Building Capacity Amongst Specialist Disciplines
Building Capacity Amongst Specialist Disciplines: Swans & Legs
FUTURE HEALTHCARE WORKFORCES CONFERENCE, RYDGES
HOTEL, AUCKLAND, 19 JUNE 2013
Ian
Powell
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Association of Salaried
Medical Specialists
In preparing for this presentation I wondered how I might best describe the workplace environment of public hospital specialists. Features of this 24/7 environment include intensity, complexity, highly skilled, passionate and labour intensive. I could not find a suitable comparison but did come across a very busy PowerPoint slide on stability in Afghanistan that at least was comparable in respect of complexity and inter-connectivity.
Its features included coalition capacity, government capacity, coalition domestic support, tribal governance, population conditions and beliefs, popular support, support to insurgent factions, infrastructure, and narcotics. They highlight a high complexity system although not all of these features apply to our health system thank goodness.
Swans also have something to offer in painting the picture of workforce reality but I’ll leave that to the end. Another feature of our health system is the ability of participants to talk past each other and, either inadvertently or deliberately, misinterpret or misunderstand messages. I am reminded of detective work undertaken a decade ago by a professor investigating the psychology of humour who concluded that the world’s funniest gag came from Spike Milligan of Goon Show and other fame. It went like this:
Two hunters are out in the woods in New Jersey when one of them collapses. He doesn’t seem to be breathing and his eyes are glazed. The other guy whips out his phone and calls emergency services. He gasps: “My friend is dead! What can I do?”
The operator says: “Calm down, I can help. First make sure he is dead.” There is a silence, then a shot is heard.
Back on the phone, the guy says: “Okay, now what?”
Entrenched shortages have become the norm
If I was asked to describe the current state of the specialist workforce in district health boards as briefly as possible it would be as follows:
Entrenched shortages have become the norm. This is not part of our history, however. New Zealand has always been vulnerable as a small geographically isolated country at the bottom of the world with a well-trained and professionally motivated specialist workforce highly employable in an internationally competitive medical labour market.
For a long time we were able to compete including a healthy pattern of New Zealand trained specialists going overseas for further experience before returning back home to continue their careers. But things took a significant turn for the worse around 2006 in response to a tragedy in the rural Queensland city of Bundaberg which involved sub-standard care including avoidable patient deaths. The subsequent enquiries revealed the extent of specialist shortages with one of the outcomes being massive increases in salaries in order to address the safety risk of this workforce crisis. To one degree or another this then extended to other states.
The failure to
respond to this in New Zealand has seen our vulnerability
escalate and entrenched specialist shortages have become the
norm. But specialists are the glue that holds so much of
public hospital services together. Earlier this year we
produced a major publication, The Public Hospital Specialist
Workforce; entrenched shortages or workforce investment?
( • More
specialists are entering the workforce but well short of the
numbers needed – and agreed with DHBs – to enable safe
and sustainable services. Each year, with every shortfall,
the workforce deficit grows. The effect, we concluded, of
entrenched shortages was that the invaluable leadership that
hospital specialists could provide in order to reduce
significant financial wastage and improve cost effectiveness
in our public health system is being obstructed. The
response of government (and obedient DHB leaders) was to
link our publication to our collective agreement
negotiations that had commenced. The fact of the matter is
that if we were to comment on weather patterns the Health
Minister and his obedient servants would link it to our
negotiations. This may be challenged now, however,
because, subject to a membership ratification ballot
currently underway, that negotiation is now settled. But
the tactic of trying to avoid the message by somehow trying
to discredit the messenger will most likely continue. We
also need to distinguish between vacancies and shortages.
DHBs will cite the former in response to concerns about the
latter but they are fundamentally different. Vacancies are
positions that DHBs have budgeted for and are seeking to
recruit to. Shortages are the positions that are needed if
senior doctors are not to be overworked and overstretched.
In the past we have looked at this in selected DHBs with the
assessment being that shortages can often be at least double
the official vacancy rate. What about the trends? I
agree with what is often said of political polls that it is
the trend rather than a particular poll that matters. The
description I have provided is bad but trends can offset it
particularly if they show a pathway to improvement.
