New ME-P Features in Review

Quick Links to Innovation and Integration

By Ann Miller; RN, MHA

[Executive Director]

IntegrationRecently we have added several new features to the Medical Executive-Post. And so, below is an aggregated and integrated list, with hot links, for your easy access and review.

We trust you will use, and enjoy them, frequently.

  

ME-P Features:

1. Our photo sharing feature called ME-Pr:

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/01/me-pr-photo-sharing-examples-2009/

2. ME-P widget for blogs, wikis and websites.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/10/get-the-new-me-p-widget/

3. Media advisory service for the ME-P.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/11/me-p-media-advisory-services/

4. Consultations and referal service.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/schedule-a-consultation/

5. Speaker’s bureau.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/dr-david-marcinko%e2%80%99s-bookings/

6. Annual doctor’s survey.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/media-kit/participate-in-annual-survey/

7. Textbooks, dictionaries and printed handbooks.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/02/imba-inc-books-texts-and-dictionaries/

8. ME-P blog rating and ranking system.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/06/our-new-me-p-rating-system/

9. Editorial complaints and publishing corrections.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/07/me-p-complaints-corrections/

10. Videos and graphic slideshows.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/category/videos/

Assessment

Give em’ a click, and tell us what you think?

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Channel Surfing: Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register.  

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

DICTIONARIES: http://www.springerpub.com/Search/marcinko
PHYSICIANS: www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com
PRACTICES: www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com
HOSPITALS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466558731
CLINICS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781439879900
BLOG: www.MedicalExecutivePost.com
FINANCE: Financial Planning for Physicians and Advisors
INSURANCE: Risk Management and Insurance Strategies for Physicians and Advisors

Our Recent Experience with CFP® Mark Utility

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Certification Falling from Grace – Deserved or Not?

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chief] dem21 

The Premise

In the summer [2008], we sent a random email blast to the first 200 Certified Financial Planners® on our list-serve. These were folks who had previously contacted us, and/or purchased our textbooks, handbooks, tools and/or dictionaries that assist accountants, financial advisors, attorneys, medical management consultants and all those working to assist physicians and medical professionals on business and economics matters.

The “Straw-Poll” Query

Our email blast asked the simple question:

“Did you ever voluntarily resign your license to use the CFP® mark?”

First Round Results

We received four positive responses [2%]. We then followed up to learn that 2 of the 4 were CPAs, one was a CFA and another was an MBA. Now, what do these results signify – probably nothing – or maybe an emerging trend?

Repeat

So, last summer [2009], after the continuing Wall Street collapse, and the Somnath Basu PhD article on “CFP Trust” in Financial Advisor magazine and this blog, we sent out a follow-up email to the exact same 200 Certified Financial Planners® as before; but carved-out and replaced the 4 CFPs who had resigned the mark, with 4 others.

Link: I Jealously “Shake my Fist” at Somnath Basu PhD

This time we asked the question:

“Have you recently considered allowing your CFP mark to lapse; or resigning it?”

Second Round Results

This time we received exactly eight positive replies [4%] or double the number from the first round. One CFP® said:

“I am rethinking my entire business and marketing philosophy. This includes separation from any taint left over from recent industry scandals – and yes – even including my CFP® mark”

 CMP logo

http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

Assessment

This little experiment was not statistically significant by any means. And, again it probably is indicative of nothing. Yet, these types of questions must be boldly asked today; even if they were not even timidly asked yesterday.

Nevertheless, cited plausible reasons for the increased negative CFP® mark response may be:

 

  • CFP BoS lacks modernity and membership alliance. 
  • SEC mismanagement.
  • NASD/FINRA impotence.
  • Wall Street greed.
  • Lack of true fiduciary accountability.
  • Client anger and public distrust.
  • Advisor frustration at lost income.
  • College for Financial Planning and American College credibility.  
  • ME-P operations in the medical niche advisory space.
  • CFP® mark and related industry certification taint.
  • Alternative degrees and available designations.
  • Rise of RIAs and the fiduciary CMPmark for healthcare specificity.
  • Resigning [doing] and considering [thinking] are not equivalent;
  • etc, etc. 

It is interesting to note that no CFP® resigned their mark who did not hold either another graduate degree [MBA, MSFS, MA, MS, PhD], or more rigorous industry [CFA and CPA] certification.

Assessment 

So, is CFP mark allegiance just a union-like mentality of “united we stand – divided we fall”, by those with little to no gravitation pull of their own – or something else; ie., industry group think? You decide; and do tell us what you think.

Note: I am the founder of the CMP online education and certification program for financial advisors and consultants interested in the health economics, finance and medical practice management space, and a former [resigned] certified financial planner www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org 

Update 2013:

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Product Details  Product Details

Product DetailsProduct Details

ME-P Media Advisory Services

Assisting our Media Colleagues and Target Professional Markets

By Ann Miller; RN, MHA

[Executive Director]Doctor's Bag

Welcome to the Medical Executive-Post. Below is a list of the services we provide to the media: 

1. Certified Medical Planners™ available for interviews or online program matriculation information and consideration www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com. Our CMPs™ may be available for interviews or short comments on medical management issues or health economic trends. We do our best to arrange for quick interviews to accommodate your deadlines. Current program matriculants may also available in some cases.

2. Reseach and Trends on Medical Economics and Modern Practice Management Issues: www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com.  We conduct ongoing research studies on healthcare financial issues, and also publish regular medical management research reports. Some research reports are available free of charge upon request; others for a modest surcharge. 

3. Pre-packaged information and content, visit: www.HealthcareFinancials.com.

4. Seminars and Speaking Engagements: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com.

5. Free ME-P blog widget: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/10/10/get-the-new-me-p-widget/

Assessment

Join Our Mailing List

Dr. David Edward Marcinko, our Publisher-in-Chief, is also usually available to the traditional, electronic or new-wave media, as needed. We have a library of over 5,000 premium content pieces that you can integrate into your stories in sidebars, charts, graphs or pieces that can be published as standalone articles within your publication. To contact us about using any of the above services, please e-mail us at: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Channel Surfing

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. 

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest ME-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Sponsors Welcomed

And, credible sponsors and like-minded advertisers are always welcomed.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2007/11/11/advertise

Why ADA / Intelligent Dental Marketing Failed?

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The ADA is an Incredible Dinosaur

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDSpruitt

As a member of the ADA, I am also a part owner in any business venture the leaders of the organization enter into. I’ve observed the loss of my investment in a business deal because my employees made mistakes. As a business owner, it would be simply irresponsible for me to ignore something like this.

The Embarrassing Story  

Do you know what part is missing from this embarrassing story? The ADA has not uttered a word about the ADA/IDM failure… Or, as the ADA Business Enterprise Inc. leaders call it – the ”ADA/idm” failure.

The fact that the two business entities never came to an agreement on what to even call their doomed joint venture reveals a lot about the egos that gummed up the machinery. It’s possible that pride undermined our non-profit/for-profit partnership from the very start. We just don’t know what happened because there are so many possible reasons for this business model to fail. Will loss of ADA members’ investment happen again if the cause is not recognized and eliminated? I think the chances are pretty good that even more embarrassment is on the way. Given the soft environment, it’s only natural.

Over my 27 year career as a dentist, I have met many ADA officials, both employed and elected, on all three levels of the tripartite system of governance – local, state and national. From the topmost quality of character I have witnessed in all but a few politically-empowered and proudly insensitive exceptions, I can assure you that like all major projects of the ADA, the failed ADA/IDM adventure into dental marketing was assembled with nothing but noble intentions and benevolent wishes for ADA members and dental patients – at least from the ADA side. Whether the leaders of the ADA’s new business partner, Intelligent Dental Marketing out of Utah, were dedicated to serving ADA members in a captive market is unlikely. The ADA/IDM business model is sort of like managed care dentistry. When dentists sign contracts that provide them with clients regardless of how they are treated, there is a natural tendency for dentists to become unappreciative of those who pay their bills.

Little Consumer Competition  

The ADA allows Americans to experience what socialism is like in markets where there is no competition for consumers: Professionals such as dentists stop trying to please their patients, and IDM stops trying to please dentists. If IDM was a decent company before the business venture with ADA membership, the ADA ruined them with a sweetheart deal that included protecting them from competition, as well as shielding them from complaints by angry ADA members. And like dental patients with preferred provider lists, ADA members noticed the bad treatment. However, complaints were never made transparent even as more ADA members where signing contracts with ADA/IDM. That is unfair and unethical.

Just Google for Complaints  

Want to see what an embarrassment in situ looks like? Just Google “CareCredit complaints.” ADA-approved CareCredit/GE has a long history of sweetheart deals like the one they made with ADA leaders. Their trail is always marked by complaints. The ADABEI is selling ADA members’ reputations. I just read ADA reporter James Berry’s article highlighting outgoing ADA President Dr. John S. Findley’s address to the House of Delegates that he gave on Friday. The article is titled, “We built our home on a foundation of science and values: Dr. Findley”

http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/pubs/adanews/adanewsarticle.asp?articleid=3771

One free-standing paragraph in the article caught my attention that perhaps exposes a symptom of the pride and secrecy that surrounds the ADA/IDM disaster. In the middle of the article, James Berry offers this cryptic message that was obviously not meant for all members to understand:

“On the Association itself, the president noted that the ADA has undergone significant change in the past year and a half. As problems were discovered and defined, he said, the leadership acted to resolve them.” 

Was the ADA/IDM fiasco one of the problems that was resolved? Did they resolve the problem with CareCredit/GE causing ADA members to be covered by the Red Flags Rule – and not letting members know about it? Did they resolve the problem of data breaches and how they can mean certain bankruptcy for ADA members, even if the members do the right thing?

Possibly  

We just don’t know which problems were resolved, but somehow we should feel much better, now that President Findley got the message out to mid-level ADA leaders who probably know exactly what he is referring to. And, by protecting lower caste members from knowing things they don’t need to know, problems are quietly resolved and the profession’s image is preserved. “Image is everything” – ADA/IDM business slogan.

“Findley for the future”- Dr. John S. Findley’s campaign slogan.

Bingo! We have a match.

We should not forget that before IDM leaders got in way over their heads and started doing foolish things like marketing Search Engine Optimization (SEO) talents they lacked, there has not been a dues increase for a couple of years – in part because of the profits that were churned from ADA/IDM purchases ADA members made. I am certain that the ADA Business Enterprise Inc’s failure breaks the hearts of sincere and devoted leaders in the ADA who would have never recommended going outside the ADA’s Mission Statement had ADA employees been transparent with them. The officials of IDM couldn’t care less. Their part of the venture is much easier to dissolve for the Utah businessmen. They just picked up and walked away. However, the ADA officials have a fiduciary responsibility to members who trusted them. Once again, virtually all of the ADA leaders are just like you and me. Some just got in too deep on our behalf and couldn’t shut the mistake down before members got needlessly hurt.

Officials in other businesses the size of the ADA are held accountable for their mistakes and are not afforded the opportunity to filter communications with the owners because of image concerns. This kind of sweetheart deal for business executives, most of who come from Delta Dental, UnitedHealthcare or both, as in the case of the new executive director, Dr. Kathleen T. O’Loughlan, occurs only in the ADA and to a lesser extent in the US government and dental insurance industry.

Assessment

The state of the ADA is not nearly as rosy as Dr. Findley would have us believe. I think we have all seen authoritarian leaders re-write history. The ADA is an incredible dinosaur.Business can be ugly in the highly competitive land of the free. If businesses don’t take risks, we cannot move forward. For that reason, mistakes are expected. But never forget. Owners expect to be told about them.

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

Off-Road Touring with Dr. Marcinko [Part III]

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I Dislocate a Finger

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chief]

Dateline: Sunday June 28, 2009DEM-MQT MTN

Fresh off my “runner’s” high from meeting Olympians Shani Davis and Apolo Ohno, the other day, I easily ran an extra couple of miles during my daily training run to stay in shape during my arduous speaking and book signing tour. Thus, invigorated in mind and body, and flushed with surging natural endomorphins, I decided to spend the afternoon at Marquette Mountain watching the downhill mountain bike races.

After introducing myself to Bruce Gustafson, the ambulance driver there on professional standby from the local Marquette General Hospital EMT service, I spent an hour or so marveling at how the racers survived the rocky and treacherous down-hill course. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky, and came very close to requiring Bruce’s expert services.

