M&M on a 15 Year History of a Merger of Gundersen Clinic and Lutheran Hospital: Struggles and Successes. Jeff Thompson, MD Chief Executive Officer

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M&M on a 15 Year History of a Merger of Gundersen Clinic and Lutheran Hospital: Struggles and Successes Jeff Thompson, MD Chief Executive Officer

Who We Are Now Integrated Delivery System Approximately 6,300 Total Employees 768 providers employed / 484 medical staff 51 clinic locations 325-bed Tertiary Medical Center Level II Trauma Center 3 Critical Access Hospitals Western Campus of the University of Wisconsin Medical School Gundersen Lutheran Medical Foundation Residency and Medical Education Programs Research Program Variety of affiliate organizations including EMS ambulance service, rural hospitals, nursing homes, hospice, etc. Strong Administrative/Medical partnership Physician Led

GUNDERSEN HEALTH SYSTEM

Our Mission We distinguish ourselves through excellence in patient care, education, research, and through improved health in the communities we serve.

National Recognition System-Wide Recognition Top 100 Hospitals Five Year Performance Improvement Leader Thomson Reuters Healthgrades Distinguished Hospital Award for Clinical Excellence 6 years in a row (2008-2013) Places Gundersen Lutheran in the top 5% of hospitals in the nation Healthgrades America s 100 Best Hospitals 2012 Healthgrades Outstanding Patient Experience Award Places Gundersen Lutheran among the top 5 % of hospitals in the nation National Research Corporation 2012 Path to Excellence Award for Top Performing Organization for Rate a Doctor (Adults) Top 100 Hospital Thomson Reuters Top 100 Integrated Healthcare Network Verispan 2009 Dartmouth/IHI/Brookings Best value of 309 Medicare regions 2009 Commonwealth Fund Top Integrated Systems 2010 Delta Group Ranked # 1 in 3 clinical categories (overall hospital care, overall surgical care, and major cardiac surgery) of 118 academic centers Service-Line Recognition Healthgrades Joint Replacement Excellence Award 2 years in a row placing Gundersen Lutheran in the top 10% nationally Top 50 Cardiac Care Thomson Reuters National Heart Care Specialty Center designation by BCBS Norma J. Vinger Center for Breast Care First Breast Center of Excellence by the National Quality Measures for Breast Centers TM Program. Bariatric Center of Excellence Designation by American Society for Bariatric Surgery

Self Selected Board of Trustees 6 Community Members, 4 Medical Staff, CEO Board Chair Voted from BOG Final Approval Voted from Medical Staff Board of Governors (9 Elected Medical Staff, CEO Board Chair) Recommendation Required to be a MD Recommended by BOG, Approved by BOT CEO 4 Medical Vice Presidents 6 Administrative Vice Presidents Operational Performance

How Leadership Is Selected CEO Must be MD, Board of Governors and Trustees majority vote Medical VPs Selected by CEO Executive VP Selected by CEO Chief Medical Officer Elected by Board of Governors (from BOG) Board of Governors Elected from Medical Staff by all Medical Staff Department Chairs/Section Chiefs Selected by Medical VPs, following advisory vote by staff (95% agreement by Executive Committee)

Medical & Administrative Partnership Patients Staff Mgrs/Supervisors Associate Staff Medical Staff Administrative Director Department Chair Administrative VP Medical VP Senior VP Executive VP CEO

Management System Priorities Superior Ultimate Goal value to Best place to get care patients and community Markers of Success Documented rapid Hitting national levels improvement, markedly excellence recognized as great increased staff engagement Transformational Line of sight goals, Broad transparency, What we use to become Tools Change Management, Lean/PDSA, become great External Partners; IHI, Estes, Non-Healthcare Businesses Must Dos Patient focus, Patient Involvement, How we run the Safest care through standard work, business good Compliance, Fiscal Discipline, Core competencies Mission, Vision, Values The guide for Direction Clarity of Strategic Plan (GL) and of individuals, Compact (All Staff) depts & org.

