preparing physicians for the interview process

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Preparing Physicians For The Interview process

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Preparing Physicians For The Interview process. BIO. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

Preparing Physicians For The Interview process

Page 2: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

BIO

Don O’Bryan, CMSR, FMSD has served for the past nine years as Corporate Director of Physician Recruitment for the Mountain States Health Alliance (MSHA), a 13-hospital regional health system with facilities in NE Tennessee and SW Virginia. He is responsible for the ongoing medical staff development for the system and full-cycle provider recruitment for a variety of practice situations that include private, employed, academic, rural, and metro.  For the past two years, the MSHA Physician Recruitment Team has had a strong emphasis on screening and preparing physician candidates for the on-site interview. This session will focus on practical ways to not only understand a candidate’s expectations, but also communicate your hospital’s expectations with the goal of a good overall “fit”.  Don has been a member of the Association of Staff Physician Recruiters (ASPR) for nine years and has served on their education committee. He is also a Board Member of Carolina’s Association of Physician Services (CAPS). He regularly speaks on topics related to physician recruitment.  He has been married to Laura for 28 years. During their long romance, they have raised four boys (Dan, Chris, Josh, and Kevin). Don and Laura have two grandchildren and another on the way.

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Agenda

Overview of our MSHA Physician Recruitment Department.

Recent Influences That Have Affected Our Recruitment Strategy.

Basic and Advanced Screening - Setting Candidate Expectations.

Reinforcement of Expectations Throughout the Recruitment Process. 3

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History and Development

Johnson City Medical Center (our flagship) has had a formal in-house physician recruitment program for nearly 20 years.

All physician recruiters are trained and certified (Certified Medical Staff Recruiter) by the American Academy of Medical Management. Three have obtained the Fellowship in Medical Staff Development by this organization.

All physician recruiters are members of the Association of Staff Physician Recruiters (ASPR), and CAPS.

Average physician recruitment experience: over 10 years

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Reporting Relationships

Directly report to the system VP of Business Development

Indirectly report to Sr. VP for TennesseeSr. VP for VirginiaAll Hospital CEOs VP CardiologyVP OncologyVP Women’sVP Children’sVP for Ortho/Neuro/TraumaPresident of our Physician Group

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Current Organizational Chart

Donald O’Bryan, CMSR, FMSDCorporate Director

Physician Recruitment

Reg. Dir. of Medical Staff Development(Smyth, Russell, Wise Counties - VA)

MSHA Physician Recruiter (Full Time)Washington County - VA

Manager of Medical Staff DevelopmentWashington County - TN

Physician Recruitment Assistant (Full Time)Physician visits, weekly staff meetings, office operations, etc.

MSHA Physician Recruiter (Full Time) Carter/ Greene County - TN

Physician Recruitment Assistant (Part Time)Compliance, special events, career fairs, med staff list, etc.

MSHA Physician Recruiter (Full Time)Sullivan/Washington County - TN

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Physician Recruitment Challenges

Five Areas of Concern and Focus:1. Aging physician population.2. Future supply of physicians.3. The general effect of healthcare

reform.4. The economy and consumer

confidence.5. Retention of our current medical

staff. 7

Page 8: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

Physician Recruitment Toolbox

1) Practice Match - www.PracticeMatch.comType: Sourcing web site. Description: Post opportunities, information on available candidates, useful for resident and fellows. Has capability to send bulk email and generate mailing lists. Database for sourcing responses. Cost: Currently under a corporate contract.

2) Practice Link – www.PracticeLink.com Type: Sourcing web site. Description: Up to 70 job postings, able to search for C.V.’s of available physicians who have self-posted their information for the purpose of finding a job. Post jobs. Practice Link attends all specialty meetings across the country, interviews candidates and makes info available. Able to send bulk emails and design a call list. Cost: Currently under a corporate contract.

3) Health E Careers - www.healthecareers.comType: Job advertising site. Description: Manages the job advertising for dozens of specialty web sites and cross advertises on JAMA. MSHA purchases bulk advertising that can be used as needed. Current contract is for one year and up to 10 jobs per month. When running an ad, the recruiter has access to posted C.V.’s of available candidates of that specialty. Cost: Currently under a corporate contract.

