With the departure of another high-level executive from Louisiana State
University’s hospital and medical division, that indicates the necessary change
in culture is occurring to improve system performance and to have it operate
more efficiently.
While the old hands being replaced, first
Fred Cerise by the Board of Supervisors and then
with his replacement Frank Opelka informing Cerise’s immediate subordinate Roxanne
Townsend that he was replacing her choices to head up some system hospitals
triggering her resignation, unfortunately experience goes with them that might
be useful as the system begins its long-overdue transformation from
state-supported provider to quasi-public status and hopefully beyond. Former
Gov. Kathleen Blanco
indicated as such when she opined about Cerise’s departure that “I think they made a
terrible mistake firing Fred Cerise, a man with so much integrity and so much
knowledge on how to serve people”
No doubt – if you are invested in a government-run health care model
for the indigent, as was Blanco and her allies and former appointees Cerise and
Townsend. But that is a deviant model among the states, with no other state sharing
the charity model foisted upon the state over 75 years ago, and for good reason,
as it has produced
low outcomes at high cost. And for that same reason it’s not the model that
the Gov. Bobby
Jindal Administration wishes to follow.
Decades of experience in the system are useful. Yet with fundamental
system transformation in progress, that experience shaped by the old becomes
less valuable as the old disappears. Indeed, having been immersed in the old
makes one less able to be open to the new. And it becomes more trouble than it’s
worth if those with that experience are not committed to the beneficial
transformation. At some point, insufficient fervor over the new model on the
part of Cerise and Townsend must have overridden whatever helpful contributions
they could have made in their former positions (they remain in the system) or
else they would have been retained.
One example of where the old retards the new is with the transition
of indigent health care from the Earl K. Long facility in Baton Rouge
scheduled to be closed in 2014. While most services have been contracted out
upon closure, final disposition of prisoner care remains unresolved. Also and
of greater impact, the four outpatient clinics governed by the closing facility
under a recent federal government ruling will not be eligible for federal
reimbursement under the proposed governance structure (which was under the
auspices of the charity hospital in Lafayette, University Medical Center).
Funding eligibility occurs when clinics are attached to a qualified hospital,
and LSU wishes to keep the clinics under its umbrella.
Unlike in rural areas or in schools, for this kind of reimbursement the
provider must be public or nonprofit. Thus LSU either must have the clinics
taken over by area nonprofit providers, or a city/parish unit, or have them
operate not at all. Any of these alternatives they are out of the system, which
goes against the cultural grain of it, even as the evolving Bayou Health system
provides a strong incentive for government to take the last option in its
casting off the direct provision strategy entirely (except for medical
education).
1 comment:
How about when your hero promotes old term-limited politicians? Is that needed too for "reform"?
Post a Comment