Taking a TumbleDismay

While climbing down the mounting, running actually, I tripped head-over-heels and commenced wildly flailing and rolling down the rocky terrain, stopping just short of smashing into a large birch tree after 50 feet or so. Bouncing straight back up in an instant, I doubt if nearby spectators even noticed what had happened.  Nevertheless, I was most pleased at my adroit body and still youthful ability to assume a dolphin like roll into the fall, dissipating kinetic energy and avoiding injury. Or, so I thought.

Dislocating a Finger

Unfortunately, my fourth right finger began to throb a few seconds later; and then scream at me. Not much medical acumen was needed to note that something was wrong, as the proximal-inter-phalangeal-joint [PIPJ] appeared laterally deviated forty-five degrees, just as the digital apex was turning blue and the joint began swelling before my eyes. Appreciating the impending neurovascular compromise potential, I grabbed the finger, distracted it, reversed the mechanism of injury, let go, and felt it snap back into place.  I promptly sat down as a diaphoretic wave of cold sweat broke out on my forehead, chest, shoulders and arms. Fortunately, the hypo-tensive episode lasted only a few minutes, and I did not go into shock. A visiting nurse came to the rescue, elevating my feet, monitoring vital signs and offering fluids as I recovered quickly. She was indeed my Florence Nightingale and, as I later learned, a Master’s prepared nurse-executive. I was gratefully taken back to my hotel after refusing further medical assistance or X-rays. The finger was grotesquely swollen the next few days but did not hurt much. Simple contrast baths, passive and active ROM exercises, along with the “tincture of time” which I estimate to be 6-8 weeks based on clinical experience, will hopefully be all that is required for complete recovery. Although, it may be some time before full typing flexibility is returned; assuming a “button-hole” extensor tendon rupture incarcerating, strangling or imbricating the phalangeal head, did not occur.Ambulance DEM

Assessment

In my former clinical medical career, I diagnosed, treated and operated on hundreds of injured fingers and toes; for various acute and chronic conditions, fractures, dislocations and related digital anomalies. I even published several peer reviewed papers on same. Still, my course of action may be considered reckless, by some, and should not be repeated. Always seek medical advice.

References:

1. Digital Fractures and Dislocations [Diagnosis and Treatment]. Author: DH Elleby, and DE Marcinko [Clinics in Podiatry. 05/1985; 2(2):233-45].

2. Marcinko DE, and Elleby DH. Digital Fractures and Dislocations; In: Scurran BL, ed. Foot and Ankle Trauma, 2nd ed; Church-Hill-Livingston, Boston, MA.

About Off Road with Dr. Marcinko

These sporadic off-road segments will continue through-out my 2009 summer promotional tour. On the one hand, formal attendance at several engagements was a bit sparse because of the death of several recent celebrities and entertainer types. On the other hand, local book stores and sponsors noted a spike in our CD and book sales, as well as interest in our online www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com program as well as our quarterly institutional premium guide; Healthcare Organizations [Journal of Financial Management Strategies] www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Part I: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/07/20/off-road-touring-with-dr-marcinko-part-i/

Part II: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2009/07/22/off-road-touring-with-dr-marcinko-part-ii/

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

Off-Road Touring with Dr. Marcinko [Part I]

“Using-Up” Health Insurance

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chief]

Dateline: June 18-19th, 2009dem24          

I flew into Marquette Michigan last night on a puddle jumper from Chicago, Illinois. Marquette will be the home base on my current book promotion and public/private  speaking tour. This second leg of our trip, from Atlanta, was delayed for mechanical reasons. So, rather than follow directions from American Airlines regarding new arrangements, and rushing to wait in a long line of humanity for a new boarding pass on a much later flight, I simply called the travel assistance number on my cell phone. We were re-routed by computer from American, to a Delta Airlines flight, that caused no additional time lag as we later learned the other passengers boarded their American flight three hours late. Many of the elderly and slower moving folks even missed connecting flights which necessitated overnight hotel stays, in some cases.

THINK: outside the box independently, and don’t follow directions mindlessly.  

About Marquette, Michigan

The City of Marquette is located in the central region of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. With a population of 20,714, it is the UP’s largest community. In addition to being a population center, it serves as the regional center for education, health care, recreation, and retail. This regional draw is particularly evident due to Northern Michigan University and Marquette General Hospital, both of which are located in the City of Marquette. Of course, I visited both.

Quality Healthcare for the Upper PeninsulaUPHC

So, the next morning I called some friends who suggested we head over to the Marquette Upper Peninsula  Healthcare Network System, on Washington Street, for an unplanned and unofficial stop on our current “signing and opining” tour. It seemed very busy for a Friday morning; so we gathered some colleagues and ambled over to Viering’s Restaurant where we discussed the local economy, current state of the healthcare industry and the Obama Administration’s ideas for healthcare reform. When I expressed my surprise at the number of patients in the clinic waiting room areas, I was informed that an unexpected corporate layoff resulted in patients “wanting to use their health insurance, before being RIFed [Reduced-in-Force].” Now, as a doctor, and insurance agent, I find this attitude both very strange; yet not uncommon.

“Using-Up” Health Insurance

I can honestly say that after more than three-decades in the business, I have never heard a single soon-to-be unemployed client say,” I need to use up my life insurance”, or “auto insurance”, or “homeowner’s insurance”, etc. So, what gives with health insurance?

Health Insurance IS Different

Insurance of all types is sold to economically protect against catastrophic events like pre-mature death, auto accidents, or home destruction. But life insurance doesn’t pay for non-lethal issues; auto insurance doesn’t pay for new tires, tune-ups or oil changes; and home owner’s insurance doesn’t pay for regular upkeep and maintenance, etc. So, why do some patients believe that health insurance necessarily needs to be used-up? Were they not healthy before the lay-off announcement; or did they suddenly become ill, thereafter? What do you think? Is this just a local phenomenon, or would it be [is it] pandemic in any community given the same or similar circumstances?

AssessmentUPHC-DEM

For me, this scenario clearly demonstrates two things. First, that Health Insurance is thought of as a personal right and/or corporate fringe-benefit; rather than true financial indemnification. Second, it demonstrates the ability of patients to think ahead; unlike the airline customers on my initial trip here. So, if patients can be forward thinking about their health insurance needs, why don’t they think ahead about their personal health care needs? Why don’t more of us exercise regularly, watch our blood pressure and weight, and/or avoid drugs, alcohol and promiscuous sex, etc.  If we can monitor and pay for routine auto and home maintenance ourselves; why not our routine health needs?  Isn’t good health our most important personal asset? Aren’t we worth it? Do we really want to abrogate our very lives to others? Do we want to concede our responsibilities to a third party, ie, a national [single-payer] governmental controlled healthcare? Those patients wanting to “use their health insurance”, before unemployment, certainly seem to think so.

About Off Road with Dr. Marcinko

These sporadic off-road segments will continue through-out my 2009 summer promotional tour. On the one hand, formal attendance at several engagements was initially a bit sparse because of the death of several recent celebrities and entertainer types. On the other hand, local book stores and sponsors noted a spike in our CD and book sales, as well as interest in our online www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com program and premier quarterly guide: Healthcare Organizations [Journal of Financial Management Strategies] www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Tell us what you think. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, be sure to subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com 

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Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest ME-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Sponsors Welcomed

And, credible sponsors and like-minded advertisers are always welcomed.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2007/11/11/advertise

ADA / IDM Breakup – You Heard it Here First

Will CareCredit be the Next ADA Subsidiary to Fail?

I saw a warning sign last week.

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDS pruitt

My aggressive writing hobby has understandably brought me in hard contact with public relations people whose job is to insulate good ol’ boys from accountability – even if it means taking hits for the team and staining their reputations. Let’s face the fact we all of us involved in public relations know but don’t dare discuss: Depending on the ethics of one’s employer, PR professionals are sometimes used up like expendable pawns. And avoiding bylines for press releases no longer shields anyone from accountability.

I often silently stalk PR employees (Gasp!) on the Internet who work for sleazy companies just to better understand them. I’ve discovered that it is not hard to find and exploit the weaknesses of those whose heart isn’t behind selling their employer’s product. Sometimes all it takes is a fistful of transparency to cause defenseless representatives to completely shut up, and that alone makes our neighborhood safer. Committee-approved methods of evasion are as simple-minded as committees, so it doesn’t take long to figure them out – exposing the shameful ethics of those who sign off on the use of lame, institutional trickery.

For example, here’s a very popular, traditional PR trick: If a huge business entity such as the ADA has bad news they can no longer keep secret from customers, professional PR-types will advise their bosses to post bad news on a Friday to soften the blow. When traditional leaders find that they can no longer sidestep accountability, delaying accountability until a busy news day is the next best thing one can purchase. Even though the tricks seem simple, there are people who study evasion science as part of obtaining a degree in marketing.

So how good is the ADA’s PR team? How much time did ADA members’ employees buy for leaders before they had to quietly acknowledge an expensive failure?

On July 10, a Friday, “ADA/idm to phase out service” was posted on ADA News Online without a byline. (Another PR trick: When the ADA posts an orphan without a name, it means someone is ashamed of the bastard.)

http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/pubs/adanews/adanewsarticle.asp?articleid=3655

ADA Business Enterprises, Inc. (ADABEI), a wholly owned ADA subsidiary, announced today that ADA Intelligent Dental Marketing (ADAidm) of Salt Lake City, one of its joint venture companies, is no longer able to provide marketing services to its customers due to significant production and operational difficulties.”

Now the ADA must refund money to members in a depressed market. Could this embarrassment for our professional organization have been quietly avoided instead of delayed and magnified? I personally started seeing clues of CEO Trajan King’s reticence long ago, and warned ADA leaders in Chicago about my concerns. Nobody ever responded to my numerous, sincere warnings.

These are highly critical times on Capitol Hill and our patients trust us to represent their welfare. Dentists are their last hope, because there is nobody else who cares. Practicing dentists are solely responsible for assuring the benevolence of our niche market, and we are losing control publicly. Disasters like the ADA/IDM make the ADA look foolish to Congress, and word gets around fast on the Internet.

This morning, I read an article posted on The NY Times titled “Study Measures the Chatter of the News Cycle, “ written by Steve Lohr.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/13/technology/internet/13influence.html?_r=1

Researchers at Cornell used powerful computers and sophisticated algorithms to accomplish an unprecedented analysis of news articles and comments on the Web during the 2008 presidential campaign. They studied the characteristics of the news cycle by scanning 1.6 million mainstream media sites and blogs for repeated phrases and tracking the history of their appearances.

Lohr writes: “The researchers’ data points to an evolving model of news media. While most news flowed from the traditional media to the blogs, the study found that 3.5 percent of story lines originated in the blogs and later made their way to traditional media.”

The study also shows that traditional news outlets are still quicker than blogs by 2.5 hours. I should now point out that the Cornell study was performed using data from very popular, huge news items collected during a presidential election – not hidden, niche news like dentistry’s.

If you are involved in the dental industry, where are you more likely to read time-sensitive news about our profession first? In an ADA publication, or from D. Kellus Pruitt; DDS?

Whereas traditional media is 2.5 hours quicker with popular topics, I scooped traditional ADA News Online by three weeks when I posted “ADA/idm – A bad union after all?” on the PennWell forum.

http://community.pennwelldentalgroup.com/forum/topics/adaidm-a-bad-union-after-all

So what about the warning sign I saw concerning CareCredit – a wholly-owned subsidiary of the ADA?

When Trajan King, former CEO of the defunct ADA/IDM partnership refused to acknowledge my questions, I immediately suspected something was terribly wrong with the union of my non-profit professional organization and his for-profit Utah advertisement company. Six months later, my fears were confirmed. Now then, I hope it grabs someone’s attention that I see the same warning signs coming from the ADA’s CareCredit business. Note this date: July 13, 2009.

On Thursday, July 9, CareCredit purchased a press release on dentalblogs.com: “CareCredit Adds 24-Month, No-Interst [sic] Payment Plan” (no byline).

http://www.dentalblogs.com

Since dental problems only get worse, I consider the idea of extending credit to dental patients is a benevolent thought during these hard financial times. I also say that the offer appears to have been put together out of generosity and not greed like the ADA/IDM disaster. However, at 4:54 pm on the same day that CareCredit’s press release was posted, I submitted a difficult question for the anonymous author of the piece who works PR for CareCredit – and is an ADA employee.

