a year, he was made an offer to continue on full time. While unexpected, he relished the opportunity to enable others in the medical community to do the very work he so loved as a young cardiovascular surgeon. Despite his emphasis on relationship building and networking, Hatcher was not one to shy away from the spotlight of responsibility, as he was often referred to in the Atlanta Journal Constitution as the Emory Health Czar. In the normally slow-to-change world of academia and especially in a private school like Emory, Hatcher was known as an exception for being deliberately forward thinking and most importantly, decisive. At 59 years old, Hatcher in his VP role had already helped to hire a new dean of the School of Medicine, renegotiated a contract with a local hospital (Grady Memorial), and had endured the trials of the choice to phase out the decades old dental school. Not one to settle, he had also set the ambitious goal by 1990 to have $100 million annually in National Institute of Health (NIH) funding, a goal that would help Emory surpass Georgia Tech in the late 90s as the largest research university in the state by grant volume. Another goal was to strengthen the 6 recently renamed Masters in Public Health program, as he was not ignorant to the growing medical trend for public health as a career opportunity for those students looking to solve national disease epidemics (HIV, diabetes, etc) or even work to improve the health of entire Third World populations. Goals were one thing, but buildings and classrooms were quite another. Recently, with the encouragement of President Laney, he had been asked to analyze how “big” public health could or should become at Emory. For nearly thirty years, several faculty members and former CDC employees had invested their lives into growing what had originally been the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health that was securely housed in the larger School of Medicine. The small Master of Public Health program was understaffed and underfunded; yet it somehow continued to press forward. In the 1981, it was awarded full accreditation for five years and even operated financially in the black for the first time in 1983. As it stood today, the MPH program had eight full time faculty and 135 students. Even more recently, the American Board of Preventive Medicine had released its 1987 report stating that Emory MPH graduates had ranked at the very top of their national board exams, beating out even students at top ranked Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and Michigan. While the sample size of Emory students was statistically insignificant, this report bolstered the credibility for the work being done within the MPH program. The driving success behind the MPH program was not so much made possible by funding or new facilities, but by the dedication of several key individuals, most of whom came from CDC backgrounds and had spent years of their careers working in Africa and in other nations of sub par health infrastructure. The vision that was carried forward in the program was one of applied study that focused on the practical application of public policy, administration, and clinical public health. 2 2 pg 45-73 A Shared Dream – The Genesis of Academic Public Health At Emory by Dollie Daniels, MPH 7 Despite these indicators of success, there was equally enough concern over the possibility of further growth of the program. Hatcher was responsible for the affairs of the esteemed medical school, which still housed the MPH program. He was the primary individual charged with maintaining the financial solvency, organizational integrity, and public perception of all health related activities at Emory. Still very much involved with the recent fate of the dental school, Hatcher understood that the opening and closing of schools was not to be taken lightly at a university that hadn’t seen a new school in nearly 70 years. Furthering his concern was the opinion given by the very dean of the School of Medicine that he helped to hire back in 1983. Dean Richard Krause came to Emory after having served as the Director of the Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institute of Health and after nearly being selected to fill the VP post that Hatcher currently occupied. Hatcher felt that Krause, with a strong academic background, would serve well as the newest dean of the School of Medicine. Hatcher was aware of Dean Krause’s disbelief in the feasibility of a separate school or even division of public health at Emory. For one, if the MPH program were to become independent, the School of Medicine would lose significant research dollars and academic capital in advancing towards the top ten in the national medical school rankings. Having come from a background of epidemiological research, Krause’s vision for public health at Emory would be a laboratory-oriented program that would strengthen and complement the core sciences departments within a flourishing medical school. With his view of public health emphasizing laboratory learning, Dean Krause also implied that collaboration would be more likely with the nearby research bastion of the CDC. This potential partnership would in turn further Emory’s chances at receiving more NIH funding. As it was known that NIH funding served as a proxy for medical school excellence, Hatcher was all too aware of the potential upshot of allowing Krause and the School of Medicine to keep the MPH program in house. Whether he thought it fair or not, he knew that Emory’s standing in the national medical school rankings would be tied to his success or failure as the VP of Health Affairs. 