Ellen Zane / Tufts-NEMC
Ellen Zane - Leading Change at Tufts - NEMC
Healthcare in Massachusetts
The health care environment in Massachusetts at the time Ellen Zane took over Tufts-NEMC was tenuous, at best. Boston was a hub of medical activity and thought to be one of the best in the nation when it came to advances in medicine and caring for patients. Unfortunately, there was more to the issue than just how well the hospitals cared for the patients they saw each day. There was trouble brewing underneath all the perceived joy of being able to save lives and protect patients, and that was something of which many hospital staffers were unaware. The only people who were "in the know" were those who were focused on the bottom line and who were high up in the hospitals and other medical facilities in Boston and throughout the entire state of Massachusetts. The biggest problem was that hospitals were treating patients but losing money. It was happening everywhere, and Tufts-NEMC was no exception to the rule of needing to bring in more money than it was paying out.
Hospitals can easily have financial difficulties (Bond & Bond, 1994; Tulenko, et al., 2009). Often, the problems come about because the hospitals see their costs rising and yet they are not getting the payments they are owed (D'Antonio, 2010). Some of that comes about from people who need treatment but then simply cannot pay for that treatment (D'Antonio, 2010). Other times it comes about because the hospitals do not receive the money they are actually owed from Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance companies (D'Antonio, 2010). People who are not involved with medical institutions do not realize the deep significance of this issue, but those who are trying to keep medical entities financially afloat struggle with the problem every day (Simmons, 2009; Smith, 2002).
The Trouble with Tufts-NEMC
During the 1990s, Tufts-NEMC had serious problems. These included patient stays that were costing the hospital money, higher overall costs, an increased debt load, lack of payments from insurance, over-spending, and other issues. One of the biggest problems it faced was a deregulation of the medical industry by the state. When a state chooses to deregulate medicine, almost anything can happen (Simmons, 2009). In the case of Massachusetts, deregulation meant that there were all kinds of mergers and acquisitions between hospitals both in-state and out of the state. Everyone started to merge with everyone else in order to build large medical corporations and have more capital with which to work. On the surface that seemed like a good plan, but most of the hospitals that merged with others or acquired others were not that much better off than they were before the merger or acquisition took place. Tufts-NEMC resisted for awhile, but eventually decided to merge.
They got involved with a company from Rhode Island called Lifespan. It seemed as though Lifespan had much to offer, and there was serious consideration for the financial aspect of what it could bring to Tufts-NEMC. The one thing that Tufts-NEMC did not seem to consider or address properly is that Lifespan was a completely out-of-state hospital with no ties to the Massachusetts market. In many industries that might not matter, but health care has a "take care of one's own" mentality or credo in many cases. With that in mind, Tufts-NEMC was basically shunned because it was involved with an out-of-state company that may not have the best interests of those who live in Massachusetts at heart. That hurt the hospital significantly, and in a way in which Tufts-NEMC was not expecting. It provided a new level of problems in an area where the hospital thought it would see improvement.
In the merger with Lifespan, Tufts-NEMC discovered that it was facing even more financial difficulty than was previously expected. That, naturally, was not good news for a hospital that had merged mostly because it was failing and needed something to stop it from going under. Instead of building a future with Lifespan, Tufts-NEMC found itself ignored by those it felt it could trust and rely on in the past. Additionally, many of the operations that were previously handled at Tufts-NEMC, such as billing, were moved to a central location in Rhode Island. That might seem as though it would take some of the burden off of Tufts-NEMC, but that was not ultimately the case. Instead, people who had been working...
This left the company a shell of its former self, possibly even without the staff to deal with the problems it faced. Faced with heavy losses, the company was having difficult with its financing. The state attorney general had stepped into the situation to ensure that Tufts-NEMC could meet its bond covenants. It would be reasonable to expect that securing future financing would be either impossible or difficult. The company
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now