“If the Red Flags Rule is not delayed for the third time in three weeks, how will it affect those who offer Care Credit?”

I was given the hopeful response “Your comment is awaiting moderation,” but days later there is no sign that my question is being considered at all. Please, oh please ask yourself: What could CareCredit leaders be hiding and how much will it end up costing ADA membership?

I will not be ignored by anyone. Today, I submitted two follow-up questions on dentalblogs.com. I considered warning the anonymous moderator that this is being simulposted on other blogs, as well as described on Twitter, but then I thought, why spoil the fun? Let the leaders of the ADA Business Enterprises, Inc. (ADABEI) get word of my e-Attack from their colleagues. Won’t they be surprised!

Oh, and for those who are wondering what happened to ADA/IDM CEO Trajan King – he quit.

Dear Dentalblogs.com moderator:

On July 9 at 4:54 pm, I submitted a sincere question concerning how the Red Flags Rule will affect ADA members who sign up for CareCredit. Instead of posting it with the promise of an answer, you regretfully chose to censor an ADA member. Today, July 13, I have a second and third question: Why did you ignore my first one and who is your boss?

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Health Care Uses for Twitter [Suggestions for Micro-Sharing]

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Health Care Should be the Leader in MicroSharing – Why isn’t It?

[By Staff Reporters]

According to by Phil Baumann, RN BSN; @ www.PhilBaumann.com

“Twitter may either be the greatest time wasting prank ever played on the internet community – or- it may be the best thing since sliced bread. It’s easy to make the first case if you read the public time-line for a few minutes. It’s a bit harder to make the second, but I’ll do my best to make it. Specifically, I’d like to take a stab at offering 140 health care uses for Twitter. Twitter’s simplicity of design, speed of delivery and ability to connect two or more people around the world provides a powerful means of communication, idea sharing and collaboration. There’s potency in the ability to burst out 140 characters, including a shortened URI. Could this power have any use in healthcare? After all, for example, doctors and nurses.” 

hipster

Assessment

Read the 23 page white-paper here:

Link: http://blogs.usask.ca/medical_education/archive/2009/02/140_healthcare.html

Conclusion

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More On Attempted ME-Post Censorship

Return to Ethridge’s Hill

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDSpruitt

For those who have stayed up late, here is a sneak preview of some upcoming action – hopefully attracting the best PR people BCBS of New Mexico can field – Becky Kenny and Ross Blackstone. 

ModernHealthcare.com – The Strong Arm? – NOT

You may or may not recall that about two months ago, Martin Ethridgehill, who once worked for BCBSNM, posted a comment on ModernHealthcare.com that was later removed as ordered by Becky Kenny – a PR specialist who represents the interests of BCBSNM. So what did Becky’s recently laid-off colleague say that justified field censorship? The title says it all:  “Don’t Rush eHRs Without Addressing Medical ID Theft.”  It attracted my attention before it attracted BCBSNM’s. They move slower than I do.

Blue Cross – Blue Shield 

Apparently, even though leaders of BCBS think caution might be prudent in paying Texas physicians for health care, the organization is not necessarily in favor of delaying the adoption of eHRs … or something like that. Maybe Jon Stewart will explain it some day for us on Comedy Central.

ME-P … Marcinko Does Not Fold 

And who is this Ross Blackstone? He’s a manly piece of PR. He tried to persuade Dr. David E. Marcinko, publisher of the ME-P, to remove my comment which is not a copy of Ethridgehill’s statement, but is a report on his statement. Blackstone learned that Marcinko doesn’t fold as easily as the publisher of ModernHealthcare.com folded to Becky Kenny’s demand. I bet she got nasty with them.

The Blackstone Video 

So who is Ross Blackstone? I’m trying to get away from posting links because they are so tedious. But you just have to watch “Ross Blackstone Reporter Resume” video on YouTube. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IuHBnNiYvcU

Assessment

“First they ignore you, then they attack you, and then you win”

-Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Become a Published Print Author with Us

The Business of Medical Practice [3rd Edition]

By Hope Rachel Hetico RN, MHA, CMP™

[Managing Editor]biz-book7

Dear Colleagues,

As you may know, we are commencing work on the third edition of our best selling book: The Business of Medical Practice

TOC 1st: http://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Maximizing-Doctors/dp/0826113117/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1231111232&sr=1-8

TOC 2nd: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Invitation to Contribute

Accordingly, we would be honored for you to consider contributing a new or revised chapter, in your area of expertise, for a low-effort but high-yield contribution. Our goal is to help physician colleagues and management executives benefit from nationally known experts, as an essential platform for their success in the healthcare 2.0 business industry. Many topics are still available: [health accounting and costing; law, policy and administration; Medicare fraud and abuse; coding and insurance; HIT, grid and cloud computing; finance and economics, competitive models, collaboration and leadership, etc].

Support Always Available

Editorial support is available, and you would enjoy increasing subject-matter notoriety, exposure and public relations in an erudite and credible fashion. As a reader, or preferably a subscriber to the ME-P, your synergy in this space may be ideal. Time line for submission of a 5,000-7,500 word chapter is ample, and in a prose writing style that is “wide, not deep.” 

A Health 2.0 Initiative

And, be sure to address health 2.0 modernity. Update chapters from the second edition are also available. 

Definition: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2008/09/12/emerging-healthcare-20-initiatives

Assessment

Please contact me for more details, if interested. A best selling-book is rare; while a third-edition volume even more so. Join us in this project. Regardless, we trust you will remain apostles of our core ME-P vision, “uniting medical mission and financial profit margin”, promoting it whenever possible.

Front Matter Link: frontmatter1advancedbusinessmedicine4 

Contact Info:

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770.448.0769

Conclusion

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3. Opportunity: Focus on the lucrative and expanding physician advisory niche.

4. Recognition: Join a select group of advisory experts.

5. Distinction: Become quality; rather than product driven.

6. Achievement: 500 hours of financial, health economics and management education.

7. Evidence: Validate deep healthcare industry knowledge.

8. Resource: CMP™ text and hand books, dictionaries, and institutional print journal.

9. Distinction: Set yourself apart with our chartered logo and trade-mark identity.

10. Commitment: Become the “go-to” financial advisor for all medical professionals.

 

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Social Media in Health 2.0

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Emerging Collaborative Trends

[By Staff Reporters]

stk166326rkeAll readers of the ME-P are aware that social media is going to play a significant role in health 2.0 initiatives going forward.

Social Media Use Growing

According to Dan Bowman of FierceHealthIT, on April 3, 2009, whether we want it to happen or not, social media – much like mobile technology – is going to play a big role in the future of healthcare. From professional networks, to collaborative consumer media and doctor rating websites, healthcare professionals across the nation are jumping on the bandwagon. And, with the federal government pushing physicians’ offices to utilize electronic medical records, it is only a matter of time before healthcare make a concerted push into social media, as well.

Publishers and Editors

“As a medical, practice management and health economics writer for almost four decades, I appreciated how electronic connectivity and social media facilitates communication in a quick and effective manner, and allows broadcast to large groups of people”

Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA

[ME-P Publisher-in-Chief]

The Research

A Manhattan Research survey found that 60 million US healthcare consumers use social media to find healthcare information online. A similar survey found that 60 percent of physicians are interested in, or are already using physician social networks. That same study concluded that “physicians who are currently participating in online physician communities and social networks write a mean of 24 more prescriptions a week than” their more old-fashioned counterparts.

Assessment

Of course, more Rxs – or more medical care for that matter – is not a quality indicator at all. Nevertheless, social media is not to be taken lightly.

Link: http://www.fiercehealthit.com/tags/ozmosis?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&cmp-id=EMC-NL-FHI&dest=FHI

Conclusion

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ADVETISEMENT

Evaluate “Healthcare Organizations” [Financial Management Strategies] AND Order Now!

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By Professor Hope Rachel Hetico; RN, MHA

[Editor and Managing Editor]ho-journal10

As healthcare continues to evolve, leaders and executives have the formidable and immediate challenge of creating both short-term and long-term financial strategies. Given that today’s knowledge-base is different from that of even six-months ago, and the need is for solutions to tomorrow’s economic problems, success seems always just beyond your grasp!

Why Subscribe?

But fortunately, you can be ready; Healthcare Organizations: [Financial Management Strategies] is your blueprint for success. To ensure your organization’s competitive edge and perhaps even its survival, you must quickly gain the financial management tools and techniques necessary to lead in the 21st century. What you learn and implement using this Guide enables you to respond proactively to the rapidly changing healthcare environment. Your subscription to Healthcare Organizations: [Financial Management Strategies] not only helps you lead, it brings together healthcare executives and visionary thought leaders to help you develop essential models and successful financial management strategies, going forward.

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Assessment 

For today … for tomorrow … for all healthcare organizations … for you! Remember, the Guide is available on a 30-day, risk-free trial. You may contact http://www.STPub.com at (604) 983-3434, fax (604) 983-3445, or e-mail at custinfo@stpub.com to place an order, or ask questions regarding pricing and/or availability. All shipments arrive within 5 to 10 days. Prepayment is required for all international shipments and a courier charge will be added to the subscription price. After hours, we suggest you review the STP website FAQs section for answer to your inquiry: www.stpub.com/pubs/custinfo.htm

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orders@stpub.com

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Events-Planner: April 2009

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Events-Planner: APRIL 2009

Staff Writers

“Keeping track of important health economics and financial industry meetings, conferences and summits”

Welcome to this issue of the Medical Executive-Post and our Events-Planner. It contains the latest information on conferences, news, and relevant resources in healthcare finance, economics, research and development, business management, pharmaceutical pricing, and physician/entity reimbursement!  Watch for a new Events-Planner each month.

First, a little about us! The Executive-Post is still a newcomer. But today, we have almost 15,000 visitors and readers each month from all over the country, in addition to our growing subscriber base. We have been a successful collaborative effort, thanks to your contributions.  As a result, we are adding new resources daily.  And, we hope the website continues to provide the best place to go for journals, books, conferences, educational resources, tools, and other things you need to establish the value your healthcare consulting and financial advisory intervention. And so, enjoy the Executive-Post and our monthly Events-Planner with our compliments. 

 

A Look Ahead this Month

 

April 1: Print Edition Healthcare Journalism: If you would like to “step-up-your-game” and be considered as a peer-reviewed contributor to the third print edition of: The Business of Medical Practice [Advanced Profit Maximizing Techniques for Savvy Doctors]; contact Ann at: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com. There are several chapter topics still available. Now, the important dates:

April 1-3: Adv. Modeling Methods for Health Economic Evaluation, York, UK.

April 4-8: HIMSS Annual Conference, Chicago, IL.

April 6: Premier Forum on Medication Therapy Management and Patient Compliance Programs. CBI; Las Vegas, NV

April 7: FINRA Small Conference Series, New York, NY.

April 14: World health Care Congress; Washington, DC.

April 15-16: Tiburon CEO Summit, Ritz Carlton, New York, NY.

April 15-18: Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy’s 21st Annual Meeting and Showcase, Orlando, FL.

April 16-18: TIPAAA Annual Conference, Marriott River Center, San Antonio, TX.

April 20-24: Health Economics of Pharmaceuticals and Other Medical Interventions. Nice (Cannes) France.

April 21-22: Market Access Strategies for Personalized Medicines and Companion Diagnostics, Brussels, Belgium.

April 21-23: Introduction to Applied Health Economics: Methods for analysis of healthcare utilization and expenditure, University of York.
April 23-25: AIP Conference on Philanthropy, Rosemont, Ill.

April 25-29:  Society for Pain Practice Management Meeting, Phoenix, AZ.

April 26-29:  Wound Healing Society Symposium, Dallas, TX. 

Apr 27-28: 8th Annual Forum on Patient Compliance, Adherence and Persistency, Philadelphia, PA.

April 27-29: Workshop on Health Technology Assessment From Theory to Evidence to Policy, Toronto, CANADA.

April 28-May 1: Pharma Pricing and Market Access Outlook Europe, 2009, London.