8 Benchmarking and Consultation In order to advance the his understanding of what the future might hold for the MPH program, Hatcher directed Krause to assemble a committee of medical school faculty to investigate and form a report on recommended next steps for the program. The committee spent several months interviewing Emory faculty and examining the MPH curriculum. When it emerged with its report (Exhibit 3 Plauth Report), the findings applauded the growth of the MPH program, encouraged it to pursue a unique international focus, and strongly emphasized good relations between the program and the School of Medicine. While the report hinted at the possibility of an independent School of Public Health, it did not conclusively state that it was imperative for a separation from the School of Medicine. Despite the committee’s findings, Hatcher grew frustrated. It was becoming more and more clear that the School of Medicine and the MPH program were reaching an impasse that showed little sign of quietly fading away. In response to the increasing pressure to support an independent public health division, Krause reorganized and refreshed funding towards the two most important academic subject areas of an education in public health – epidemiology and biostatistics. With an additional $750,000 of allocated budget and the combining of the School of Medicine’s epidemiology and biostatistics departments, Krause sought to prove that public health studies could be advanced but only under the auspices his medical school. Chosen to chair this new department was a young and promising epidemiologist, Dr. Ray Greenberg. Not completely satisfied with the results of the internal Emory report, Hatcher realized that the consultation he needed would require perspectives larger than what could be found on campus. Knowing that he preferred to deal with such important matters personally, he brought together Krause, Dr. Jim Mason (director of the CDC), and Dr. Bill Foege (director of the Carter Center).3 The discussion held yielded a majority supported decision (with Krause still skeptical) of “yes”; there was great potential for a school of public health at Emory. This judgment was 3 9 Pg 268 All In the Timing – From Operating Room to Board Room by Charles Hatcher, MD subsequently endorsed and validated by a consultation and visit by and Dr. D.A. Henderson, dean of the School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins, widely known and respected as the “Dean of Deans” in Public Health. Coming from the number one ranked public health school in the country, Dr. Henderson especially was the authority on the academic realities of a public health education. Having been the educational birthplace of public health, Johns Hopkins had held dominion over the brightest students and the most experienced medical faculty for quite sometime. For Dr. Henderson to support the public health initiative at Emory and disregard the potential competition for students, faculty, and funding told Hatcher that the opportunity was too unique to not consider further. Hatcher knew that going straight from a degree program to a new school would present severe fiscal disadvantages. In order to avoid the “taxing” that is a function of being a school within a university, he opted to suggest the formation of a new division of public health within the Health Sciences Center. Such a designation would allow for a lighter financial burden, but still greater autonomy than if the MPH program were to remain as it was. Already not one to drag his feet, Hatcher was a bit relieved to have finally reached a decision that would hopefully appease the various parties associated with the question of public health at Emory. Human Resources Reshuffling Shortly before the Board of Trustees vote on the proposal to make the program a division, Hatcher was notified that Krause had frozen all funding for the MPH program for the upcoming 1988-89 academic year. “What on earth does Krause think this will accomplish?” said Hatcher. He knew that not only would this cause more bad blood between the School of Medicine and the MPH program, but it would also negatively affect the morale of the worn thin public health faculty. To add fuel to fire, it was now public knowledge that Krause had openly voiced within certain circles at Emory that there was no inherent mandate for the MPH to grow and that it would only become a school over his “dead body”. 10 The last thing Hatcher needed was the Atlanta press to catch wind of an internal power struggle within the pink granite facades of Emory. President Laney and his cabinet would expect Hatcher to move quickly in order to quell the discontent, but there was little that could be done short of completely overriding Krause’s authority on the matters of the medical school. If this was the case, the frayed relations that would result between the Dean of the School of Medicine and the VP of Health Affairs could adversely impact a number of other critical Emory medical issues that might be entirely unrelated to the MPH program for years to come. Then, a stroke of luck befell the future of public health at Emory when in October, Dean Krause suddenly resigned. While it was unclear as to why exactly he stepped down when he did, Hatcher could imagine that the conflict over the growth of the MPH was a significant factor. While this unexpected exit by Krause helped to clear the path towards a public health school, Hatcher was concerned to see him go. Hatcher knew he was not a college