4) Kontact Intelligence – www.kontactintelligence.comType: Web-based Contact Management Data BaseDescription: Data storage tool and contact management system for collecting info on candidates sourced by MSHA recruiters and for tracking progress. We upload documents such as CVs and references to this site. Recruiters can access this via internet connection from anywhere. Cost: Currently under a corporate contract.

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Toolbox (p.2)

5) MSHA.comType: Sourcing and area informationDescription: Provides opening information, area info, video info, pictures. Cost: none

6). Social MediaType: Relationship building, maintaining contact with interested candidatesDescription: Establish a social media site, such as Facebook, and encourage med students, residents, candidates, spouses, etc. to “like” us in order to establish and maintain a long-term communication link for recruitment and retention purposes. Cost: none

7). Training Program RecruitmentType: Sourcing and Relationship DevelopmentDescription: Contacting training programs with job opening information, maintaining on-going relationship with program directors and coordinators, arranging presentations to trainees on job-search related topics, etc. Cost: None, unless we do a lunch presentation or travel outside the area. $200 – $500 + travel

8). Speciaty Web and Journal Ads (as needed)Type: Sourcing and BrandingDescription: Varies with each specialty. At the request and/or approval of the Hospital CEO or Service Line VP, additional advertising may be secured at suggested sites or journals that are know to be a source of candidate traffic. Cost: $500 - $1,500 per month.

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Toolbox (p.3) 9). Cold calling

Type: SourcingDescription: Develop a targeted calling list of candidates to present information about your opening. Cost: Individual phone calls

10). Exhibiting (Specialty meetings and Career Fairs as needed)Type: Sourcing and BrandingDescription: At the request and/or approval of the Hospital CEO or Service Line VP, it may be determined that MSHA should to have a presence at a specialty meeting via renting booth space or attending the meeting’s career center to generate additional leads. Average cost: $2,000 - $6,000.

11). Direct Mail (as needed)Type: Sourcing and BrandingDescription: At the request and/or approval of the Hospital CEO or Service Line VP, a direct mail piece may be developed and sent to prospective candidates. Mailing lists can be obtained through Practice Match and using targeted criteria. Average cost: $1 per piece.

12). Contingency Recruitment Firms (as needed)Description: MSHA has signed contractual agreements with several firms that require payment only if we sign the candidate. Average cost: $23,000.

13). Retained Recruitment Firms (as needed)Description: At the request of the Hospital CEO or Service Line VP, MSHA will engage a retained firm to conduct a search. Average cost: $35,000.

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Setting Goals

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5 Basic Goals For Each Approved Opening

1. Well thought-out recruitment plan that creates the necessary candidate flow to be successful.

2. Thoroughly screened candidates who understand our opportunity.

3. Well orchestrated visits that make a good first impression with good information exchange.

4. Streamlined contracting process.5. Smooth on-boarding process.6. An effective retention plan.

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Page 13: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

Recruiting in the Healthcare Reform Era

Everything is being measured against the Triple Aim™ goals:

improve the health of the population;

enhance the patient experience of care (including quality, access and reliability); and

reduce, or at least control, the per capita cost of care. 13

Page 14: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

CASE STUDY – Reform Influences on our System

Culture

- Continued commitment to patient-centered care - Tennessee Quality Award and the pursuit of Baldridge - Medicare quality initiatives - ACO’s rapid development - The shift from pay-for-performance to pay-for-value - Infusion of Medical Executives throughout the system - Decisions are becoming more becoming data-driven.- More employment of physicians- Less tolerance toward anything that loses money- LEAN – a management system derived from Toyota- Healthcare contraction

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Physician Recruiter Responsibilities (Overview)

Insure the opening has been approved and/or support is obtained to begin recruiting.

Work with the group to define the job description, skill-set, and recruitment timeframe for candidates and verify with MSHA leadership.

Develop a message or script to share with candidates. Develop and implement a recruitment strategy to produce a

candidate flow. Screen candidates and spouse/family for fit with

emphasis on PBQ. Preliminary background check (license, certification, google,

references, NPDB, Medicare sanctions, etc.) Present appropriate candidates who have cleared screening. Arrange for phone interviews with group. Set up on-site interviews. Maintain energy from the first contact and all the way through

the contracting process. Nurture the newly-recruited doctor through the on-boarding

process. Make quarterly contacts with the doctor for three years

(retention).