Regrettably the trends are not good suggesting further
deterioration in the entrenchment of shortages. In
particular: • Newly qualified New Zealand specialists
leaving at increased rate. 1. Newly qualified New Zealand
specialists leaving at increased rate The retention trends fluctuate more in
subsequent post-vocational registration years but the
general direction is towards an increasing loss of doctors.
For example: six years post-registration, 11.5% of those who
registered in 2005 were not practising here compared with 5%
of those who registered in 2000. 2. Deteriorating retention of
recently registered overseas trained specialists Retention
of immigrant doctors (international medical graduates -
IMGs) who have registered as specialists in New Zealand over
the past decade has deteriorated markedly, according to
Medical Council registration data. By 10 years
post-registration, approximately one third of IMGs are no
long practising here. Around two-thirds of new vocational
registrants are hospital specialists. These trends are
particularly concerning because 42% of New Zealand’s
specialist workforce are IMGs (this is by far the highest
rate in the OECD). The high turnover has created a high
level of instability. It results in an increasing share of
specialist posts being filled by locums on costly short-term
contracts (many of whom are themselves IMGs). Not only is
this wasteful but it reduces the capacity to bring
cohesiveness to health services, which can have serious
implications for the efficiency and effectiveness of
hospital care. 3. Demographic changes The ageing of the specialist workforce
is evidenced by the fact that the largest group of doctors
has shifted from the 40-44 age group in 2001 to the 50-54
age group in 2010. In each year there is a sharp drop-off in
numbers in the age groups above the peak age group. On
recent trends approximately 19% of the workforce is likely
to be lost over the next five years from the effects of the
drop-off of specialists from the age 55. In addition,
older specialists who remain in practice tend to reduce
their work hours. In 2010, 17.6% of specialists were aged
60-plus and 37% of them worked less than 40 hours per week,
including 22% of those aged 60-64 and 46% of those aged
65-69. Over the next five years, despite the losses from
early retirement, the proportion of specialists aged 60-plus
is likely to increase to more than 20% of the
workforce. The increasing number of women in the workforce
is another key factor. In 2011 27% of the specialist
workforce were female – up from 19% in 2000 and 13% in
1990. Gender statistics for practising registrars indicate
the trend is continuing: In 2011 52% of registrars were
female. Because females tend to work fewer hours than males
(often due to family circumstances), the working life
contribution for female medical practitioners, when measured
in total time worked, is estimated at about 80% of that of a
male medical practitioner. This must be taken into account
in projected workforce requirements. Furthermore, there is
evidence suggesting growing interest in work-life balance
for both male and female doctors. Reports from New Zealand
and Australia indicate that work-life balance aspirations
are becoming increasingly important for new generations of
doctors, regardless of gender, and that this affects
recruitment and retention. This is more generational than
gender although the blokes may be slower in appreciating the
importance of better balance in the relationship between
work and the rest of life than their female
colleagues. 4. Burnout and early retirement While
Medical Council data indicates more medical specialists are
working part-time, many continue to work long hours, which
is contributing to significant staff burnout. A survey of
New Zealand hospital doctors published in 2004 found nearly
30% of respondents suffered psychological distress, with 10%
classified as severe. The most frequent stressful
situations reported were associated with work demands,
commonly found in other studies. A study involving 267
consultants at Canterbury DHB in 2006/07 found one in five
had symptoms of high burnout, with long work hours and low
job satisfaction being key contributory factors. A quarter
of the respondents reported working longer than 60 hours per
week. International studies show burnout has major
repercussions for patients and employers, including poorer
patient care and higher staff turnover. A survey of senior
doctors working in Britain’s National Health Service found
less than a quarter of the respondents definitely intended
to work in the NHS to normal retirement age; a reduction in
workload or shorter working hours were reported as the
greatest inducement to stay until normal retirement
age. How can DHBs and Government capitalise on and
strengthen the capacity of specialists to meet increasing
demands I hope I have sufficiently outlined the serious
situation we are confronted with. But at the same time I
need to emphasise that our health system is not broke,
performs well, punches above its weight (including by
international standards), and is highly innovative. But it
is a system that depends in large part on a specialist
