Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment

Stacie Vilendrer,1 Alexis Amano,1 Steven M Asch,1,2 Cati Brown-Johnson,1 Amy C Lu,3 Paul Maggio4 1Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA; 2VA Center for Innovation to Implementation, Menlo Park, CA, 94025, USA; 3Department of Anesthesia,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vilendrer S, Amano A, Asch SM, Brown-Johnson C, Lu AC, Maggio P
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2022-04-01
Series:Journal of Healthcare Leadership
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/engaging-frontline-physicians-in-value-improvement-a-qualitative-evalu-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-JHL
_version_ 1828948861670916096
author Vilendrer S
Amano A
Asch SM
Brown-Johnson C
Lu AC
Maggio P
author_facet Vilendrer S
Amano A
Asch SM
Brown-Johnson C
Lu AC
Maggio P
author_sort Vilendrer S
collection DOAJ
description Stacie Vilendrer,1 Alexis Amano,1 Steven M Asch,1,2 Cati Brown-Johnson,1 Amy C Lu,3 Paul Maggio4 1Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA; 2VA Center for Innovation to Implementation, Menlo Park, CA, 94025, USA; 3Department of Anesthesia, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA; 4Department of Surgery, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USACorrespondence: Stacie Vilendrer, Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, 1265 Welch Road, Mail Code 5475, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA, Email staciev@Stanford.eduPurpose: Physicians can limit upward trending healthcare costs, yet legal and ethical barriers prevent the use of direct financial incentives to engage physicians in cost-reduction initiatives. Physician-directed reinvestment is an alternative value-sharing arrangement in which a health system reinvests a portion of savings attributed to physician-led cost reduction initiatives back into professional areas of the physicians’ choosing. Formal evaluations of such programs are lacking.Methods: To understand the impact of Stanford Health Care’s physician-directed reinvestment in its first year (2017– 2018) on physician engagement, adherence to program requirements around safety and fund use, and factors facilitating program dissemination, semi-structured qualitative interviews with physician participants, non-participants, and administrative stakeholders were conducted July-November 2019. Interview transcripts were qualitatively analyzed through an implementation science lens. To support contextual analysis of the qualitative data, a directional estimation of the program’s impact on cost from the perspective of the health system was calculated by subtracting annual maintenance cost (derived from interview self-reported time estimates and public salary data) from internal cost accounting of the total savings from first year cohort to obtain annual net benefit, which was then divided by the annual maintenance cost.Results: Physician participation was low compared with the overall physician population (n=14 of approximately 2300 faculty physicians), though 32 qualitative interviews suggested deep engagement across physician participants and adherence to target program requirements. Reinvestment funds activated intrinsic motivators such as autonomy, purpose and inter-professional relations, and extrinsic motivators, such as the direction of resources and external recognition. Ongoing challenges included limited physician awareness of healthcare costs and the need for increased clarity around which projects rise above one’s existing job responsibilities. Administrative data excluding physician time, which was not directly compensated, showed a direct cost savings of $8.9M. This implied an 11-fold return on investment excluding uncompensated physician time.Conclusion: A physician-directed reinvestment program appeared to facilitate latent frontline physician innovation towards value, though additional evaluation is needed to understand its long-term impact.Keywords: physician incentives, professional autonomy, cost savings, motivation, quality improvement, program evaluation, quality indicators, health care, organizational innovation, work engagement
first_indexed 2024-12-14T05:55:51Z
format Article
id doaj.art-e3b42d6c9b51458cbd97e620562c6a60
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1179-3201
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T05:55:51Z
publishDate 2022-04-01
publisher Dove Medical Press
record_format Article
series Journal of Healthcare Leadership