Our History Lesson 1995 Gundersen Clinic 300 physicians 60/40 specialties 35 locations Lutheran Hospital 300 beds Tertiary center 2 affiliated hospitals Skemp Clinic 90 physicians 40/60 specialties 15 locations St. Francis Hospital 200 beds Secondary center 2 affiliated hospitals

Options All go it alone Find local partner Find external partner Develop single regional health system

1995 1996 Mayo bought Skemp Clinic Convinced St. Francis Hospital to join Mayo also Gundersen and Lutheran focused talks on merger (no buy out)

Our Physicians Concerns Anti-doc attitude of hospital administration We are ok why change? Lack of trust of the community board; ability and prioritization Support for education and clinical research may not be their priority

Hospital Board Concerns Doctors will take all the money Doctors will have too much control Doctors will not continue with the community board mission Hospital will not be centerpiece of care

15 Year Follow-Up Anti-doc attitude of hospital administration? They changed or left We are ok why change? Much better off now Lack of trust of the community board; ability and prioritization? Great trust now Support for education and clinical research? Very strong

15 Year Follow-Up Doctors will take all the money Cash then $50M Now $450M Doctors will have too much control No change, but not an issue Doctors will not continue with the community board mission Bigger community accomplishments Hospital will not be centerpiece of care True, it is not, the patient is

Key Characteristics of Initial Design A full merger of assets A unified governing board was formed consisting of six community members and four physicians from the clinic The clinic CEO was appointed CEO of the newly formed health system A board of governors was formed composed of nine elected physicians Operations were consolidated to reflect an equitable integrated operating management model

First five years were marked by The governing board meeting separately with insufficient integration. Managers of the clinic and hospital frequently confused over roles, responsibilities and accountabilities. Some leaders remained psychologically rooted in the past. Territorialism emerged. Somebody wins and somebody loses vs. we are all here for the patient.

External Stoppers The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 Increasing market competition Local, large businesses needing to dampen health cost inflation rates Health system ownership of a small HMO

The first five-year period was marked by turbulence and volatility. Fortunately, the design of the integration allowed for no easy way out (i.e., no turning back). Costs of reversing the deal were too high. All needed it to work.

Next 10 Year Innovations Physician prominence in our integrated system Physician leadership development plan Non-healthcare businesses as partners Early outpatient electronic record Electronic management dashboard Believing that healthcare competition will migrate to outcomes /cost not volume/prestige GE/LEAN/IHI approach to performance improvement Energy / international / educational partnerships

Developed and integrated Physician Compact into fabric of organization.

Errors Too cheap, short term thinking at time of merger The idea that with the same mission, vision, value, governance, strategic plan we would function integrated Held pay raises to balance benefits of clinic and hospital Separate board meetings led to separate thinking Too slow to remove mediocre performance

Jeff Thompson, MD Chief Executive Officer www.gundluth.org

Gundersen Health System Then, Now and Forward The Value of Sustaining Principles as a Guide for Leaders in Health System Transformations Daniel K. Zismer, Ph.D., Professor and Director, MHA and Executive Studies Program Division of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota Associate Adjunct Professor Division of Medicine MHA Program

Then: (1) Vision: Betting on the Integrated Model to be more sustainable (2) Commitment to the business model. Abandoned the thought of break-up (3) Commitment to the system as the provider (4) Commitment to a customerfocused experience Now and Forward: (1) Model has endured through more than one attempt at reform and negative market cycles. Best Positioned for next cycle (no matter what) (2) This decision permitted the organization to get on with the fulfillment of the vision through a strategy that optimized the integrated model (3) A focus on the value of the brand ; team care and efficient and effective care management over time (4) System recognizes the need to address a multiple-customer strategy; patients, families, community, employers, payers. The need to accommodate to varying economic cycles and contracting methods is baked into the long-term strategy. Organization has formidable competitor. It understands it s strategic value proposition.

Then: Now and Forward: (5) Commitment to transparency (5) Leadership is composed of environmentalists responsible for a delicate eco-system. Frequent, honest, open communications at all levels has become an effective management tool. (6) Consistency of Clinical Care Models and Evidence-based, best practice standardization across an expanding, regional foot print (7) Commitment to Sustainable financial performance (6) Organization is a cogent, cohesive system of care across multiple communities. There is a commitment to one standard of care. Patients can enter clinical service lines through many, geographically distributed system front doors and expect a one best way of care. (7) The vision, mission and values remain constant, markets and market cycles change. The integrated economic and business model permits flexibility, which facilitates sustainability. Model facilitates efficient (and expedient) innovation, and transmogrification as required.

Then: (8) Commitment to ongoing internal incentives alignment Now and Forward: Organization anticipates reimbursements models to be an experimental science for the foreseeable future Organization has a functional sense of the connection between clinical model design, operating economics, financial performance and accounted performance (8) Physicians are not insulated from the realities of the economics of the market. provider compensation designs evolve as required physician leaders manage the provider compensation plans the organizational culture connects market realities with provider mental models of the clinical and business model interdependencies

Then: (9) Commitment to growing own leaders Now and Forward: From the beginning the physician leaders came from within. They are developed deliberately for: governance, clinical program leadership, senior leadership. Physician leaders have job descriptions. Physician leaders are paid. Physician leaders are accountable for results. Physician leaders are paired with nonphysician management partners.

Questions