Case Studies
Charge Nurse Leadership Development Leads to Significant Annual Savings
The
chief nursing officer (CNO) of this 250-bed, for-profit hospital wanted
to improve the quality of care and physician satisfaction in her
medical-surgical units. She felt that one of the best strategies to
effectively address these issues was to further develop and improve her
charge nurses’ skills and job performance. As a result, she initiated a
16-week Charge Nurse Leadership Development engagement with B. E. Smith
Positioning Physicians for a Prosperous FutureThis not-for-profit acute care hospital was experiencing typical challenges with its physician relations, those practices managed by the hospital and those with independent physicians. In an effort to improve physician relations, the hospital commissioned an operational assessment that revealed hospital leadership was not adequately staffed to support physician practice management.
Materials Management Lays Foundation for Successful Financial FutureMaterials management employees at this not-for-profit, 180-bed community hospital needed to fill a leadership void and have an expert to follow through on several outstanding projects that were hurting the hospital financially.
600-bed not-for-profit hospital in the MidwestIn
today's healthcare environment, it is imperative that hospitals
accurately document case mix index in order to receive appropriate
reimbursements. A Chief Nursing Officer in the Midwest was challenged
by declining reimbursements, so she contacted B. E. Smith. Within
weeks, an Interim Leader with over 20 years of healthcare experience
was on-site to turn this critical situation around.
500-bed urban tertiary hospital in the Northeast: Cutting Costs and Improving Patient Satisfaction
A Vice President of Operations was placed by B. E. Smith to improve patient satisfaction and lose no more than $5 million for the fiscal year for this 500-bed hospital in the Northeast. In the first six months, the Interim Leader created a culture of accountability to increase patient satisfaction and also reduced overall expenses by $3 million creating a sustainable positive bottom line. This was the first positive bottom line since acquisition of the hospital.
197-bed hospital in Ohio: Improving Nursing Leadership
B.E. Smith placed an Interim Chief Nursing Officer to provide leadership and build a strong nursing team, address patient issues and improve regulatory compliance for this 197-bed hospital in Ohio.
238-bed, full-service community hospital in Michigan: Implementing a Strong Financial Structure
An Interim Chief Financial Officer was placed by B. E. Smith in this 238-bed hospital in Michigan to identify a true financial picture, establish a reality-based budget and decrease overall organizational expenses. Also, decisions regarding a future joint venture required leadership and a true financial position of the hospital needed to be established for bondholders.
Nursing Home in Maryland with 69 beds: Nursing Leadership
B.E. Smith placed an Interim Director of Nursing in this Maryland nursing home with 69 licensed beds to identify the need for clearer direction and visibility from leadership along with reasons for director of nursing turnover. Supply and equipment processes needed revision to improve efficiency and decrease cost. Quality-of-care concerns were noted with need for staff education and accountability. Performance improvement, risk management and compliance with regulations required immediate attention.
Beaumont Hospital: Taking the Emergency Department to the Next Level
When Beaumont Hospital’s emergency department director and the administrative director of surgical services resigned within two months of each other, Heidi Shepard, vice president of operations, found herself with departments urgently in need of leadership. “I needed to place interims in both departments fairly rapidly,” Shepard says. “Ideally, I was looking for two talented people who we could learn from and gain knowledge from their past experiences. It was incredibly important for us to get the right people in these roles, and we needed the interims to provide stability while taking the departments to the next level.”
Kettering Medical Center: Fast Response and Flexibility
In the touch-and-go world of healthcare, key management positions cannot remain empty for long. When Gloria Ceballos, MS, RN, CNAA, BC, needed to fill a leadership gap quickly, she turned to B. E. Smith for help. According to Ceballos, the director not only took charge of day-to-day OR management, she rallied staff to make needed process changes. "When she arrived, only 19% of cases began on time," said Ceballos. "Our interim director was able to refine some systems, and now on-time starts are up to 70%."
424-bed Hospital in Texas: Decreased Length of Stay
B. E. Smith placed an Interim Executive Consultant to assist in providing an operational review of the emergency services department's resources and requirements, determine opportunities for workflow changes and assist with establishing an improvement plan from triage to discharge.
428-bed Tertiary Care Hospital in Arizona: Improved Regulatory Compliance
B. E. Smith placed a Human Resources Executive Consultant to serve as an on-site change agent and facilitator for this 428-bed tertiary care facility that is part of the largest healthcare system in Arizona. Results included increased Internet advertising of employment opportunities showcasing the attributes of the organization’s unique work environment, identified actions required to actively recruit healthcare professionals being discharged or retiring from the military, implemented initiatives to centralize and routinely audit HR employee files at the facility, thereby improving compliance with regulatory and accrediting agencies and decreased the operating room technician vacancy rate to zero within eight weeks.
262-bed Hospital in Texas: Increased Reimbursement
B. E. Smith placed an experienced Quality Services/Case Management Executive Consultant for this progressive, health-system hospital that serves communities in a three-state area. Results included significantly increased hospital reimbursements for services which had previously been denied payment, decreased readmission rates for defined patient populations, bridged gaps in continuity of patient care and decreased average length of stays, 24/7 case management coverage in the Emergency Department and implemented non-emergent patient transfer policy which decreased bad-debt expenses.
Hospital in Ohio: Increased Reimbursement
A hospital administrative team called B. E. Smith concerned about a frustrated medical staff that was unhappy with all aspects of the surgery department operations. The physicians were frustrated and began moving their surgeries and patients to local competitors or terminating their practice at this facility. Within three weeks of contacting B. E. Smith, an interim professional with 20 years of surgical leadership experience was placed in the organization.