April 29-May 2: American Geriatric Society Meeting, Chicago, IL.

 

Please send in your meetings and dates for listing in the next issue of our Events-Planner.

MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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I Shake my Fist at Pfizer, Inc.

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And, Laugh out Loud over D2D Marketing

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; FACFAS, MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chiefdem22]

We all know how intrusive direct-to-consumer [D2C] marketing by the pharmaceutical industry has become. Especially for those male “enhancement” type drugs that seem to be a ubiquitous feature on TV, the print media and internet, etc.

No, I’m not talking about sildenafil citrate or minoxidil; although I do recall seeing them on TV for the last decade, or so; maybe more. The target audience for both keeps getting younger and younger; or am I getting older and older? Still, allow me to assure all ME-P readers that the problems they reportedly treat are not my own.

Gotcha!

For this post however, I am talking about antibiotics.

Pfizer Seriously

Seriously, we are all aware that D2C marketing, and patients, goad doctors into “action” during an office visit [i.e., prescribe], when perhaps they ought not to. A follow-up office visit is often able to be scheduled, too.

Think: the antibiotic drug resistance epidemic.

Therefore, I was so righteously upset recently that I had to go out for a premature hour-long run, as I have been doing almost daily for thirty years, just to cool off.

Why?

It’s because I received the email copied verbatim, below.

Doctor [my name was not used, but my personal email address was correct],

For decades, azithromycin has been proven clinically effective to fight infections in your patients. With Zmax, azithromycin is reformulated to provide the same powerful efficacy against infection in a single, well-tolerated, liquid dose.

Zmax — the novel one-dose formulation of azithromycin
Zmax is indicated for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in pediatric patients and adults and acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS) in adults. Zmax uses extended-release microspheres to deliver one well-tolerated, front-loaded dose.

Zmax is not to be confused with Zithromax®, Z-Pak®, or Tri-Pak®

By delivering 100% compliance with just one dose, Zmax is the only formulation of azithromycin that avoids the complexities of multiple-day dosing for your patients.3-5

Prescribe Zmax and save with the “Never Pay More Than $20” coupon
Prescribe Zmax as your antibiotic-of-choice for your patients with CAP and ABS.
Zmax guarantees that your patients never pay more than $20 with the cost-saving Zmax coupon. For more information, please visit
www.ZmaxInfo.com or www.PfizerPro.com/Zmax

Sincerely,
Raymond W. Urbanski; MD, PhD

Vice President
Clinical Development and Medical Affairs
Established Products Business Unit
Pfizer, Inc.

Now, I have prescribed Zithromax® in the past, and will probably do so again in the future. I have lectured for several big-pharma companies throughout the years, and have written a textbook on bone and soft tissue extremity infections, and their diagnosis and treatment. I have served, and still serve, as a medical expert witness in malpractice cases involving infectious diseases, etc. But, I do not, repeat, do not need to be reminded by personal email about this anti-microbial, or any other drug. Being spammed in the office is one thing; but please not at home. I “reply-cancelled” the email; I think. Will let you know, down-line.

Of Podcasts and Webcasts

Recently, I was asked to make several new-wave podcast and modern webcast presentations for physician distribution by third-party vendors of the pharmaceutical industry. From what I could gather, this sort of “product information” distribution has not been eagerly embraced by the profession to-date, and so they are searching for industry recognized “names” to do their bidding. And so, as an educator, I acquiesced regarding same. But, I do pine for the attractive female pharma-rep visits back-in-the-day; replete with food for “lunch and learn” office presentations [mea culpa].

Think: Sermo, if you want a medical opinion.     

Assessment

Poor Dr. Urbanski, by the looks of his sur-name, I bet he’s Polish like me. I also bet that he gets more than a few emails, cards, faxes and letters like this post.

So, here’s where you need to imagine me shaking my fist at Pfizer, Inc.

I also laugh mockingly, as well.

Click to play :

PS: Ray, call me; let’s do lunch.

Conclusion

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Apply to our Financial Advisor Consultant Listing Service

We’re collecting information on financial advisors, financial planners, accountants, attorneys and/or related folks in the Health 2.0 space who have a particular affinity or expertise advising doctors, nurses, medical professionals, and related others. And, we have been for some time, now.

New Channel Development for Medically Focused Financial Advisors and Management Consultants*

Beta-in-Progress

By Ann Miller; RN, MHA

[Executive Director]solo-consultant3     

A New Approach

Unfortunately, this usually means that some really interesting and smart folks, who purchase our books, dictionaries, print-journal, blog or email us; may get lost in the confusion. The result is that too many great medically focused consultants that we’d love to hear about are getting lost in the shuffle. And so, we’re trying something else instead.

Tell us about your Practice

Tell us about your financial advisory practice, and you may end up being mentioned in dispatches, or featured on a separate channel that we are developing. Selection and inclusion criteria include but are not limited to the following credentials:

  • Undergraduate or Graduate degree
  • Industry acknowledged certification or designation
  • Clean CRD record
  • Clean criminal record
  • Insurance agents need not apply
  • Stock brokers need not apply
  • Fiduciaries are encouraged
  • RIAs and independent advisors are encouraged
  • Published authors or educators are encouraged
  • Mission statement on physician niche focus required.

Assessment

So, if you want our readers to pay attention to your financial advisory practice or firm, this will get it into a systematic review process starring our crack staff.  Otherwise you may face the peril of lost notoriety to other non-specific niches; or referral sources.

Publisher’s Note: The inclusion or rejection decision is final; but not set in stone and our terms and conditions may change without notice; the beta project may also be cancelled at any time. We reserve the right to reject anyone, at any time, for any reason or no reason at all. This is a beta project-in-development. The advisors listed are not affiliated or endorsed by iMBA Inc., in any way. This is an advertisement opportunity only.

*NOTE: There is a $120 annual fee for this listing service. It is waived for subscribers of our two volume companion print journal, upon request. www.HealthcareFinancials.com

List Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/schedule-a-consultation/financial-advisor-listings/list-of-advisor-consultants/?preview=true&preview_id=8633&preview_nonce=a3203ab9f9

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. What do you think about this idea to develop a new promotional channel for truly physician focused financial advisors?

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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Advetising in “Worth” and “Bloomberg” Magazines

Advertisers – Give Me a Break!

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™dr-david-marcinko16

Did you know that financial advisor Judith Zabalaoui, age 71, considered a pioneer of the fee-only business-model of financial services sales, pleaded guilty to using a Ponzi scheme to embezzle more than $3 million from her New Orleans area clients between 1993 and 2007? Yep, it’s true, but this is not really noteworthy to many pundits considering the current financial meltdown on Wall Street. But, do you know … the rest of the story?

Resource Management Inc.

Most of Zabalaoui’s clients came from Resource Management Inc. in Metairie, La., which she founded in 1974, according to the Times Picayune. Apparently, she became a Certified Financial Planner® in 1979, but the certification expired in 1999.

Link: http://www.nola.com/business/t-p/index.ssf?/base/money-1/1233728420253000.xml&coll=1

Assessment

So, here’s the rub. According to reports, Resource Management Inc. was the only firm in the country where each of the principals were allegedly “selected” by Worth [1996 to present], Money [1987] and/or both magazines as one of the top financial consultants in the country. The company also made Bloomberg Wealth Manager’s list of top wealth managers in 2004.

Industry Indignation Index: 55

Now, with all due respect and humility, I have been asked several times by Worth and Bloomberg to “promote yourself” in their “advertiser-driven” publications as a top financial consultant; but never Money magazine. I have always refused their selection charges for same of $12-18,000.

Full disclosure: I am the Founder of www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com and a reformed insurance agent, registered investment advisor and Certified Financial Planner™.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Was Judith Zabalaoui a fiduciary and what about these magazine “best-of” awards? Are they worthwhile monikers or worthless sales advertisements? What about all the so-called financial certifications, designations and charters; meaningful or meaningless? What is your opinion?

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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This Time the Hospital Financial Crisis is Different

Oh Really … No so Fast!

Submitted by J. Wayne Firebaugh, Jr; CPA, CFP®, CMP™ho-journal2

Dr. Malcolm T. MacEachern, Director of Hospital Activities for the American College of Surgeons, presciently observed that:

… Our hospitals are now involved in the worst financial crisis they have ever experienced. It is absolutely necessary to all of us to put our heads together and try to find some solution. If we are to have effective results we must have concerted and coordinated immediate action. … Repeated adjustments of expenses to income have been made. Never before has there been such a careful analysis of hospital accounting and study of financial policies. It is entirely possible for us to inaugurate improvements in business methods which will lead to greater ways and means of financing hospitals in the future … It is true that all hospitals have already trimmed their sales to better meet the financial conditions of their respective communities. This has been chiefly through economies of administration. There has been more or less universal reduction in personnel and salaries; many economies have been affected. Everything possible has been done to reduce expenditures but this has not been sufficient to bring about immediate relief in the majority of instances. The continuance of the present economic conditions will force hospitals generally to further action. The time has come when this problem must be given even greater thought, both from its community and from its national aspect…

Source:  Steinberg, C. Overview of the US Healthcare System; American Hospital Association 2003.

Many hospital CXOs, healthcare administrators and physician executives would agree that Dr. MacEachern accurately describes today’s healthcare funding environment. However, they might be startled to learn that Dr. MacEachern made these observations in 1932! There is the old truism that there is nothing new under the sun.

American Hospital Association Statistics

Healthcare statistics suggested that the financial crisis is much the same today as it was for hospitals during the Great Depression. The American Hospital Association’s (AHA) reported gloomy statistics for hospitals include:

  • In 2001, 29% of hospitals had negative total margins.
  • Approximately $101.3 billion of uncompensated care was provided between 1997 and 2001 with an average annual increase of 16% during that time period.
  • Emergency departments in 62% of all hospitals report operating at, or over, capacity.
  • Technology costs are soaring as traditional technologies such as X-Ray machines, for $175,000, are being replaced by contemporary technologies such as CAT Scanners at $1 million that are in turn being replaced by CT Functional Imaging with PET Scans costing $2.3 million. Even such a “simple” instrument as a scalpel that costs $20, is being replaced by equipment for electrocautery costing $12,000, that is then being replaced by harmonic scalpels costing $30,000.
  • Between 2000 and 2002, 33% of hospitals reported increases in liability premiums of more than 100%.
  • The average age of hospital plants has increased 21% from 7.9 years to 9.6 years in just one decade.
  • In the four years ending 2002, hospital bond downgrades have outpaced hospital bond upgrades by almost 5 to 1.

Editor’s Assessment

As editor’s of the premium subscription, two volume, 1,200 pages, institutional print-guide Healthcare Organizations [Financial Management Strategies], we prefer engaged readers and contributors like Mr. Firebaugh, who demand and create compelling content like the above. Please review these links for same.

www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Info: http://www.stpub.com/pubs/ho.htm

TOC: http://www.stpub.com/pdfs/toc_ho.pdf

Purchase: Call 1-800-251-0381 or email orders@stpub.com

Conclusion

Always beware the words: “this time it’s different;” as it rarely is. And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Please opine and subscribe to the ME-P here; it’s fast, free and secure.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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Product Details  Product Details

Enter our Writing Contest

You Must Submit – to Win

By Hope Hetico; RN, MHA, CMP™

Managing Editoridea2

Enter the Medical Executive Post submissions contest and just maybe you can become famous! Simply send in a written post about some aspect of the healthcare industrial complex, finance, administration, policy or health economics space that you are particularly knowledgeable about. Or, visit our topic channels for related ideas. Use you fertile imagination.

Rules

Submission must be original, not submitted elsewhere and under 1,000 words. Rest assured that grammar, spelling, citations and punctuation counts. Originality and thought-leadership is a must. Oh, you must be a subscriber and all copyright ownership will be transferred to us, as well. Your material may even be used in some iMBA, Inc print project or publication, now in-progress or in the future.

Grand Prize

Just think! You could become one of 3 finalists featured as an upcoming Medical Executive Post monthly column, with photographic byline, or even the grand prize winner who’ll receive our free best-selling hardcover textbook, the Business of Medical Practice.