workforce subject to entrenched shortages and with worsening
trends. This is not a sustainable basis for DHBs and
government to capitalise on and strengthen the capacity of
specialists to meet increasing demands. These demands come
from a mix of government requirements, public expectations
and demographic shifts (impact of the growing and aging
population). In response the government has done a massive
flip-flop. From a position of acknowledging that the
brittle state of the specialist workforce in public
hospitals was a crisis and the government’s number one
problem, they have evolved to a position denying its
existence (this denial coincided with the last electoral
cycle). This is done through embellishing hospital doctor
numbers by misusing workforce data. We call them spread
sheet doctors. The problem with spread sheet doctors is
that they can’t operate, can’t diagnose, can’t do
outpatient clinics, and have no bedside manner. The New
Zealand health system is not going through the same
austerity pressure of some European countries such as
Greece, Spain or Britain. By comparison it could be called
austerity-lite. However, the rate of increased funding has
steadily decreased and is falling well below the cost of
providing and funding services; in other words, a
‘declining uplift’. Unfortunately compounding this
difficulty, the global recession brought out the worst
rather than the best of our health leaders. It encouraged a
shorter-term approach to decision-making based on what we
call managerialism – that is, decision-making is
management led with health professionals pigeon-holed into a
reactive role. This is intensifying the pressures on the
already entrenched shortages of specialists and has led to
our public hospitals creaking under the
pressure. Distributive clinical leadership The way
forward in my view is distributive clinical leadership which
we have been advocating for some years. It is more than
simply having formal positions of clinical leadership.
Instead it is about all hospital specialists having the time
to be involved and empowered in professional and
organisational leadership activities beyond their immediate
clinical practice and their employer providing the
supportive culture to enable this. This would become part
of their duties and responsibilities for their DHB along
with their clinical commitments. International research
shows the potential gains are immense – clinical, quality,
organisational and cost effectiveness. Managers will support health
professionals to provide leadership in service design,
configuration and best practice service delivery. In 2009
this was extended further down the path of ‘distributive
clinical leadership’ with the government’s policy
statement on clinical leadership In Good Hands. What makes
good financial sense Sadly this move towards distributive
clinical leadership is becoming a casualty of the
undermining culture of managerialism that is showing signs
of a major revival. Although managerialism is less
effective, it is an easier path for short-term thinkers to
go down. The ASMS has argued in the past that if you see
things through a quality improvement lens, particularly when
addressing process improvement, using the jargon of the day,
one of the benefits is that the financial savings are
‘dark green’ rather than ‘light green dollars’. We
came to this conclusion with the DHBs when we jointly
developed a document called The Business Case: Securing a
Sustainable Senior Medical and Dental Officer Workforce in
New Zealand (November 2010) which provided an agreed
blueprint for the future direction of a sustainable health
system. While the DHBs nationally (under political
pressure) have walked away from this blueprint, we remain
committed to it. But we are tending to paraphrase the
‘quality improvement lens’ description to more apt plain
language. More so we say that if it makes good clinical
sense it also makes good financial sense. Generalism and Specialism If we could reduce our
reliance on overseas recruitment and retain more of those
wonderful specialists we train we would be better placed to
address another problem in our health system – the
imbalance between generalist specialists and
sub-specialists. A country the size of New Zealand needs a
significant emphasis on the generalist nature of
specialists. But we largely recruit internationally from
larger countries that logically have a greater emphasis on
sub-specialisation. The more we depend on international
recruitment the more the balance between generalism and
sub-specialism gets out-of-hand. Sadly, while we and the
DHBs agreed with this assessment in 2010, the DHBs national
leadership quickly walked away from it the following
year. On the positive side, restoring the role of
generalism was a subject of an important conference in
Sydney earlier this year organised by the Australian, New
Zealand and Canadian royal colleges of surgeons and
physicians. Integrated care Another area where we need
to advance is integrated care between community and hospital
care. The health quality and financial gains that have been
achieved through the clinical pathways developed between
community and hospital care under what is called the
