Confessions of a Hospital Administrator: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

A look at recent data that explains the impact of uninspiring workplace culture. Nurses General Nursing Article

You've probably heard of the now controversial Johns Hopkins study that medical mistakes are the third leading cause of death in the U.S. When, as part of an assignment, I asked a Chief Medical Officer at a large healthcare system about medical mistakes, he gave me what I thought a very insightful answer:

"In medicine, we rely on the heroic efforts of doctors and nurses not to make mistakes," he told me. "But people can make mistakes. It's not a matter of fault, but a bad process."

His answer got me to thinking that if most mistakes are a bad process, what kind of mistakes fall into the rare category of intentional? I once worked at a large hospital system as the media spokesperson. We had an inexplicable incident in which hundreds of patients were exposed to contagious diseases because two sterilization techs improperly steamed surgical instrument packs. The techs, for reasons they never explained, did not follow a process with which they were very familiar.

So I started looking around on - as a retired Navy buddy likes to say - "the worldwide Interweb" to see what I could find. Nurses still come off looking pretty good. In case you didn't read my first column last year, nurses have been ranked as the most honest, ethical profession by the public 14 years in a row in a Gallup poll.

But this doesn't make the job any easier. Another recent poll found that of the five factors that make up the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index - purpose, social, financial, community and physical well-being -more than half of all healthcare workers are thriving in none or only one element of well-being. Additionally, fewer than one in ten workers is thriving in all five elements. As a former hospital administrator, this makes me ashamed.

I don't know if this falls under a bad process or not. But a recent study just found that if a healthcare worker knows they are being observed, they are twice as likely to comply with handwashing protocols. I'd be very interested in hearing your thoughts for this finding, which has been dubbed the Hawthorne Effect.

Lax handwashing practices pale compared to the $1 billion Medicare fraud bust the feds just made in Florida. Three owners of a home health and assisted living company, as well as a hospital administrator and a physician's assistant were just indicted on money laundering and conspiracy committed over 14 years. Given that close to $2.5 trillion is spent on more than four billion health claims a year, $1 billion may not seem like much (HA - just kidding...). But the laundry list of charges turned up the usual stock in trade for fraud. This included: billing for services never provided; up-coding, including unbundling; performing medically unnecessary procedures; falsifying diagnosis and test results; accepting kickbacks for patient referrals (inurnment); and waiving patient co-pays and deductibles.

Physicians have their challenges as well. A recently published JAMA article found significant evidence that doctors who received as little as one free meal from a drug sales rep prescribed the discussed drug at a rate that was significantly higher than their peers. A ProPublica story and a Harvard Medical Business School study earlier this year both concluded that doctors who accepted payments from pharmaceutical and medical device industries prescribed those specific brands at a higher rate than their peers.

In an article in the New York Times, an M.D. clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at the N.Y.U School of Medicine wrote an article titled "The Illicit Perks of the M.D. Club." He cited a former Cigna executive whistle-blower who stated that "insurance companies profit by introducing hurdles in the coverage and claims process." The author also noted that since 2010 when the ACA was adopted, "the major insurance companies have seen their stock prices soar. Though the act expanded coverage to millions, a report last year by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation revealed that 41 percent of health plans sold on the government exchanges had physician networks described as "small" or "extra-small," covering less than 25 percent and 10 percent of local doctors, respectively."

So what does all this mean?

To me, it suggests that our healthcare system is only as good as its weakest link. Asking unit secretaries to convey orders, appointing nurses as security guards and expecting physicians to deal with insurance companies are, as the Chief Medical Officer said to me, "a bad process". The people in a hospital whose primary job is to identify bad processes are administrators.

There are administrators in every organization who develop best practices for safety, quality, compliance and ethics. But a hospital administrator's primary job is to make sure everyone - from nurses to physicians to housekeepers - feel inspired to get up and come to work. It takes a servant leader to be really successful. This is easy to say, but hard to do.

One of the biggest misperceptions about servant leaders is they don't hold people accountable to the values and metrics of the organization. My experience is that it is easy to hold people accountable when they have a say in what the values and metrics should be. This, I finally learned, is the easiest way I know to be in charge. Because there is no competition for an engaged workforce.

Specializes in Administrator inspired by nurses.

All of your feedback: lack of nursing input; poor work processes (including info overload); inadequate pay, etc all come down to poor workplace culture. As many of you know, I've talked about this topic in other posts. If hospital administrators want to have a market advantage for which there is little competition, they must address nursing concerns. Nurses will set high metrics they can support given the opportunity. Achieving this end requires servant leadership; this is easy to say and difficult to do. Most hospital administrators are taught to be command and control leaders. Herein lies the root cause of nursing unhappiness and dissatisfaction. Thank you for reading my post.

Specializes in Registered Nurse.

I ditto the thought that better staffing would solve a lot of problems. Not all, but a lot. As someone else said in a different way, you can't focus on your most important work while handing out the third cup of ice in an hour to return to explaining, "What's going on with Mom?" while trying to keep the man in the next room from doing a head dive out of the bed while your CNA is busy doing vitals somewhere far down the hall.