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Contest Close

Submissions are due December 31, 2009. There are no limits to the number of times you may apply or the number of submissions you may send in. All results are final. The anonymous judges reserve the right of non-selection. And, we reserve the right to reject any content submission; for any reason perceived as reasonable, or unreasonable.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post submissions contest are appreciated.

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Collaborative Dental Health 2.0 [Part One of a Three Part Series]

Consumerism is the Hippocratic Way

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDSpruitt1

The Appearance of DR. Oogle

By September of 2005, when I finally worked up enough courage to ask a patient to post a review for me on DR. Oogle (doctoroogle.com) – a web-based patient referral site – my dental practice had been invisible and struggling for a few years and was still disappearing.  It was the most discouraging period in my career. 

Following the Golden Rule 

In spite of my efforts to always treat my patients like I would want to be treated myself, I was headed for either managed care, which I consider to be an unethical model for dentistry, or bankruptcy. The progressive betrayal of my profession and my patients by leaders in dentistry spawned bitterness and high blood pressure that I still suffer today – even though my practice has fully recovered. My hygienist and I are currently booked almost solid for the next two weeks. I know also that in the next three, misfortune could arise. I have no idea what is in store for dentistry in tomorrow’s economy. If I was in the business of selling advice, or DR. Oogle, I would probably be tempted to radiate much more confidence than I truly feel.

Back in the Day 

When I graduated from dental school in 1982, I was reassured by dentists I respected that one’s practice location is not important if one works hard to consistently provide patients with one’s best efforts.  Dr. Earl Estep, a practice development guru from Athens, Texas, taught me decades ago that word-of-mouth is much more effective for attracting patients who are ready to spend money than advertisements provide, and that one should never forget to ask for referrals, even if it feels “unprofessional.”  This is still solid advice.  For example, two days ago, in a special marketing feature on Jim Du Molin’s The Wealthy Dentist Blog, Chris Barnard suggested,

“Enlist your existing patients in your practice success. Actively seek those all-important word of mouth referrals from your patients.”

Link: http://www.thewealthydentist.com/blog/727/practice-marketing-in-down-times

Even though Barnard doesn’t mention patient referral sites such as DR. Oogle, his other ideas which may or may not fit one’s practice image include quarterly letters, $10 gas cards and iPod raffles in order to

“… Let them know who you are beyond that white lab coat …!”

Just Do it … and Ask

I personally think it is much less complicated, as well as much cheaper, to simply select a recently satisfied patient, look the person in the eye and ask,

“Would you mind putting in a good word for me on this website?” 

Handing a patient a business card with the website handwritten on it becomes easier to do after the first dozen or so, but don’t expect immediate results. My success rate was around 45% when I was actively pursuing favors. When I reached 90 reviews after around nine months, I quit pestering my patients with requests for reviews. Active participation in a patient referral site also provides the incentive to improve one’s practice by motivating both dentists and staff to become wrapped up in treating each patient with extra-special care in the hopes of a nice review. Before anyone knows it, personalized, attentive care becomes a habit, I have found. Other than those who sell ads and party favors, everyone wins.

Enter Dr. Oogle 

I came across DR. Oogle in March 2005. The open-source patient satisfaction measurement application was born in San Francisco at the very end of the .com bust, and had been actively gathering word-of-mouth data about dentists for over two years when I began observing its progress.  By then, DR. Oogle had already accumulated an impressive amount of information concerning patient satisfaction with many of nation’s dentists. I suspect that today, Dr. Oogle’s volume of data is insurmountable by potential competitors. 

Akin to Wikipedia 

I found DR Oogle’s revolutionary marketing concept fascinating simply because like Wikipedia, it is not supported by advertising – thus avoiding a tremendous built-in and transparent bias. The company’s profits are derived solely from dentists like me who agree to pay reasonable monthly fees for the opportunity to participate in the application by displaying their customers’ opinions for public scrutiny. It is what I call playing to win rather than playing not to lose. Five months before I purchased the service, I published an article about DR. Oogle in The Twelfth Night, the monthly newsletter of my local dental society. I believe mine was the first mention of such web-based patient referral sites in any dental publication. Here is the article:

Patient Driven Referral Services

[From: “The Twelfth Night” April, 2005]

In a small community people as a general rule know a lot more about their neighbors than do people in a city.  They also know a lot more about the doctors and dentists in town since there are only a few.  It is fairly common to talk to neighbors and friends to get opinions on who is the best dentist, who to avoid, who is the cheapest, who has the most up to date equipment. 

In a small community, as well as in a city, even a neighbor’s recommendation carries more weight than a dentist’s paid advertisement.  I would imagine that sales of 1 800 Dentist subscriptions are significantly lower in rural Texas than in the metropolitan areas on a per capita basis.  The dentists in small communities know that they are far too easy to find to need to spend money for a referral service or for much advertisement at all. 

Well, Fort Worth and cities across the nation are becoming smaller dental communities because of the internet.  If any of you have googled your name, you may have picked up a hit by one or more patient driven referral services (PDRS). And, if you have not done this lately, you should.  There is a good possibility that the information about your practice location may contain errors.  But more importantly, you may read something pleasingly flattering or terribly humbling about your practice written by a patient you saw last week.

Dr. Oogle is presently the most popular PDRS. A patient’s comments about his or her dentist is posted only after the patient accepts the terms of the agreement; which are that the patient is neither a relative nor an employee of the dentist and that the patient is not otherwise being compensated for the review. The website also requires an authentic e-mail address and other personal information for verification purposes.

There is a filtering system in place in which employees of Dr. Oogle reject (at their discretion) comments which are too good or too bad to be credible.  And there are other ways in which dentists can handle bad reviews and are described on their website. There is, I suppose, always room for an attorney or two if the other attempts at removing a bad review fail.

But, if the PDRS’s survive the lawsuits, and if the first review which comes up under your name happens to be a real stinker written by an easily disgruntled and fervently vindictive patient (I think his name is Fred. You probably know him as he changes dentists often), and if you cannot get it otherwise removed, perhaps you should bury it under as many good reviews as you can encourage your patients to submit. This reaction, not surprisingly, is the reaction recommended by Dr. Oogle.  In fact, they also recommend that we routinely ask our patients to submit reviews to them.  I imagine that there are already dentists who have had cards printed for this purpose. 

Like it or not, our patients are being given more power in the marketing of our practices and their influence is growing. Dr. Oogle’s first reviews of dentists in the greater Ft. Worth area occurred in September of ’04. By the first of February, 5½ months later, there were only 18 dentists who had been reviewed by at least one patient.  As of today, one month later (March 7), there are 16 more. By the time this is published the number could be close to 50. Who knows how many reviews will be posted a year from now if the public perceives value in this kind of information. Many more of us will be listed as either good or bad dentists; legitimately or not. 

Regardless of the outcome of Dr. Oogle’s venture into dentistry, the fact that the public has a thirst for “unbiased” sources of information concerning our practices tells us that more than ever before we have to treat each patient as our most important source of new business or a disappointed patient could soon become a significant obstacle for growth.

Another good thing is that a patient who has to choose a dentist from a list at least soon may have some guidance; other than the fact that his insurance company thinks they are all equally swell.

Darrell K. Pruitt; DDS

[April 2005]

Investigative Reporting 

Since writing the unprecedented article, I have performed numerous simple investigations comparing DR. Oogle’s ratings to dentists’ names on preferred provider lists for various cities.  Invariably, the vast majority of the dentists who sign managed care contracts are found in the bottom 50% of the ratings. Sorry if I hurt some colleagues’ feelings, but that is cold fact. Anyone with a preferred provider list can confirm it. I suspect it has been done thousands of times by many anxious people holding new annual lists of strangers’ names in just the last year. Alert dentists should note that humans are choosy when it comes to trusting someone to use sharp, rotating instruments in their mouths. Dentistry is not like buying a can of beans as discount brokers would have their naïve and trusting clients believe, and most importantly, ethics are not for free.

Apart from the common sense rule that a purchaser of intricate handwork to exacting tolerances generally gets what the dental patient pays for, what else causes fee-for-service dentists to be generally favored over preferred providers?  I think it has to do with hunger.  If one’s meals arrive daily without effort, one forgets how to fish.

Managed care and preferred provider lists protect contract dentists from the naturally cleansing free-market principles taught by economist Adam Smith centuries ago. The beauty of competition in the marketplace occurs every time a dis-satisfied patient shops for a new dentist. When reliable information about patient satisfaction is available, quality is rewarded and encouraged in the neighborhood. Free-market capitalism works as reliably as classical operant conditioning in the best of possible worlds.

Assessment 

It is my opinion that there has always been something dishonest and un-American about discount dentistry with no quality control. I think we need to expose the unfair and unethical managed care business model to free-market forces even if it involves the calculated promotion of a simple, foolproof scheme for dentists interested in graduating from preferred provider lists. Those who feel trapped can begin their escape immediately by preparing some business cards for their managed care dental patients who by now are easily impressed by compassion. I’ll share more in Part 2.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. If US dental patients are lucky, Web 2.0 transparency arrived just in time. Consumerism rules naturally.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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About In-Situ Medical Practitioners

Searching for Definitional Clarity

Staff Reporters

solo-consultant2Apparently, there is a growing trend toward so called “in-situ medical practitioners”. In this model, specialists like internists or diabetologists, add a certain medical expertise to address a large number of patients with specific needs in a general or primary care practice. 

Link: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Business Savvy

This clearly indicates that physicians are becoming more business savvy, are becoming more sophisticated in driving the growth of their practice, and better understand the structure and needs of their local health care market. 

Assessment

Regardless, the basic principles of relationship building and relationship management apply – treating each party with mutual respect and engaging in open and honest dialogue. Of course, we seek input form readers and subscribers to further define this emerging trend; if not merely a group of isolated incidents made known to us.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Internal Healthcare Marketing and Patient Satisfaction

Managing Expectations and Perceptions

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

By Dr. Gary L. Bode; MSA, CPA, CMP™ (Hon)gary-bode

Patient satisfaction occurs when patient perceptions exceed their expectations. They get an intangible “something extra” from the visit, above what they, or their TPA / health plan / Medicare / Medicaid plan, paid for. 

Managing Perceptions

We’ll concentrate on managing patient perceptions. Note that when patient expectations match their perceptions, mutual obligations are fulfilled, making both practitioner and patient “even”.

Clinical Outcomes

The clinical result, within a relevant range, is only part of the patient’s perceptions. Numerous unconscious impressions comprise the remainder.

We’ve all had patients love us despite a less than optimal result. And, we’ve all had patients angrily leave the practice over some non-clinical matter like a trivial billing dispute.

A patient’s perception of any health care service is colored by a vast array of prior experiences that set up current expectations. The patient is pleased to the extent that his current perceptions exceed his pre-existing expectations. This encompasses far more than the clinical result (within a relevant range), and includes such non-treatment issues as the demeanor of the staff, condition of the physical premises, psychological comfort during the visit, etc.

Patients Talk

Remember, all patients talk about you anyway.

A happy patient tells four others about what a nice doctor you are.

They are more likely to complete treatment and follow instructions, thus obtaining a better medical outcome, and, generating additional fees for the practice.

They pay quicker, cause less bad-debt and help create a pleasant environment for us to work in.

An unhappy patient vehemently tells nine others what a nasty rip off artist you are. Sad, but true!  They are not as likely to complete treatment, thus incurring a less than optimal result, and generate fewer fees. They pay slower, if at all, create a stressed environment and detrimentally affect the attitude of other patients in the office.

Soft Managerial Science

Try to eliminate problems that might cause negative perceptions (i.e., a filthy restroom) and implement controls that help assure positive perceptions.

Patient satisfaction is a soft managerial science. It is a numbers game. Most patients don’t pre-define what would be “acceptable” from this encounter, but have vaguely defined ranges of prior expectations anyway, gleaned from a lifetime of health care related experience. Any variance between these this “acceptable” range of expectations and each trivial encounter invokes some degree positive or negative feeling in the patient.

The total perception of the office experience is an aggregate of multiple trivial, often subliminal, observations. Patient satisfaction is an intangible and amorphous process complicated by: 

  • Inter patient variables: Significant differences between patients in their “expectations”. 
  • Intra patient variables: A single patient can perceive the same thing or situation differently at different times, depending on uncontrollable variables like mood, or, context of occurrence which may (sometimes and/or partially) be controllable by the practice.
  • Luck of the draw” in physical variables: Does Sally or Mary escort the patient to the exam room?  Was it the blue or green exam room: Did the last patient to use the rest room, five minutes ago, leave a disgusting mess?
  • Heterogeneous staff variables: Even with appropriate training, people are not machines and have their own quirks.

