(IND) The new model of healthcare facility management
A growing number of
healthcare organizations are moving to an integrated real estate model in an
effort to better manage costs, respond to regulatory requirements, and support
changes in patient care delivery.
As healthcare organizations seek solutions to the challenges
presented by today’s evolving marketplace, it’s clear that the cost and
performance of their facilities will have a significant impact.
Whether it’s the need to drive cost reduction, respond to
regulatory requirements or support changes in patient care delivery models, the
effectiveness of an organization’s facilities management program plays a
critical role in their ability to provide high-quality, cost-effective patient
care.
As healthcare leaders realize the importance of an effective
real estate platform, many are finding that transformative changes are needed
in order to realize outcomes that cannot be achieved under traditional facility
management models.
Confronted by the limitations of their current real estate
platforms, many organizations are seeking comprehensive solutions to optimize
the performance of their real estate assets.
The traditional
facilities management model:
Historically, facility management services have been
provided on a campus by campus basis or separated into acute care and
outpatient programs. In many cases, these programs have been limited to plant
operations, which are segregated as an individual support service and function
in a silo environment.
Due primarily to organic growth or mergers and acquisitions,
healthcare systems often find themselves managing their facilities in a
bifurcated manner, with individual hospitals operating more or less autonomously.
While many organizations have identified the goal of
standardizing real estate operations across their system, it’s common to find
that these initiatives have been in the planning stage for some time. As a
result, the inability to proactively manage facility costs and performance at
the system level continues to be an obstacle to progress.
Although facility management teams may have a
“best-in-class” process at an individual hospital, a lack of resources or
resistance to change may prevent that process from being consistently
implemented across the system.
Compounding the issue, as each individual campus makes
incremental process improvements, they move further and further away from a
comprehensive real estate solution.
Recognizing that future success will require a systemwide approach to
facilities management, continuing with the status quo model increases the cost
of change in the future and forfeits the savings that can only be achieved
through a centralized real estate platform.
The lack of a comprehensive real estate delivery model also
inhibits an organization’s ability to effectively develop essential programs at
the system level. Services which are
critical for long-term success, such as work order management, energy
management, benchmarking, and standardization, are often pursued on a campus by
campus basis. These initiatives require the dedication of significant time and
resources to collect and reconcile data before creating and implementing the
new program.
With disparate facilities management systems at each campus,
the process must then be repeated across the system. When evaluating the
benefits to be gained through individual campus initiatives, consideration must
be given to the cost of replicating the process as compared to the cost and
time to market to create one process for the entire real estate portfolio.
The lack of a consistent facilities management program also
creates challenges related to business planning at the system level. A common
example may be seen in the capital planning process, as the prioritization of
projects breaks down due to a lack of reliable comparison data and the absence
of analytics based on performance and cost projections.
The process then becomes politically driven, rather than
following a disciplined approach based on projected need and justified by
consistent business case analyses.
A similar result is frequently displayed when organizations
attempt to implement segregated processes related to space allocation. The
practice of assigning space based on availability is common, but it creates higher
occupancy costs and difficulties in forecasting future demand and associated
expenses. This reduces the accuracy of the business cases that drive the
decision making process.
Without a comprehensive approach to facilities management,
the space allocation process becomes reactive and can lead to the unnecessary
construction of new space, when the reality may be that a solution is
achievable within the organization’s existing real estate.
Approach to reducing
costs
The challenges caused by the lack of a systemwide facility
management platform are exacerbated by the traditional approach to reducing
costs, which is to cut staffing levels. In the absence of a comprehensive facility
management program, these staffing cuts are often a reactive response to an
immediate need to reduce costs rather than a component of a long term plan.
While reducing head count generates savings in the short
term, these cuts eventually impact the facility management team’s ability to
effectively manage preventative maintenance programs and sustain operational
efficiency.
When staffing levels approach operational minimums, the
ability to be proactive is diminished and the department becomes tactical and
reactive.
As the ability to focus on preventive maintenance decreases,
the organization’s risk increases and employee satisfaction and performance
decreases. At some point, doing more with less is counterproductive and a new
approach is needed.