I was just thinking, all these administrators/DONs/other hospital administrative types come here asking what the problem is, and we KEEP TELLING THEM and nothing ever changes. We TELL them we need better staffing, and it NEVER improves. Why keep asking if you don't plan to DO anything about the problem? Because they want an answer that won't affect their bonus for bringing the hospital in under budget, that's why!

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
If they REALLY want to know why mistakes happen, I worked 23 years on an oncology unit. I 95% of the time was doing primary care on 6 - 7 patients, and 99% of the time (I can count on the fingers of one hand I when wasn't) I was giving 2 units of blood to at least 2 patients in addition to giving chemotherapy to at least 2 patients, plus the others were usually immunocompromised, and we had one STNA for the 14 to 17 patients. THAT is how mistakes happen!

I can't even imagine. Did you have the second nurse available for checking chemo? How on earth did you manage? Who was taking the frequent VS for the transfusion patients?

There were two nurses on the floor, one other one plus me. The poor STNA and the nurse on that team (either me or the other nurse) had to do it. So (obviously) breaks and lunch were out of the question, but we still had to clock out for lunches (mandatory) even though we never got them. In all the time I worked there, I got lunch approximately 10 times (as best I can remember.) But it was a pretty good place to work in that we all worked together and "had each others' backs." We had a good crew. And our afternoon supervisor was good, she felt for us even though she couldn't do much. But if we were having a totally disastrous night, she would "turf" admissions to another floor for us (because we didn't complain unless it was a total disaster.)

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
There were two nurses on the floor, one other one plus me. The poor STNA and the nurse on that team (either me or the other nurse) had to do it. So (obviously) breaks and lunch were out of the question, but we still had to clock out for lunches (mandatory) even though we never got them. In all the time I worked there, I got lunch approximately 10 times (as best I can remember.) But it was a pretty good place to work in that we all worked together and "had each others' backs." We had a good crew. And our afternoon supervisor was good, she felt for us even though she couldn't do much. But if we were having a totally disastrous night, she would "turf" admissions to another floor for us (because we didn't complain unless it was a total disaster.)

Wow! Everyone....Does sthis situation seem even remotely okay? I'm sure everyone has their own stories, but knowing what I know about caring for Onc patient's (not much), even I can't get a grip on how all this was done safely. Not to mention no breaks. Mandatory clock out for a break you don't even take. Where is the oversight for this? KUDOS to you and your coworkers for handling it as a team.....but then, for those of us who manage to skirt by without conseguences/disasters...we perpetuate the problem. Why change anything as long as remarkable nurses like LadysSolo make it work?

I have to say, LadysSolo, you must be one heck of a nurse to be able to run like this and still catch the potential problems that may come up. You must REALLY know your stuff! What happens when a less knowledgeable nurse comes along with the same expectations from management? Does she get fired for incompetence or loose her career when she makes a mistake? Not to mention have to live with those consequences.

You make it work because it's all about the patients. I got out on time about the same # of times I got lunch - you could NO WAY keep up your charting under the circumstances, you make notes on the paper on your clipboard so you can chart later. I also am extremely anal about things, and very organized. I also used to joke that my patients were "well-trained," I would check into everyone's room about hourly, and they could ask me for what they wanted then (cut down on call lights), and their families got used to it too (I worked 5days/40 hours/week) so it made things better. I also knew from friends that it was no better anywhere else, so I stayed where I at least had good co-workers.

You hit on many interesting points.

Specializes in Administrator inspired by nurses.

When I started as a hospital administrator in 2000, an older guy explained to me about how hospitals were becoming more complex to management: "You know, it used to be in the old days you counted the money in the morning, played golf with the doctors in the afternoon and underpaid all the nurses all the time." He was serious. While I know some good administrators who really care about their staffs, not allowing nurses time to take lunch or bathroom breaks or staffing so charting can be done properly makes me think we're not so far removed from those days in some hospitals.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

Not to mention, violating labor laws by charging people for breaks they don't get. That would not work with me.

When I started as a hospital administrator in 2000, an older guy explained to me about how hospitals were becoming more complex to management: "You know, it used to be in the old days you counted the money in the morning, played golf with the doctors in the afternoon and underpaid all the nurses all the time." He was serious. While I know some good administrators who really care about their staffs, not allowing nurses time to take lunch or bathroom breaks or staffing so charting can be done properly makes me think we're not so far removed from those days in some hospitals.
Specializes in Administrator inspired by nurses.

Oh yes, it is illegal. But I have seen cases were doing something illegal was not enough to motivate executives to make changes - they had to get caught, first (this is not widespread, but I have seen it first hand). I had such circumstances brought to my attention once and it brought to light a serious understaffing issue, which I corrected.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
Oh yes, it is illegal. But I have seen cases were doing something illegal was not enough to motivate executives to make changes - they had to get caught, first (this is not widespread, but I have seen it first hand). I had such circumstances brought to my attention once and it brought to light a serious understaffing issue, which I corrected.

A class action lawsuit (if proven and people banded together)--- would fix the situation and sink their reputation quickly.