By proactively anticipating the entire visit, from the patient’s perspective, the medical practitioner can structure and arrange things so that most patients have, generally positive perceptions, most of the time. This can be done despite all the potential heterogeneity of the above factors. Patient satisfaction can be improved in any office, and can be done by anyone.

Assessment

Because patient satisfaction is a multi-faceted amorphous subject, there are multiple correct approaches to the subject and no “cook book” recipe on how to proceed. Try and get the big picture: 

  • Identify the worst areas and fix them.
  • Identify the best areas and reinforce them.
  • Proceed slowly.

It can be done one facet at a time. Adapt things to your own managerial style and personality. Be completely open to new suggestions, innovation and change.

Conclusion

How do you mange patient expectations, as an increasingly vital concept for CDHCPs, concierge medicine, retail and onsite medical practices and clinics? Please comment.

Related Information Sources:

Medical Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact him at: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: http://www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Understanding Healthcare Competition

Funneling Porter’s Five Forces of Business

Staff Reporters

ho-journal12Michael Porter PhD, of Harvard Business School, is considered by many to be one of the world’s leading authorities on competitive strategy and international competitiveness.

In 1980, he published Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors, in which he argued that all businesses must respond to five competitive forces. And now, these thoughts have been condensed for the healthcare industrial complex by Robert James Cimasi; MHA, CMP™ of Health Capital Consultants, LLC, in St. Louis, MO. They are cited below from the print journal-guide www.HealthcareFinancials.com

1. The Threat of New Market Entrants

This force may be defined as the risk of a similar company entering your local marketplace and winning business. There are many barriers to entry of new market entrants in healthcare including: the high cost of equipment, licensure, requirement for physicians and other highly trained technicians, development of physician referral networks and provider contracts, and other significant regulatory requirements.

Certificate of Need (CON) laws, which require governmental approval for new healthcare facilities, equipment, and services that have been in place since they were federally mandated in 1974. State CON laws create a regulatory barrier to entry. New medical provider entrants commonly faced substantial political opposition by established interests, which is manifested in the CON review process.

2. The Bargaining Power of Suppliers

A supplier can be defined as any business relationship or vendor you rely on to deliver your product, service or outcome. Healthcare equipment is a highly technical product produced by a limited number of manufacturers. This reduces the range of choices for providers and can increase costs.

3. Threats from Substitute Products or Services

Substitute products or services are those that are sufficiently equivalent in function or utility to offer consumers an alternate choice of product or service.  An illustration of this in healthcare would be diagnostic imaging, or PET scans, as a substitute for surgery, which is often a more costly and risky option for patients. The threat of less invasive or less expensive diagnostic tests other than diagnostic imaging is relatively small for the near term future.

4. The Bargaining Power of Buyers

This force is the degree of negotiating leverage of an industry’s buyers or customers. The buyers of healthcare services are ultimately the patients. However, the competitive force of buyers is manifested through healthcare insurers including the US and state governments through the Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, and other programs; managed care payers (e.g., Blue Cross/Blue Shield affiliates); workers’ compensation insurers; and others. 

In addition to the government, many of these healthcare insurers are large, national companies, often publicly traded, commanding significant bargaining power over healthcare provider reimbursement.

5. Rivalry among Existing Firms

This is ongoing competition between existing firms without consideration of the other competitive forces which define industries. Healthcare providers face pressure from other existing providers to obtain favorable provider contracts; maintain the latest technology; increase efficiencies; and lower prices.

Link:

http://www.thehealthcareblog.com/the_health_care_blog/2009/02/making-price-competition-work-.html#comments

Assessment

And so, these forces should be considers by all new, mid-career, and mature independent medical practitioners. They should also be combined with an internal organizational SWOT analysis as well.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Collaborative Dental Health 2.0 [Upcoming Three Part Series]

Hippocratic Dental Consumerism

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDSpruitt

Even before the downturn in the economy sent dentists scrambling for new sources of patients, these were already times of revolutionary changes in the marketing of dental care. To those who are alert, the Internet-enabled chaos signals a rare opportunity if one sides with consumers rather than tradition. It takes confidence to welcome transparency, and it looks increasingly bad when dentists resist accountability in traditional ways – like suing. Yelp; because of a bad review that was posted on the patient referral site. That is the second stupidest thing one can do. Being perhaps a geeky student of the Internet, and sort of nosey, I have been tracking the popularity of dentists’ comments on a few Internet venues for quite a while, because of my own curiosity.  I also get ornery enjoyment from reporting to my friends my opinion of what is really happening in my profession that nobody else talks about. My hobby could be called fuzzy data mining based on a platform of precise subjectivity. 

For more intricate and dependable real-time information, I choose the surveys reported on The Wealthy Dentist Blog, hosted by Jim Du Molin. They are the best around.

Link: http://www.thewealthydentist.com/blog/

American Dental Association

The ADA also provides nice, formal presentations of even more accurate information, but it is often dated and not ground-level relevant like Du Molin’s studies. Until the Internet came along, gathering useful information about dentists’ prevailing attitudes outside one’s professional circle was virtually impossible, and dentists are well aware that even within these circles, colleagues’ opinions at dental meetings are sometimes intentionally misleading – perhaps mine are less reliable as well at social gatherings. I never talk this frankly in real life. 

Dental Information Silos 

Talk about information silos!  No less that 85% of dentists in the nation are owners of solo private practices (ADA News), and only 2% have bubbly personalities (my guess). Dentists’ quiet isolation, which is arguably favored by what I would guess would be around 85% of dentists in the nation, is a unique characteristic in modern healthcare that is part of a unique labor-intensive art – performed to exacting tolerances in an unpredictable environment – intricate work that most consumers know little about. Yet the ultra-personal accountability welcomed by almost all solo dentists is the way even neighborhood physicians once practiced their trade for thousands of years before modern stakeholders became involved. 

Hippocratic Oath

Is working alone with one’s chosen staff the most efficient way to provide dental care?  No way.  But for me personally, maintaining complete control of the care I provide from start-to-finish for those who depend on me is safer for them and a better business model for me than any alternative I have seen yet.  In my opinion, there is no room in the Hippocratic Oath for less than 100% devotion to the patients’ interests. More than two thousand years later, it is called consumerism, and it is 180 degrees counter to stakeholders’ interests, preferred provider lists and universal healthcare. And, it probably comes as no surprise that last October I observed that the most popular comments that were posted shifted from news about the benefits of high-tech inventions in dentistry to advice for how to survive in a tough economy. The whole nation is concerned about finances, and getting one’s teeth cleaned is commonly sacrificed when things get tough. Don’t even mention implants and crowns.

2009 Recession 

At the risk of sounding ostentatious as well as pedantic, I will offer that (for the time being) my practice is not suffering from a downturn that many of my local colleagues are enduring. In fact, I am actually busier than I was this time last year – and I made more profit in 2008 than ever before in 26 years of practice. I am also discovering that patients I lost long ago are returning now that they no longer have provider lists. They are also finding that my prices are not so high after all (in fairness, I should add that it has been longer than usual since I have raised fees – except for full gold restorations, of course). Since I am not in the business of selling advice, I am not afraid to also admit that my practice still experienced a couple of slow periods in the late fall – directly attributable to the initial shock of the downturn.  But I cannot say that the slowdown was any worse than other times in the last few years, and it certainly hasn’t been as bad as what dentists in Michigan must endure. My sympathy and best wishes go out to my colleagues up north. Things could all turn for the worse for me tomorrow, but for right now, I’m somewhere between surviving and thriving, for what that is worth; nothing spectacular, but solid.

Three Part Series 

This posting, which I hope some readers find useful, will be a multi-part series. I haven’t worked everything out yet, and my outline is subject to change, but here is what I have in mind.

In Part One, I’ll describe how my active participation in DR. Oogle (doctoroogle.com) has not only kept my name off of preferred provider lists, but it has also improved the quality of care my staff and I provide, as well as improved the working atmosphere in the office. Transparency will do that.

Then, in Part Two, I will offer my suggestion how one can use DR. Oogle or similar patient referral site to “graduate” from managed care into fee-for-service dentistry without losing patients or profit. As a naughty teaser, let me hint that over three years ago, I offered the idea as an article for the monthly newsletter of my local dental society, only to be refused publication for the first time in over two decades of submissions. I was told that an official nixed it as a transparent “scheme” to harm managed care dental companies, and was therefore below the standards of ADA publications.

“Image is everything”

-ADA/Intelligent Dental Marketing

Finally, in Part Three, I’ll describe how a good offense is also a handy defense – perhaps even in defense against malpractice litigation. Hopefully, a few sincere readers will consider playing to win rather than playing not to lose. And, for those who still don’t see my point, I will reveal how to play not to lose. Fair is fair.  It costs from $625 to $1995 per year, and in my opinion, is the stupidest thing one can do. Hope you enjoy this three part series. 

Assessment

Editor’s Note: This post was first published on PennWell. Dr. Pruitt blogs here and at others sites. His insights are applicable to most all medical specialties.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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Financial Product Sales, Communication and Management

Techniques-of-Art for Financial Advisors

By Robert Ayrer and ME-P Staff Writers

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Before any piece of work that requires communication can be understood, the context must be established.  Without context, words have very little reality; and without reality, there can be no communication. Communication is the “transfer of meaning.”

Introduction

The lack of a definitive role of the marketing function (and the sales function, and the difference between the two) for financial advisors [FAs], has contributed to the lack of clarity required for the achievement of sales targets. The fuzzy line between “targets” and “goals” has left most financial product salesmen, OSJs [Office of Supervisory Jurisdiction] and sales managers without the “tools to manage.” In this context, we will define the financial sales person’s role as the “person responsible for the execution of the corporate, or personal, sales plan, which includes the short term marketing of the company.”

Marketing versus Sales

Long term strategic marketing is a very sophisticated process, requiring highly trained people that are not involved with the mundane, day-to-day activities of the enterprise.  Unfortunately, this type of “marketing” is done by too few businesses, RIAs, BDs, and FAs.

The “marketing plan”, as defined by Malcolm H. B. McDonald, Director of the Cranfield Marketing Planning Centre, of the Cranfield School of Management, is a comprehensive business plan, incorporating and integrating all of the elements of business; the four “P’s” — Product, Price, Place and Promotion. More often than not, financial sales organizations and RIAs are run by people with “Director of Sales & Marketing” titles.  This use of the “marketing” title often confuses the difference between marketing and sales. For our purposes, we will include the very short term marketing function in the sales department’s role.

Dirty Ear Marketing

This “very short term marketing” required of the FA or sales person is what is called “The dirty ear” marketing.  The “dirty ear” comes from “keeping an ear to the ground” to detect changes in the market that would affect the assumptions that support the marketing plan and the company sales plan.

It has been said that the American plains Indians could drive a stick into the ground, put the end of the stick to their ear and tell if the buffalo herd was within twenty miles — and, by bending the stick, tell in which direction.  The more sophisticated tracker could tell whether the herd was approaching or going away.

It is this short term, close in, change in direction of the market (herd) upon which the assumptions of the marketing and sales plan are based, that should be the concern of the sales department or financial advisor and business owners. 

Of Bull and Bear Markets

For example, during times of economic expansion, and bull markets, the purchasing authority for many items is transferred down the reporting chain to the lowest possible responsible level of management. At this level a sales person or FA may only require one or two calls to complete the selling process with a buying authority. This authority level would dictate the activity of sales people in achieving their personal sales plan and achieving their targets and goals. 

During a recession however, as is occurring now, authority to buy may be withdrawn from the customary buying level, designating someone at a higher level as the “buyer.” The financial sales person still must go through the traditional contact at the lower level. These contacts can now only say “no”. They cannot say “yes.” By adding another level of decision making to the buying process, additional activity will be required to make the average sale. You cannot double the activity required to make a sale and make the same number of sales!  Don’t make the mistake of thinking that working harder is the answer, as there is only a finite amount of time available to get to your prospects. Your options are; change the plan; adjust the sales budget; add more sales representatives.