‘Canterbury Initiative’ and through a process sometimes
known as ‘alliance contracting’ have been truly
outstanding. It is not a tool kit that can be taken to
other DHBs. But its principles based on low transaction
collaboration through what makes good clinical sense can be
developed by clinical leadership in other DHBs. The
benefits of this innovative process were evidenced in a
well-attended conference in Christchurch organised by
Canterbury DHB, Pegasus and other organisations on the role
of primary care in the management of high acuity patients in
April. I am heartened to learn that this appears to have
become the basis of the recent agreement between DHBs, PHOs
and the Health Ministry. While it is about culture rather
than structural agreements, nevertheless this is a positive
development. But ‘alliance contracting’, which is
strongly relationship based across the continuum of care, is
highly labour intensive. It requires a level of specialist
workforce capacity that we presently do not have if the full
benefits are to be achieved. Swans and legs Back to the
swans. New Zealand has the potential to be a world leader
in health system performance and innovation. Central to
this is the specialist workforce, who I would like to
compare with swans. Swans are wonderful creatures
characterised by beauty and grace. Specialists are also
wonderful creatures characterised by high motivation, skill
and professionalism. What we don’t always appreciate
about swans is that often hidden from view are legs going
flat-out to keep their image of graceful beauty as they
glide across the water. But at least they can have a rest.
We need to also appreciate that hidden from sight (and
ignored by political and bureaucratic masters) is that our
wonderful specialist workforce is overstretched and
overworked. In 2010 an academic survey of our
members employed largely in public hospitals revealed that
only 20% of respondents said they had sufficient time to be
involved in distributive clinical leadership. But our
public hospitals have a remarkably high level of innovation,
much of which is specialist-led. If what is achieved in an
environment of entrenched shortages is any indication, what
could be achieved with a stable specialist workforce with
80% (or even 100%) having sufficient time, would mean that
our public health system would be far more financially
efficient and cost effective than it is now. This has to
be addressed if DHBs are going to deliver on fiscal
responsibility (including reduction of wastage and
duplication), substantive process improvement, reducing
imbalances in the specialist workforce, and integrated
care. Our health leadership needs to wake up, shape up,
recognise that their intellectual capital resides within
their workforce, and focus on long-term
sustainability.
• Retention of our new
specialists and potential future specialists is getting
worse, especially among overseas-trained doctors.
• On
current trends, in the next five years an estimated 19% of
the specialist workforce could be lost due to a drop-off of
doctors from the age of 55.
• Deteriorating retention of
recently registered overseas trained
specialists.
• Demographic
changes.
• Burn-out.
New Zealand’s
newly qualified specialists are quitting practice in this
country at an increasing rate. The Medical Council’s
latest medical workforce report (for 2011) shows that of the
New Zealand doctors who gained vocational registration in
2010, 13.5% were no longer practising here one year
post-registration, compared to 5.5% in 2000. DHB specialists
account for around two-thirds of new vocational
registrations.
It is often argued that
many doctors who leave New Zealand tend to return
eventually. The data show that over recent years some
specialists (not many) have indeed returned, at least for
the short to medium term. However, by eight to 10 years
post-registration the numbers tend to drift away again and
the eventual loss is greater than in the early
post-registration years.
By three years
post-vocational registration, the latest trends indicated
more than 25% of IMGs are lost to New Zealand compared with
around 15% at the beginning of the 2000s decade. Aside from
a few small fluctuations, similar trends emerge in
subsequent post-registration years.
The ageing of the
specialist workforce, the increasing proportion of female
specialists, and the growing desire for better work-life
balance across all generations will together add significant
pressure on DHBs to improve recruitment and retention over
the coming years.
This has origins
in an agreement we reached with the DHBs in 2008 called Time
for Quality. This agreement contained engagement principles
including the following:
It makes a
much better sound bite. It recognises that the real
intellectual human capital of DHBs rests with its
professional workforce and that medical specialists are at
the core of this. But to get this point you need the
workforce capacity to enable the level of distributive
clinical leadership necessary for it to advance beyond a
sub-optimum standard. Unfortunately in practice this is not
a sufficiently shared view with those in positions of power
and leadership with their heads buried in slow quick
sand.
ends