Andres Barkil-Oteo, MD | Physician (psychiatrist) | November
3, 2016
Physicians are known to be masters of self-sacrifice, and
self-control. They undergo years of training and make substantial emotional and
financial sacrifices until they complete their training. The reward at the end
of the road is a fulfilling job where he or she can treat people who are in
need and enjoy the emotional, personal, and financial fruits of their labor.
But is this the reality? At a time when the job satisfaction
of physicians is at all time low, and burnout at all-time high, alarming
depression rates, and a shocking 400 physicians suicide per year in the United
States. One can’t help but wonder if physicians have finally joined the working
class. The popular belief is that working classes are comprised of
those who are paid minimum wage and who cannot make ends meet, while physicians
are compensated well financially, relative to those in other professions.
However, this income-based classification is misleading. The working class
represents workers who have lost control over their means of production, and
are in turn controlled by members of another class.
With the rapid “industrialization” and “commodification” of
medicine, an increasing number of doctors are deserting private practice for
large heath systems and employment in hospitals. Only one-in-three physicians will remain
independent by the end of 2016, and three in four medical residents will start
their career as employees of a medical group, hospital, or faculty plan.
This trend is not arbitrary; there is a strong movement facilitated
by ACA to consolidate doctor networks, and to turn them into salaried employees
of hospitals and health plans. The aim, is to control service utilization and
make health care delivery more coordinated and efficient.
This change would not necessarily be all negative.
Consolidating doctors will help to deliver more efficient services at a lower
cost. Doing so may provide security and peace of mind to doctors in the current
challenging financial and regulatory environment. However, this change is coming
at a steep price for providers and patients. Physicians need to be cognizant
that they are trading away autonomy, control over decision-making, and at times
their ability to influence the work process. Giving up autonomy and means of
production results in alienation of physicians from each other, alienation from
the work being done, alienation from their patients, and ultimately alienation
from themselves.
To meet the complex nature of service delivery, health
systems have created inflated bureaucracies, with numerous administrators and
middle managers to manage the system of production. This has led to two
parallel sets of workers in a system, often with broken lines of communication.
Over time, a distinctively antagonistic relationship has developed between
physicians and the bureaucracy that controls them. A hierarchical bureaucracy now controls the
daily work of physicians, and management’s
power is based on the concentration of decision-making authority and
information needed in planning and controlling the system. The oppression of
the physician working class is a result of their exclusion from the
decision-making process.
There have been increasing complaints about the
concentration of money and power among the managers of health systems, coupled
with the increasing tendency to fill the ranks of administrators and hospital
CEOs with people lacking clinical background. The official explanation for this
trend is that systems are becoming increasingly complex, and that managing the
business of health care necessitates control by business minded people. This has created a clear split between
administrators vs. doctors and nurses regarding dealing with clinical protocols
and procedures.
In this challenging environment, physicians’ identities are
increasingly being changed and molded to fit the chain of production.
Physicians are described as a collection of FTEs (full-time equivalents). They
are referred to as providers or prescribers, and they are increasingly viewed
as workers whose job it is to deliver health care to costumers or consumers.
The physician-patient relationship is seen as a business transaction between
vendors and purchasers. “It is difficult for physicians to take themselves
seriously as professionals if patients treat them with the same suspicion as
snake oil salesmen.” In this system, the
ability to work becomes commodified and sold in the marketplace in 15-minute
units., and physicians perceive their work as simply executing the checklists
and demands that are coming from their employer. In time, there is a sense that patient
consultations are closer to mundane processes in a long production line, rather
than a fulfilling system for improved health.
Given the nature of this situation, it is no wonder that so
many patient safety and quality improvement initiatives, checklists, and “practice
improvement” campaigns fail. They fail because often these campaigns are
perceived as external demand, as opposed to something physicians freely choose
because they believe in it.” As a result, physicians are increasingly alienated
from their work. Decisions regarding who to take care of, when, where, and what
therapy should be administered at what cost are increasingly determined by the
employer or the insurer – and not the practicing physician. With the quality of
the work delivered increasingly determined by process measures that are imposed
externally, physicians will eventually be less satisfied by and fulfilled by
their work.
In order to deal with the frustration of physicians, the
employer provides two different types of solutions. The first is based in
offering R&R, relaxation workshops,
and personal growth retreats to offset the negative impact of the alienation
caused by the existing unpleasant work environment. The second to ask
physicians to do more training. The CME (continuing medical education) industry
is growing at a fast pace especially after the introduction of the maintenance
of certification (MOC) requirements, which has encountered much resistance from
the medical profession.
All of the forgoing suggests that doctors need to identify
the problems they face in clear terms, and need to embrace their working class
identity. Only then will they be able to identify possible solutions and create
a practical plan of action.
http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2016/11/physicians-finally-joined-working-class.html
Courtesy of Doximity
When a physician decides to become an employee, you are signing on to an exchange of value. The organization provides you will patients, facilities, staff, support and a paycheck in accordance with your compensation formula. You agree to follow the rules of the bureaucracy, usually known as "The way we do things around here". You are doing work for a boss and are certainly a member of the working class.
ReplyDeleteAnd you are not making widgets. You get to practice medicine and play a role as a Lightworker for your patients who are sick, hurting, scared and dying and their family member's crazed attempts to deal with this reality. You get to be a doctor ... especially when you are behind the closed door or pulled curtain and knee to knee with the patient.
In my work with burned out physicians it is clear that a doctor can find the wiggle room and the awareness to find fulfillment in most organizational settings. 70% of my clients are able to recover "in situ" - -without changing jobs. We take small steps to
1) Learn mindfulness skills so you don't wallow in negative emotions and fall victim to your frustrations about "the system" and "the man". Breathe and release and stay present so you can be the "eye of the storm" at work.
2) Make small changes in documentation habits, dealing with text and email and other overload and become much better at leading your team and sharing the load more effectively with them.
3) Work some simple tools to create weekly life balance ... things you did not learn in your training.
With a consistent strategy in these three areas you will be able to thrive as an FTE. And I agree with the other comments, now is the time to build your personal strategy because there are a number of reasons why the stress on the physicians (and everyone else in healthcare) is only going to get worse going forward.
Is this simple - No. Is it possible - absolutely, however the way forward is to do something other than simply complain. You must decide what kind of a practice and what kind of a life you really want and take new actions to create that for yourself. If all you do is vent and then go back to doing the same things ... you are stuck in Einstein's Insanity Trap.
My two cents,
Dike
Dike Drummond MD
www.TheHappyMD.com
http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2016/11/physicians-finally-joined-working-class.html