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Page 16: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

Two Parts of Effective Candidate

Preparation

Basic Screening - Compatibility with the Area/Group/Job/Family needs and understanding their expectations.

PBQ Screening – Helping the Candidate Understand Your Expectations.

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Ex·pec·ta·tion

a standard of conduct or performance expected

by or of somebody.

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We spend our time managing these three things:

Hospital ExpectationsGroup Expectations

Candidate Expectations

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Information Exchange with candidates in the Recruitment Process

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Basic Candidate Screening

Candidate qualifications (training, BC/BE, ability to obtain a license, medical staff privileges, get on the insurances, etc)

Candidate’s practice preferences Compensation needs Skills (what they do, what they don’t do) Availability date English or language needs Personality Ties to the area Spouse/Family needs Malpractice history Verify state licenses and certification National Practitioner Data Bank Professional questions References 20

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Relaying Practice Information

Why the group is recruiting Provider make-up of the practice Basics of the compensation and benefits Skills that are important to the group Call arrangement Payer mix Benchmarks Practice culture Area competition On-boarding assistance Start-up assistance for a new provider 21

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Relaying Area Information

Web sitesTourism infoCity demographicsHousingSchool optionsRecreation opportunitiesEconomic baseKey restaurants and shoppingNearest airportHousing options 22

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Relaying Hospital information

Why the hospital would benefitSpecialty-specific infoNumber of bedsER volumesInpatient censusHospital call issuesAvailable specialty support Financial info to emphasize stability Hospital culture (recent changes

affected by Reform) 23

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Setting Candidate Expectations: PBQ Screening

ф Productivity - work ethic, willingness to do

the things needed to build a practice quickly, see the necessary patients to cover salary and expenses, etc.

Behavior – Professional, good bedside manner, treatment of family members, treatment of nurses and staff, cooperative with hospital administration, citizenship (serve on volunteer committees, call coverage, teaching residents and student who are on rotations, etc.)

Quality - Improved outcomes, establish and/or follow protocols, evidence-based medicine, best practice, malpractice history, claims data, etc.

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Communicating your hospital’s

expectations in these areas starts with the

physician recruiter but must be reinforced at

every stage of the interview.

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Productivity Screening

Do some data gathering ahead of time. If there are other physicians in the practice, gain an understanding of their work ethic and establish production benchmarks - Research how many patients/surgeries a new doc needs to cover the proposed salary and overhead.

After screening the candidate for basic qualifications, geography, spouse issues, etc., point out to the physician that practices are very sensitive about financial loses at this time.

State to the candidate that productivity is very important to the group/hospital.

Ask the physician how they compare to the MGMA median for wRVUs or other benchmarks.

Ask the physician what is typical workday for them. If it doesn’t match your need, the interview may be over before you spend any money on a visit.

Ask for data to confirm their work ethic, especially if they are demanding a high salary.

Ask behavior interview questions – (Tell me about a time when you were informed that the practice was not making budget. What did you do?

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Page 27: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

PHYSICIAN BEHAVIOR:ACPE Survey

840 Physicians and Physician Executives were surveyed:

41% of respondents witnessed profanity 40% witnessed inappropriate jokes 24% witnessed discrimination against

colleagues or patients 21% witnessed the spread of malicious rumors 14% witnessed physicians throwing objects 14% witnessed substance abuse 13% witnessed physicians retaliating against

perceived slights 3% witnessed physical violence.

* American College of Physician Executives – May 2011

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Behavior Screening

Check licenses, Google, LinkedIn, Facebook, on every candidate.

In the initial conversation, state that your hospital/group is very interested in recruiting a well-behaved doctor.

Give some positive examples of behaviors that are important.

Ask behavior interview questions. 28

Page 29: Preparing Physicians  For The Interview process

Quality Screening

State that quality is the highest goal for your hospital and, as the recruiter, you are seeking physicians that are also quality-oriented.

Mention your hospital or group’s quality initiatives.

Emphasize patient-centered care, the use of Press Ganey, the evaluation of the physician experience, and how physician behavior impacts our success.

Seek data or information that will reinforce that the candidate is quality oriented.

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Quality Screening (cont.)