spelling doaj.art-e3b42d6c9b51458cbd97e620562c6a602022-12-21T23:14:35ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Healthcare Leadership1179-32012022-04-01Volume 14314574338Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed ReinvestmentVilendrer SAmano AAsch SMBrown-Johnson CLu ACMaggio PStacie Vilendrer,1 Alexis Amano,1 Steven M Asch,1,2 Cati Brown-Johnson,1 Amy C Lu,3 Paul Maggio4 1Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA; 2VA Center for Innovation to Implementation, Menlo Park, CA, 94025, USA; 3Department of Anesthesia, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA; 4Department of Surgery, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USACorrespondence: Stacie Vilendrer, Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, 1265 Welch Road, Mail Code 5475, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA, Email staciev@Stanford.eduPurpose: Physicians can limit upward trending healthcare costs, yet legal and ethical barriers prevent the use of direct financial incentives to engage physicians in cost-reduction initiatives. Physician-directed reinvestment is an alternative value-sharing arrangement in which a health system reinvests a portion of savings attributed to physician-led cost reduction initiatives back into professional areas of the physicians’ choosing. Formal evaluations of such programs are lacking.Methods: To understand the impact of Stanford Health Care’s physician-directed reinvestment in its first year (2017– 2018) on physician engagement, adherence to program requirements around safety and fund use, and factors facilitating program dissemination, semi-structured qualitative interviews with physician participants, non-participants, and administrative stakeholders were conducted July-November 2019. Interview transcripts were qualitatively analyzed through an implementation science lens. To support contextual analysis of the qualitative data, a directional estimation of the program’s impact on cost from the perspective of the health system was calculated by subtracting annual maintenance cost (derived from interview self-reported time estimates and public salary data) from internal cost accounting of the total savings from first year cohort to obtain annual net benefit, which was then divided by the annual maintenance cost.Results: Physician participation was low compared with the overall physician population (n=14 of approximately 2300 faculty physicians), though 32 qualitative interviews suggested deep engagement across physician participants and adherence to target program requirements. Reinvestment funds activated intrinsic motivators such as autonomy, purpose and inter-professional relations, and extrinsic motivators, such as the direction of resources and external recognition. Ongoing challenges included limited physician awareness of healthcare costs and the need for increased clarity around which projects rise above one’s existing job responsibilities. Administrative data excluding physician time, which was not directly compensated, showed a direct cost savings of $8.9M. This implied an 11-fold return on investment excluding uncompensated physician time.Conclusion: A physician-directed reinvestment program appeared to facilitate latent frontline physician innovation towards value, though additional evaluation is needed to understand its long-term impact.Keywords: physician incentives, professional autonomy, cost savings, motivation, quality improvement, program evaluation, quality indicators, health care, organizational innovation, work engagementhttps://www.dovepress.com/engaging-frontline-physicians-in-value-improvement-a-qualitative-evalu-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-JHLphysician incentivesprofessional autonomycost savingsmotivationquality improvementprogram evaluationquality indicatorshealth careorganizational innovationwork engagement
spellingShingle Vilendrer S
Amano A
Asch SM
Brown-Johnson C
Lu AC
Maggio P
Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment
Journal of Healthcare Leadership
physician incentives
professional autonomy
cost savings
motivation
quality improvement
program evaluation
quality indicators
health care
organizational innovation
work engagement
title Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment
title_full Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment
title_fullStr Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment
title_full_unstemmed Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment
title_short Engaging Frontline Physicians in Value Improvement: A Qualitative Evaluation of Physician-Directed Reinvestment
title_sort engaging frontline physicians in value improvement a qualitative evaluation of physician directed reinvestment
topic physician incentives
professional autonomy
cost savings
motivation
quality improvement
program evaluation
quality indicators
health care
organizational innovation
work engagement
url https://www.dovepress.com/engaging-frontline-physicians-in-value-improvement-a-qualitative-evalu-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-JHL
work_keys_str_mv AT vilendrers engagingfrontlinephysiciansinvalueimprovementaqualitativeevaluationofphysiciandirectedreinvestment
AT amanoa engagingfrontlinephysiciansinvalueimprovementaqualitativeevaluationofphysiciandirectedreinvestment
AT aschsm engagingfrontlinephysiciansinvalueimprovementaqualitativeevaluationofphysiciandirectedreinvestment
AT brownjohnsonc engagingfrontlinephysiciansinvalueimprovementaqualitativeevaluationofphysiciandirectedreinvestment
AT luac engagingfrontlinephysiciansinvalueimprovementaqualitativeevaluationofphysiciandirectedreinvestment
AT maggiop engagingfrontlinephysiciansinvalueimprovementaqualitativeevaluationofphysiciandirectedreinvestment