dean himself and as the CEO of the Woodruff Health Sciences Center, he had counted on strong academic leaders under him to enact the fiscal and organizational policies he set forth. Public health at the university may have received an early Christmas gift that year, but Hatcher had watched as the Dean of the proud Emory School of Medicine left under duress while under his watch as VP of Health Affairs. Shortly thereafter in December of 1988, Hatcher’s proposal was passed by the Board of Trustees. While the MPH faculty rejoiced to have finally have thrown off the yoke of the School of Medicine, there were still serious questions and uncertainty to be accounted for if the newly formed Emory Division of Public Health (DoPH) was to one day become a school. Sustained Growth and Strategic Planning With renewed vigor, the DoPH looked to stand a fighting chance of one day becoming a school, but Hatcher knew that two significant deficiencies would hinder its grow. 11 First, where would a division with no real funding find a physical home? Hatcher knew that a tangible and consolidated location for the program was key if prospective students or even other members of the Emory community were to recognize it. If it was to find a home, it needed to be sooner rather than later and most importantly, cheap. And then, he thought of the recent move of the American Cancer Society from bustling Manhattan to the quieter Clifton Road, the very same street on which his own office was located. The move was sparked by the Society’s desire to drive down costs from the pricey operating environment that New York required of any business, and its own interest in better relating to its far-flung national constituency. Having already been involved with the transition and the raising of funds to build their new facility, Hatcher knew that the ACS was looking to add a vacant top floor to their building in order to accommodate future growth projections. He also knew that Emory and its many related foundations would look favorably on strengthening their relationship with ACS by creative means. Seeing an opportunity, Hatcher approached the ACS with a proposal. He proposed to a local anonymous foundation to put forth a million dollars, and then proposed to the ACS that the additional floor could be built with this money, but only if the newly formed Division of Public Health could occupy the space for five years, rent-free. This brilliant move was convenient and came at the right time, but Hatcher knew too that it was people, not buildings that sustain and grow a new organization. Moving quickly, he created a search committee to discuss and interview candidates to find who would serve as dean if the division were to become a school. The Board of Trustees would consider conferring the status of an independent school, but not before a strong leader had been identified as dean. After a national search, the committee came to Hatcher with one final candidate – the current chair of the Epidemiology and Biometry Department, Dr. Greenberg. Ray Greenberg at 35 years old was nearly a decade younger than the other candidates, but his track record in public health was extremely impressive. Dr. Greenberg had also come from a family history in the field, 12 as his father had been the Dean of the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina. Sitting back in his office, Hatcher thought to himself, “Greenberg is a sharp kid, but the school is still fragile…if this doesn’t work in the first few years, we might have to close another school”. In a sense, his experiences with heart transplantation came to mind. A surgeon hopes that a new heart will be accepted by the rest of the body the same as the insertion of the school of public health into the political environment of Emory would hopefully garner both fiscal and cultural support. Other questions filled Hatcher’s thoughts. As the man meant to have the larger perspective on the whole ordeal to create a public health school, what vision must he cast for it? Would the choice of bringing in a young dean potentially undermine the work of his predecessors to establish the school? Would it all financially remain viable? And most importantly, with his eyes towards the future, how does Emory’s School of Public Health uniquely position itself in the southeast, in the nation, in the world? 13 Exhibits 14 Exhibit 1 – Emory Woodruff Health Sciences Organizational Woodruff Health Sciences Center Organizational Chart CEO, CEO,Woodruff Woodruff Health HealthSciences SciencesCenter Center && Executive Vice President for Health Executive Vice President for Health Affairs Affairs&& Chairman of the Board, EMORY HEALTHCARE Chairman of the Board, EMORY HEALTHCARE Michael MichaelM.E. M.E.Johns, Johns, MD MD Vice VicePresident, President, Academic AcademicHealth Health Affairs Affairs Jeffrey JeffreyW. W.Koplan, Koplan, MD, MD, MPH MPH Dean, Dean, Emory EmoryUniversity UniversitySchool School ofofMedicine Medicine Thomas ThomasJ.J.Lawley, Lawley, MD MD Dean, Dean, Nell Nell Hodgson Hodgson Woodruff Woodruff School School ofof Nursing Nursing Marla E. Salmon, ScD, RN, Marla E. Salmon, ScD, RN,FAAN FAAN President President &&Chief Chief Executive ExecutiveOfficer, Officer, EMORY EMORYHEALTHCARE HEALTHCARE John JohnT.T.Fox Fox Vice VicePresident President for for Health Health Affairs Affairs&& CFO, CFO,Woodruff Woodruff Health HealthSciences SciencesCenter Center Ronnie Ronnie L.L.Jowers Jowers Vice VicePresident President for for Research Research Administration, Administration, Emory EmoryUniversity University Frank