In order to achieve significant improvement, the status quo
model must be transformed as part of a centralized delivery model to optimize
the performance of facilities and create financially sustainable real estate
practices. A comprehensive facility management plan will provide alternative
paths to achieving cost reductions, as well as processes to ensure the
continued support of patient care.
The path to a
solution
In order to achieve lasting results, healthcare
organizations should embark on a process to consolidate their existing facility
management services into a systemwide, best-in-class real estate platform.
With the volume of changes impacting the healthcare market,
having best-in-class facility management will be critical to long-term success.
All aspects of facility services should be included as a
baseline delivery model, with adjustments made in policies and processes to
address different facility types.
This system-based approach to planning and analytics
provides a substantial competitive advantage. Given the time involved in
developing and fully implementing real estate plans, organizations that pursue
integrated facility management models will have an advantage over their
competitors who continue operating as they have in the past.
By the time competitors are able to transform their real
estate delivery models, the organizations who were first adopters of integrated
facility management will be on program version 2.0 or 3.0 and will retain their
competitive advantage.
So, what are the steps taken to achieve a best-in-class real
estate delivery model?
STEP ONE – THE REAL
ESTATE ASSESSMENT
The first step is to evaluate the cost and performance of
the current real estate model. This process should not be an exercise in finger
pointing or blame.
The intention is to objectively assess the existing platform
in order to generate baseline data which can then be benchmarked campus to
campus and against the top performers in the industry.
STEP TWO – AN
INTEGRATED FACILITY MANAGEMENT PLATFORM
Once the assessment is complete, it will be possible to
produce a gap analysis to identify opportunities to reduce costs and improve
processes and performance. These opportunities can then be evaluated by
weighing the cost to implement new system based programs against the expected
savings or operational benefits.
Each opportunity should be validated as part of a consistent
decision process, allowing prioritization based on an organization’s overall
business plan and appetite for change.
Although there are sound business reasons to justify the
creation of a best-in-class facility management platform, choosing to pursue a
systemwide approach represents significant change.
As with any fundamental change from what people have grown
comfortable with, there will be resistance.
However, as objective data is developed and stakeholders accept that the
continuation of the status quo model is unsustainable, this resistance will
fade.
When considered objectively, it is difficult to justify the
continuation of an inefficient and expensive real estate model in the face of
revenue reductions, continuing pressure to lower costs and a need to improve
performance.
The purpose of healthcare real estate should be to support
the delivery of high quality, cost effective patient care. Provided that
consensus can be achieved on the purpose of an organization’s facilities, the
change process can be implemented successfully.
STEP THREE – FACILITY
MANAGEMENT AS PART OF AN INTEGRATED REAL ESTATE SERVICES MODEL
Once the facility management program is on its way to
best-in-class status, it should be integrated with all other real estate
services to fully optimize performance.
Ideally, this transformational process will follow
concurrent and coordinated schedules across all real estate services, with the
objective of developing supportive and complimentary processes among all teams.
Conclusion
As the delivery of patient care evolves, the delivery of
real estate services must transform to keep pace. The solution is to transition
to an integrated systemwide real estate model, drawing on examples of
successful platforms and driving improvements based on quantifiable data and
objectives.
A systemwide real estate program, including facility
management, project management, facility activation services, property
management, strategic real estate planning, real estate accounting and
market-based transaction management allows organizations to successfully
implement proactive initiatives such as ambulatory prototyping, site selection,
labor analytics and workplace environment optimization.
As part of an integrated platform, these programs allow
organizations to fundamentally change the way real estate is managed,
dramatically reducing year over year expenses and enabling the accurate
prediction of future space requirements and the reliable forecasting of
associated long term financial obligations.
When truly integrated, the real estate platform will provide
cost-effective management of assets and contribute significant value to many
internal departments, including strategy and business development, clinic
systems, finance, compliance, and procurement.
The benefits of an integrated real estate platform cannot be
achieved without completing a comprehensive transformation of the traditional
model.
In order to achieve that goal, healthcare organizations
should pursue the transformation of their real estate platform by taking the
first steps towards a best-in-class facility management program.
Successful healthcare organizations of the future will have
integrated real estate services, with facilities that operate at peak
efficiency and are proactively managed to respond to and support changes in the
delivery of patient care.
Source: BDCNetwork.com
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