The Sales Cycle

Continuing a sales plan based upon the assumption of a two-call sales cycle when the market requires a three or four call cycle will take your sales plan out of reality.  The key to both a good marketing plan and a good sales plan is “reality.”  It is the FA or sales manager’s prime function to see that the sales organization is working in “reality” by constantly testing the basic assumptions of the sales plan.

The challenge to every financial services business owner, sales manager and every FA sales person is to stay focused on the prime objective of a sales person – processing the sale.  To maintain focus on the sales objective, the activities of a sales person should be looked at in two categories; “tasks” and “selling objectives.”  The tasks are those activities that all sales people are required to do to service clients – handle back-charges, warranty claims, stocking services, point of sale maintenance, etc.  The selling objectives are defined by the sales progression used in the sales strategy.

Processing the Sale

To give better understanding to this concept, consider the following.  If you find a local bank that offers a certificate of deposit that is paying a good return, and you put $10,000 on deposit, you have made an “investment.”  It is an “investment” because you expect your money back with a profit.  To find this investment opportunity you must be focused externally (not within your own business).  And, investments are a source of new capital.

If, on the other hand you take the $10,000 and purchase a car for your business, your focus is internal to your business, solving a problem of transportation, and you will only realize gain by reducing an existing or potential expense. You will not realize any new capital from this expenditure.  This use of the $10,000 is an “expense.”

Internal and External Focus

To generalize, if your focus is external and you are seeking to generate new capital by exploiting new opportunities, this is an investment.  If your focus is internal, and you are solving problems (the activities that come after the sale), the time and money spent is an expense.

Tasks and Objectives

Sales people sometimes lose sight of the difference between the “tasks” (internally focused after sales activities that are expenses to the company) and the sales “objectives” (opportunity seeking activity that will result in generating new capital through sales). Although we must service the task items, we can avoid “buying” the customer’s problem (forgetting that the customer’s problem is our opportunity).  The way we make sure we maintain focus on the opportunity rather than the problem – is to link every task with a sales objective. 

Management Reporting

Historically, we have asked sales people and FAs to report to management through an activity report that usually records the “task” items but ignores the opportunity items. To use the reporting system as a training and management tool, stop requiring the typical activity and expense reports.

Instead, ask your sales people fill out an “Opportunity” report and an “Investment” report.  It is true; “What gets measured gets improved!”  If you want your sales people to be externally focused and seek opportunities, investing in accounts rather than “solving problems” and spending money (“expense” items), measure and report on the opportunities and investments.  It is more positive to run an investment department for your business rather than a cost center.

Managing For Results

Peter Drucker observes that “… there are no profit centers in a business; there are only cost centers.”  The profits centers are external.  Again, quoting Drucker; “Results are obtained by exploiting opportunities, not by solving problems!”

Assessment

The above offering is intended to help financial advisors and sales people “manage” themselves, and for the sales people who have assumed the mantle of OSJ or “manager”, etc

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated.

Speaker:If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com 

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

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Dear Colleaguesaward-cup2

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We are discussed, read and viewed by medical students, physicians, dentists, podiatrists, optometrists and industry analysts; as well as healthcare administrators, financial advisors and planners, accountants, lawyers, office managers, CXOs, investors, Wall Street insiders and nurse-executives from health systems around the country.

Advertise with us and you’ll put your brand name in front of a smart & tightly focused Health 2.0 demographic; one at the forefront of our emerging healthcare marketplace of collaboratively informed, thought-leaders and professional “movers and shakers.”

 

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2009 HCG Medical Staff Salary Survey

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The Health Care Group

[By Cheryl Sprows]salary-survey

Personnel costs continue to be the highest expense item for most medical, dental and other practices.

The Health Care Group’s® 2009 Staff Salary Survey is designed to help you structure an effective staff compensation package that will benefit your medical practice or clinic.

Published annually, the 2009 Staff Salary Survey provides salary and fringe benefit information for 38 different job positions:

  • Compare the salaries your practice is paying its staff members.
  • Establish salary classes.
  • Learn the market rate of pay for new hires. 
  • Evaluate your practice’s benefit package.

To make the search for location-specific information easier, the summary reports for each position are organized by Geographic Region and Metropolitan Statistical Area. They are also presented by Practice Specialty and by Practice Gross Revenue.

Link: www.healthcaregroup.com

Multi Use Potential

The information in the Staff Salary Survey can be put to a wide range of uses, such as comparing your practice’s salary amounts and benefits to the national and regional averages in the Survey. These data are also vital to benchmarking salary and pay-related expenses in a medical, dental or other practice.

Economic Trend Analysis

Data can also be used for trend analysis. Despite tightening reimbursements and continuing overall economic stagnation in health care, practices still need to reward good workers by giving raises to employees who warrant them. A productive and motivated staff is a practice’s best investment. Some practices recognize the need to raise salaries higher than the “average” increase. Because it is a “seller’s market” with respect to qualified and experienced employees in many regions of the country, both initial salaries and annual increases may need to be higher to attract and retain staff.

Fringe Benefits

Medical, dental and other practices continue to provide good fringe benefits for full-time and regular part-time employees. With so many practices needing a mix of full-time and part-time employees, providing benefits to regularly scheduled part-time staff is essential.

Assessment

Personnel costs continue to be a significant expense item for most practices. The Health Care Group’s 2009 Staff Salary Survey is designed to help you structure an effective and fair staff compensation package that will benefit your practice and employees. Click below to view the Table of Contents for the 2009 Staff Salary Survey:

Link: http://thehealthcaregroup.com/TOC/2009SSSTOC.pdf

To Order

Choose one of the following methods to order the 2009 Staff Salary Survey:

1. Online: direct link

https://www.thehealthcaregroup.com/pc-18-4-staff-salary-survey.aspx

2. Telephone: (800) 473-0032, extension 3350 (have your credit card information available)

3. Mail: Send completed Publication Order Form to:

THE HEALTH CARE GROUP
140 W. Germantown Pike, Suite 200
Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462-1421

4. Fax: Fax completed Publication Order Form to: (610) 828-3658

Click below link to view and print Publication Order Form for mail and fax orders.

https://www.thehealthcaregroup.com/temp/2009PubOrderformFeb2009.pdf

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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Launching our ME-P Advertising Initiative

Learning and Growing with your Help

By Medical Executive-Post Staff stk321042rkn

This complimentary and companion blog forum for the 2-volume, 1,200 pages, quarterly print-journal at www.HealthcareFinancials.com provides the very latest news, information, insider reports, rated commentary, white-papers, professional posts and ranked subject matter information on the health care industrial complex. We see it as a “between-the-issues” communications forum, with in-vivo knowledge repository integrated with a ranking utility and professional social network for modernity.

Linking Stakeholders

In other words, we link movers-shakers and promote those in the profession with financial advisors, medical management consultants and health economists. All stakeholders of the healthcare industrial complex are invited to read, vote, submit posts and become involved with us.

Complimentary Resources

In order to make these high-level resources available to you at no cost, we promote our in-house textbooks, dictionaries, white papers, handbooks and print journal; online. www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com We also promote our consulting services, seminars, speaking engagements and online education program in heath economics and management for consultants www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com  

Soon, we intend to sparsely sell ads to sponsors interested in reaching out to our informed audience.

Privacy Assured

Of course, our sponsors will require some anonymous, aggregate data for reporting purposes

www.HealthDictionarySeries.com But, at no time will personal information or e-mail address be shared with vendors, sponsors or other sites. Please feel free to review our privacy policy.

Assessment

Don’t forget to send in your informed posts, and comments, too! Deep subject matter content is our lifeblood.

Read, rant, rate, rank and rave!

Please be sure to subscribe here for increased functionality.

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Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Will subscribers object to some focused and target-specific advertisements on this blog-site? Or, shall we remain purists? Why or why not?

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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On Ingenix and Delta Dental

Or, Birds of a Feather; etc. etc

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDS

pruitt10

Introduction

Just a quick note while I’m working on other material. As anyone can see from reading Rabia Mughal’s DrBicuspid article, “Dentists or patients: Who should get the insurance check?” Delta Dental is simply a sleazy company that dentists should shun to protect their patients’ welfare.

http://www.drbicuspid.com/index.aspx?sec=sup&sub=pmt&pag=dis&ItemID=301436&wf=34

It is unethical to sign a contract with Delta Dental, and I will help Delta show you why. Here is a sample of Delta sleaze I intend to present:

Arlene Furlong on Delta Dental

On September 17, 2008, Arlene Furlong posted an article about Delta Dental on ADA News Online titled “Delta caps rates nationally for two networks.”

http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/pubs/adanews/adanewsarticle.asp?articleid=3218

Furlong writes:

“A contract provision that holds dentists to Delta’s maximum allowed fee for non-covered services will affect all of Delta’s Premier and Preferred Provider Organization participating dentists throughout the country by January 2011.″.

The Upshot 

This means that if a Delta preferred provider wishes to make up for the profit lost from providing Delta customers 25% discounts on dentistry, which works out to over half the dentist’s pay after expenses are deducted, doing more cosmetic dentistry will no longer help keep the doors open.  Delta, like a sleazy dentistry broker, is telling its providers that it will demand discounts on everything for its customers. Think about it. It is beyond unfair business practice. It is tyranny.

Invading the Dental Homes 

And now, Mughal tells us that Delta Dental intends to break up dental homes – where patients enjoy the benefits of continuity of care from dentists they prefer.  Why does Delta harm their clients like that? 

Ari Adler, the communications administrator at Delta Dental of Indiana says it is a matter of dentists stealing something from the network:

“Direct reimbursement to out-of-network dentists is a problem because it allows them to enjoy the benefits provided by the network without following cost guidelines and quality control measures of the network”, [Adler] added.

Quality control; you mean like UnitedHealthcare’s Ingenix? 

When one thinks about it, since dentists will only be paid half of what they are paid today, no matter what they do for dental patients, quality control could indeed become a new issue, just like the appearance of black-market dentistry. 

My Beat 

I will be covering quality control by dental consultants soon. Did you know that they have their own national organization? It is called the American Association of Dental Consultants (AADC). I bet you didn’t know this: Less than a year ago, Dr. Gordon Christiansen as well as Dr. John Luther, Senior Vice-President of the ADA, spoke at their annual convention in Scottsdale, Arizona. Delta Dental was Dr. John Luther’s employer before he came to work for the ADA. Hmm, I wonder?

Wait, there’s more:  the AADC’s largest sustaining sponsor is UnitedHealthcare Dental. http://aadc.org/site/sponsors.php

The Ingenix Scandal

Have you heard of UnitedHealthcare’s company called Ingenix?  New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo caught Ingenix being creative with physicians’ FOIA-disclosable data for cost-control purposes (profit), and calling it quality control.  Ingenix was marketing its professional number-cooking scheme to insurers across the nation before Cuomo saw through their deceit and recently demanded Ingenix to be dissolved. 

Transparent Feudal Mechanisms 

One can see that incest probably worked well for royalty in Europe until literacy and the free-market brought transparency to their self-perpetuating feudal machinations. I will be watching for a name and email address of an appropriate Delta Dental official to contact about Delta’s sleazy business practices.  At some point in this thread (which I can keep active for years), I intend to make someone from Delta Internet-famous among dentists, just like Trajan King, CEO of Intelligent Dental Marketing. Suggestions from readers and subscribers are always appreciated.  Please, no in-laws.

Assessment 

It is time to come out and defend yourself in front of a hostile audience, you good ol’ boys from Delta Dental … or not.  Your old command-and-control tricks don’t stand a chance in a transparent marketplace, and I will show you that silence is lame defense as well. Someone on your team is trapped. Please, let’s talk sooner than later.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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INSURANCE: Risk Management and Insurance Strategies for Physicians and Advisors

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What’s Up with Plaid Management?

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A “Cold-Call” Cowboy for Financial Advisors

[By An Anonymous Subscriber]gears

We have been getting annoying cold robo-calls, monthly for about a year now, from one Tim Smith. It seems as though Mr. Smith is a financial services matchmaker from Plaid Management, who brokers deals between clients and those in the financial services [sales] industry desperate for them. His firm may also do this with patients and medical professionals too; but, at what cost?

