Friday

CFOs and the Business of Quality

Under the Health Care Reform Act, hospitals will be measured, and paid in part, on the basis of quality indicators. Those organizations that have not heretofore focused on quality will need to do so. Those that have will seek to move to the next level of quality. This is good news for consumers of health care, but equally good for the providers. It's been shown that as efficiencies and protocols are developed, quality rises, as does profitability. So, everybody wins. Need I mention this principle applies to every other industry as well?

What does this have to do with CFOs, you ask? We are critical members of the management team's collaborative efforts to improve quality and to measure improvement over time. We're familiar with key performance indicators and benchmark comparisons focused on such areas as liquidity, productivity and profitability. If we haven't already done so, we need to create similar, relevant statistics and meaningful reporting focused on quality indicators as well. There are a number of published statistics and benchmarks regarding numerous quality indicators, from reinfection rates to slips and falls.

I suggest CFOs be at the forefront of their organization's initiatives to improve quality, by teaming with the operations leaders to identify the strategic quality improvement objectives, develop key metrics to measure progress toward those objectives and create timely, meaningful reporting of progress.

So, for those currently involved, congratulations! For those who are not, what are we waiting for?

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