FrankStout Stout Dean, Dean, Rollins RollinsSchool School ofof Public PublicHealth Health James JamesCurran, Curran, MD, MD, MPH MPH Chief Chief Counsel, Counsel,WHSC WHSC &&EMORY EMORYHEALTHCARE HEALTHCARE Jane Jane E.E.Jordan, Jordan,JD JD Director, Director,Yerkes YerkesNational National Primate PrimateResearch ResearchCenter Center Stuart Stuart M. M. Zola, Zola,PhD PhD Senior Senior Associate AssociateVice VicePresident President for for Health Health Affairs Affairs &&Chief Chief ofof Staff Staff Gary Gary Teal Teal Associate Associate Vice VicePresident, President, WHSC WHSC Communications Communications Ron RonSauder Sauder 15 Senior Senior Associate AssociateVice VicePresident, President, WHSC WHSC Development Development Philippe Philippe Hills Hills Associate Associate Vice VicePresident, President, Strategic Strategic Planning PlanningOffice Office WHSC WHSC &&EMORY EMORYHEALTHCARE HEALTHCARE Shari Shari Capers Capers Exhibit 2 – The Plauth Report 16 Exhibit 3 – The Value Proposition of AHCs: Community and Societal Benefits As defined by Fred Sanfilippo, MD Healthcare Broad range of services Sub-specialists Experimental treatments Referrals to other AHCs Education Quality and quantity of physicians Nurses, dentists, and other professions Biomedical scientists New, evolving healthcare disciplines Research Basic biomedical mechanisms Translational, applied research Technology development Test beds, clinical effectiveness Economic 17 Direct job creation Uncompensated care Extramural funding; indirect job creation Intellectual property, business creation © 2012 by the Georgia Tech Research Corporation. This case was prepared by Professor William J. Todd and Francis LaRossa, Scheller College of Business, Georgia Tech. Cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management. 18 Public Health “…what we, as a society, do collectively to assure conditions in which people can be healthy…” Institute of Medicine, 1987 Public Health Focus is on health of populations Focus is on prevention Main functions are: Assessment (data) Policy Development Assurance Public Health Priority setting: 1) Numbers of persons in a population affected (or potentially affected) 2) Severity of conditions 3) Ability to impact (1) and/or (2) Research Spectrum Basic Science (Lab, Bench) Individual Population (Community) Efficacy Effectiveness Impact RCT Surveys Modeling Epidemiology Economics Rollins School of Public Health Rollins Auditorium Rollins School of Public Health MPH/MSPH Behavioral Science/Health Education √ Biostatistics/Bioinformatics √ Environmental Health √ Epidemiology √ Health Policy/Management √ Global Health √ Nutrition — PhD √ √ √ √ √ –√ Rollins School of Public Health Dual Degrees MPH plus graduate degrees in • • • • • • • Medicine Nursing Physician Assistant Business Law Theology PhD MY OWN PATH Born in Michigan B.S. Notre Dame M.D. University of Michigan M.P.H. Harvard School of Public Health Preventive Medicine Residency: Harvard Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 1971-1995 Emory University Rollins School of Public Health 1995 – present Lessons from the AIDS Epidemic James W. Curran, MD, MPH September 13, 2018 Task Force on Kaposi’s Sarcoma and Opportunistic Infections (KSOI) 1981 Auerbach, Bennett, Brachman, Caldwell, Crispi, Curran, Darrow, Falk, Gordon, Guinan, Haverkos, Heath, Ing, Jaffe, Jones, Juranek, Kelter, Lane, Lawrence, Ludlow, McGrath, Monroe, Morens, Orkwis, Rogers, Rushing, Sattin, Shapiro, Spira, Stewart, Thomas, Westmoreland 1982 CDC Task Force on Kaposi’s Sarcoma and Opportunistic Infections (KSOI) CDC Task Force on Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) LAV = HTLVIII = HIV LymphadenopathyAssociated Virus Human T-cell Leukemia Virus Type III Human Immunodeficiency Virus HIV LESSONS LEARNED AIDS = AIDS Is Different (Stupid) Biologic and Social Factors Favor Insidious Spread and Long-Term Endemicity Factors Facilitating the HIV Pandemic 1. Long period between infection, symptomatic illness and death: a) In an Individual: Silent infection and infectivity; b) In a Community: Prevalence greatly exceeds incidence; Insidious epidemic. 2. HIV persists for life of human host. HIV Facilitating Factors (cont’d) 3. HIV is highly stigmatizing: a) Modes of transmission (sex, drugs); b) Debilitation and high case-fatality rate; c) Fear of contagion; 4. HIV preferentially affects the poor; a) Competing priorities; b) Unsustainable political support HIV Facilitating Factors (cont’d) 5. Status of Women in Most Societies 6. HIV attacks the immune system a) Increase morbidity from other conditions b) Enhances effects of other poverty-related conditions 7. No effective vaccine or curative therapy HIV LESSONS LEARNED People Make The Difference • • • • Persons with HIV Caregivers Scientists Other Concerned Leaders Jonathan Mann 1947-1998 Mary Lou Clements-Mann 1947-1998 ROLLINS SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Promoting Health, Preventing Disease Locally, Nationally, Globally Diverse Research Portfolio Public Health Capital of the World Leading Graduates Practice-Based Experiences www.sph.emory.edu Attentive Faculty Community Partnerships APPLYING TO ROLLINS Visit us at RSPH Define your interests * Monthly Admissions Information Sessions *Fall Open House *Individual Appointments SOPHAS Complete the online application at www.sophas.org Determine which academic program best suits your interests Need Additional Advisement? Contact Prudence Goss, Director of Admissions & Student Services prudence.goss@emory.edu
Purchase answer to see full attachment