Interview questions:- Do you serve on any quality-related committees?- Have you had any quality issues in the past?- Can you provide documentation on your outcomes?- Are there any procedures typical for your specialty that make you uncomfortable? - For surgeons: Would you be open to one of our surgeons coming to your location to view an operation?

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Have others reinforce PBQ in the interview process.

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Responsibilities in the Recruitment Process

Norton Recruitment Responsibilities

For MSMG Openings

______ Primary Responsibility ______ Provide support to Primary and/or participate (if needed)

Decide to Recruit

Develop practice

description

Sourcing

Screening and comp discussion

Initial Hospital

Call

Approval to

Interview

1st Site Visit and

Details

LOI Development and Delivery

2nd Site Visit

Details

Contract

Negotiations

Signed

Contract

On-

Board-ing

Robbie C. _________ _______ ________ ________ ___________ ______ _______ _______

Joan C. _______ _________ _______ ________ _______ ________ ______ _______

Mark L. _______ _______ ________ ________ ___________ ______ __________

Susan M. _______ _________ ________ ______ _______

Brenda N. _______ _________ ________ ________ ________ ___________ ______ __________ _______ _______

Dr. T. ________ ________ ______

Doug E. _______ _________ ________ ________ ___________ ______

Steve K. ________ ___________

Ann F. _______ ________ __________

Don O. _______ ________ ___________ __________

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Recruiter Interview Components

Collect C.V. and inquire about incomplete information. Initial phone screen using 20+ questions to insure a basic fit,

including why they are leaving their current job, family issues, timeframe, probe for problems, etc. Behavioral interview questions included.

Share basic hospital, service-line, system, and area information including schools, area demographics, cost of living, taxes, shopping, outdoor activities, etc.

Introduce Patient-Centered Care emphasis. Introduce PBQ expectations. Send out Professional Questionnaire. Share information collected from interview with group and

MSHA. Coordinate phone interviews. Coordinate 1st visit dates. Help secure offer information. Help with Letter of Intent (LOI). Coordinate 2nd visit. Help insure contract process stays on track with good

communication.

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Hospital CEO Interview Suggestions

Where we’ve been - History of the hospital Where we are - The role of the hospital in MSHA, recent

awards, etc. Where we’re headed - Strategic vision and goals for the

future Baldridge business model. Inpatient/outpatient statistics. Construction projects, new equipment being added. How the candidate’s specialty fits in to the big picture. Ask any questions about the candidate’s information. PBQ - Emphasize our expectations regarding

productivity, behavior, and quality. Provide any appropriate info about the group and

competitor’s in the area. Ask how you can help the candidate with their decision.

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Service Line VP Interview Suggestions

MSHA Service Line Corporate Strategy Hospital Service Line Strategy Where the candidate will fit in the picture. Statistics, demographics, market share,

competitors (as appropriate). PBQ - Emphasize our expectations regarding

productivity, behavior, and quality. Ask questions about clinical skills, what they

are comfortable doing, what they are not comfortable doing and why.

Behavioral interview questions.35

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CMO Interview Suggestions

Discuss our Patient-Centered Care philosophy. Discuss our participation in the various quality initiatives,

MSHA’s commitment to quality and outcomes, and the expectations we have for incoming medical staff.

Emphasize the hospital’s expectations regarding physician behavior.

Ask about any malpractice issues that we should know about and drill in to areas of concern that you may have.

Discuss medical staff structure at your hospital / entity. Ask any questions about candidate information (training

program, skills, if there is anything they are uncomfortable doing within their specialty, etc.)

Ask behavioral interview questions to gauge how they have reacted to situations in the past.

Discuss or answer questions regarding credentialing or privileging and probe for any possible issues that may cause delay.

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Practice Interview Suggestions

Discuss the structure of the physician group. Go over the strategic importance of their specialty to the

group and community. Share clinic history, set-up, and details. PBQ - Discuss the importance of recruiting a productive,

well-behaved, quality-oriented physician. Provide basic contract information and benefits

information. Go over contracting process. Probe for offer information. Discuss any issues that may impact our ability to sign,

credential and relocate the candidate. Probe for start-up details (special equipment, space,

staffing needs, etc.) Discuss how the group measures progress. Behavioral interview questions.

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Congratulations!

You now have an established process that has better prepared a candidate (and your hospital) for the interview.

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QUESTIONS?

Contact Info:Don O’Bryan

[email protected]