Our Internet Search

So, as a financial advisory firm, we did a web search for his company in Houston. Of course, you can too. According to the site, Smith founded The Plaid Group as a resource to help companies improve financial performance by simplifying and stabilizing their business operations. So, he is not working for the client prospect or patient-consumer; at all. But, he does seem to have a marketing history that includes a Fortune 500 Diversified Financial Services Corporation; and in a gamut of industries that include CPAs, IT, law, training, employee assessment folks, and marketing firms. Yet we know nothing else about him, good or bad, sans his cheesy and automated cold-call techniques.

Why Plaid?

Plaid is a fabric with a consistent, repeatable, and predictable pattern. Like Tim, we’ve taken that idea and applied it to his constant gear-like marketing activities.

Assessment

In other words, we have placed his firm on our Do Not Call list; with email message block. If inclined, you can too; or not! The decision is your own; but caveat emptor. Here is the contact info:

The Plaid Group
PO Box 25247
Houston, TX 77265-5247
713-627-3569 info@plaidgroup.com

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Discount Dentistry Brokers

Join Our Mailing List

More … on Sleazy Defenseless Companies

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDS

I just came across a deceptive advertisement for a discount dentistry broker.

Yea, I know! What’s new? 

Why do we as healthcare providers silently allow naïve consumers to be so brazenly misled by sleazy businesses like Universal Benefit Plans and Universal Dental Plan, when we know they cheat their clients out of healthcare dollars?

Massachusetts Non-Profits

In a press release that announces their joint outreach initiative to aid Massachusetts nonprofits, it says Universal Dental Plan provides “… guaranteed rate discounts of 20-50% on all procedures.”

http://news.prnewswire.com/DisplayReleaseContent.aspx?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/01-06-2009/0004949991&EDATE=

Off the Top 

Just think – 20-50% off what – a super-inflated “retail” price? Dentists’ overhead easily tops 60%. If a dentist is losing 10% of his or her retirement just to do an intricate procedure for a gullible and trusting consumer who has no idea what is happening, how well do you think that work of art will chew? 

A Madoff Investment

Universal Dental Plan sounds almost as good as a Bernard L Madoff Investment, except that Ponzi tycoon Madoff accidentally promised quality before the wheels fell off. Universal Benefit Plans and Universal Dental Plan are sleazy companies who will never attempt to defend themselves on the Internet. They know better.

Assessment

This has been fun. Let’s do it again. And, if sleazy attorneys don’t like what I have to say about these two sleazy clients, come and get me.  But you better bring a ladder and a sack lunch. I’m not worried. I’ve said the same thing about Delta Dental, and they haven’t the guts to face me either [“Such a ‘Sleazy’ Company” on this Medical Executive-Post].

https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2008/09/19/%E2%80%9Csuch-a-sleazy-company%E2%80%9D/

Note: Dr. Pruitt blogs at PenWell and other dental sites, where this post first appeared.

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

Market Driven Healthcare

Keep Practicing Medicine

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

By Hope Rachel Hetico; RN, MHA, CMP™biz-book2

In the second edition our book, the Business of Medical Practice, we cite Regina E. Herzlinger, PhD, the Nancy R. McPherson professor of business administration and chair at Harvard Business School, and mother of a physician-daughter. Regina was a guest lecturer at Piedmont Hospital, here in Atlanta, GA last year, as we were fortunate to heed her advice decades ago.

Herzlinger Speaks

In her musings, Regina opines that there is little wonder that some physicians become depressed and want to give up their careers entirely when pondering the future of medicine, managed care and related compensation issues?

Healthcare Update

In fact, the newest Medicare Trustees Report projects a 4.7% reduction in physician reimbursements in 2009 and 37% in cumulative cuts over the next nine years. It notes that each year for the next decade will feature a roughly 5% cut in doctors’ pay – unless Congress steps in – while the costs to physicians of providing care increase by more than 2%. Trustees also noted that spending on Medicare Part B continues to rise at alarming levels and puts growing strain on beneficiary and government pocketbooks.

In response, the Bush administration repeated its call for nearly $36 billion in Medicare reductions over five years to hospitals and non-physicians, and pushed again for a physician quality reporting program that would lead to reimbursements based on individual performance against predetermined standards. What path the new Obama Administration will pursue is still not known?

Market Driven Healthcare

Nevertheless, Herzlinger implores in her book, Market Driven Healthcare, “don’t give up practice, yet.” Pragmatically, the future is bright and offers great opportunity to early adaptors who have the foresight to change medicine for the better and be handsomely compensated, too! But, physicians’ inability to deal with competitive market forces is well known and many are loath to deal with them.

Assessmentcmp-logo4

And so, one way is to seek a strategic competitive advantage is with additional education through a traditional Master’s Degree in Business Administration (MBA); or a new-wave online distance-education resource like the Certified Medical Planner program in health economics and medical management for financial advisors and healthcare consultants (CMP™). Tuition, textbooks and fees may be tax deductible. In this way, doctors may maintain their place as salary and compensation leaders in the U.S. labor force www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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US Communications Decency Act

Our Disclaimer

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA

Editor-in-Chiefdr-david-marcinko5

Section 230 of the US Communications Decency Act:

“No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”

Thank you.

Medical Executive-Post

www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Our Ranking System Explained

Think “Digg” for Medical Stakeholders

Staff Writers

55842730

More than a few folks have asked about our Medical Executive-Post ranking system? So, a few words of explanation are in order. 

 

A Simple Concept

Ranking is a simple concept. Folks like you [financial advisors; HIT experts; medical professionals, accountants and practice managers; CEOs, CFOs and COOs; health law attorneys; medical clinic managers and health administrators, doctors and nurses, etc] submit articles to us which are then posted. We try to post 1-4 unique stories almost every day. Comments on the articles are accepted too, and often serve to “start the conversation.”

Rising to the Top

Then, subscribers and visitors read the posts and comments, and thereby vote them up or down depending on popularity. We make no distinction among subscribers, casual viewers or regular readers. The best stuff simply rises to the top of the rankings system.

Health Administration Niche Based

In other words, we’re much like a niche electronic newspaper, but for the healthcare administration space. Basically, all healthcare stakeholders [even patients and laymen] are invited; but we are not clinical in nature.

Eschewing Ads

Currently, we have eschewed paid advertising, as all editors, staff writers and contributors work for free. We are “unbiased and un-bought.” And, will remain so to the extent possible.  

Assessment

Well, we all do work for “exposure” and to promote our own books, white papers, dictionaries: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com, innovative ideas, online education courses: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com, speeches, consulting engagements: www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com; and especially our 1,200 pages, 2-volume, quarterly premium-institutional subscription print journal: www.HealthcareFinancials.comho-journal

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post ranking system are appreciated. While we are not perfect; we do strive to be transparent and understandable thought-leaders in our space.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

Our Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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iMBA Inc, Secret Shopper Service

For Healthcare Consulting Practices56400711

Staff Writers

Are you worried about what your insurance agents, accountants, RIA Reps, attorneys, benefits managers, RRs, 401[k] or 403[b] administrators, or stock-brokers are telling potential lay and physician clients? [sins of commission]. Or; worse-yet – not telling them? [sins of omission].

If so, why not use our Secret Professional Client-Shopper Services so you can breathe easier?

Our staff is available to attend seminars and to pose as potential clients and customers. Services range from walk-ins, to in-depth BD compliance investigations. 

Contact

Just email Ann for more information: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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The 2.0 Healthcare Marketing Culture

Determining your Medical Practice-Niche Focus

By: Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

Courtesy: http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

cropped-dem

[Publisher-in-Chief]

It is believed that small to medium sized independent medical practices will have limited appeal to patients and buyers of medical services in the nascent Healthcare 2.0 future. Here’s why?

Healthcare 2.0 Defined

According to Matthew Holt, and other sources, Healthcare 2.0 may be defined as:

 “a rapidly developing and powerful new business approach in the health care industry that uses the Web to collect, refine and share information. It is transforming how patients, professionals, and organizations interact with each other and the larger health system. The foundation of healthcare 2.0 is information exchange plus technology. It employs user-generated content, social networks and decision support tools to address the problems of inaccessible, fragmentary or unusable health care information. Healthcare 2.0 connects users to new kinds of information, fundamentally changing the consumer experience (e.g., buying insurance or deciding on/managing treatment), clinical decision-making (e.g., risk identification or use of best practices) and business processes (e.g., supply-chain management or business analytics)”.

Marketing and Advertising

Thus, the marketing and advertising of medical services through traditional channels [patient word-of-mouth, physician referrals, newspapers and magazines, insurance handbooks, internet, etc] is diminishing and will be soon gone forever. In its place, as a surviving healthcare 2.0 medical-executive, you must philosophically decide to become either a discount, service or value provider, and then aggressively pursue this cultural strategy in your medical practice, clinic or healthcare organization. And, as we see it, there will be three types of cultures to investigate:

1. The Service Provider

A medical provider committed to a service philosophy must be willing to do whatever it takes to satisfy the patient.  For example, this may mean providing weekend, weeknight, or holiday office hours, instead of a routine 9-5 schedule. House calls, hospital visits, prison calls and nursing home rounds would be included in this operational model.  Children, elderly patients or those with mental, physical or chemically induced challenges are all fertile niches of a core service philosophy. Managed care contracts are eschewed, as concierge practices exemplify this culture.   

2. The Discount Provider

A discount provider is one who has made a conscious effort to practice low cost, but high volume medicine.  For example, discount providers must depend on economics of scale to purchase bulk supplies, since this model is ideal for multi-doctor practices.  Otherwise, several practitioners must establish a network, or synergy, to create a virtual organization to do so. In this manner, malpractice insurance, major equipment and other recurring purchases can be negotiated for the best price.  Another major commitment must be made to computerized office automation devices, eMRs, RHOs, etc. By necessity, such as offices are small, neatly but sparsely furnished, with functional and utilitarian assets.  Most all managed care contracts just be aggressively sought since patient flow and volume is the key to success in this organizational type.

3. The Value-Added Provider

A value-added medical provider is committed to practicing at the highest and riskiest levels of medical and surgical care and has the credentials and personality to do so.  Value differentiation is based on such factors as; healthcare 2.0 fluency, board certification, hospital privileges, subspecialty identification or other unique attributes such as fluency in a second language or acceptance into an ethnocentric locale. This brand identification must be enunciated in your marketing activities, and genre, as you answer the question: What can I offer that no one else can?  

Assessment

One sound marketing approach for the future of Healthcare 2.0 is to rely on a leader in the hospital, medical clinic and healthcare administration publication industry. 

For example, this complimentary Executive-Post forum and our subscription companion 2-volume 24 chapter premium quarterly guide, is relevant to the entire fluctuating healthcare space and can be a valuable navigation tool in these troubling economic times. It will help you survive in the era of Healthcare 2.0

Disclaimer: I am the Editor-in-Chief of: Healthcare Organizations: [Journal of Financial Management Strategies].

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos 

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

***

Product Details

***

Deeper Financial Management Insight

Our Executive-Post Growth

Ann Miller; RN, MHA

Wow! That’s the best word to describe our recent growth! 

Outcomes

The September issue of the Executive-Post was the most successful to-date. Unfortunately, this was – no doubt – in-part to the recent stock market collapse and lack of confidence in the domestic credit and industrial-complex.

Economic Commentary

Read the opinion of Schwab’s Liz Ann Sonders, on the US economy, here:

Link: liz-ann-sonders

And, going forward, we trust our deeper-insight into health economics and financial management will carry the day even more.

Data

Almost 10,000 readers and subscribers visited or signed-in to our complimentary blogs and communications forum. We now reach folks nationally; working in healthcare finance, accounting pharma/biotech, consulting, government, academia, medical management, business and physician recruiting.   

Assessment

Of course, our 2 volume, 1,200 pages, professional quarterly and peer-reviewed premium-print subscription journal-guide is also growing in the hospital and institutional markets. www.HealthcareFinancials.com Many thanks to all supporters; both online and in-print.

Conclusion 

And so, if you want to reach your target audience of healthcare executives, physicians, administrators and medical leaders; with information on your company, product, service, or job opening, just contact Ann: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Plus, don’t forget to book mark us: www.HealthcareFinancials.wordpress.com

Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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