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The best ways to start

It’s been said that physicians tend to fall into leadership roles. Few physicians set out to become leaders, and then one day they realize that they desire to be a leader and an agent for change.

They may be rotating through the chairmanship of a clinical department or the management of a small practice and decide they like the work. In a large organization, doctors get assigned to committees, or specialists agree to run a new service line for a while, and it changes their lives.

Some physicians have a natural aptitude for managerial work. Often, colleagues tell them they are a good fit, but they may still have some reservations. In any case, it’s good to do a bit of soul-searching before taking the leap.
 

1. Weigh the pluses and minuses of a leadership role

When you stand at the precipice of a totally new career in physician leadership, it’s worthwhile to step back and consider the pluses and minuses of the work.

One plus is that there may be fewer work hours than on the clinical side, but being a physician leader is by no means a 9-to-5 job. In a large organization, a physician on the executive team can be on administrative call – dealing with institutional crises on off-hours – for a length of time. Board and strategic planning retreats tend to occur on weekends, and you may need to attend frequent dinner meetings.

Another plus is that the pay is pretty good. In 2016, physician leaders in large organizations earned an average of $350,000 a year, according to a survey by Cejka Executive Search and the American Association for Physician Leadership (AAPL).1

On the minus side, an executive probably won’t be as beloved as a clinician serving a host of grateful patients. And you will not have the kind of job security that most clinicians have. There may be frequent turnover among health care executives because of change of top leadership, pressure for more profitability, or a host of other reasons.
 

2. Try on different roles

To decide whether you want to make a career of being a physician leader, it’s useful to try out several different jobs. Volunteer for committees or take on a special project if it’s possible to do so in your organization.

You can also volunteer for posts outside the organization, such as joining the board of your local cancer or heart association or helping them out on a committee. You might volunteer for Little League or a school or civic organization. Your choices are wide open. The goal is to get a feel for directing an organization and whether that fits your lifestyle.

Also, talk to current physician leaders. Contact a cross-section of people, including those who are unhappy with their jobs and those who had to struggle with their new roles. This will give you some good perspective into whether the work is right for you, as well as tips on how to cope.
 

 

 

3. Find a mentor

This is also a good time to find a mentor for your new calling. Choose a seasoned physician leader who can help you over the long haul – someone who can get you up to speed and then advise you during crucial junctures in your career.

Good mentors should be willing to spend the time with you, have your best interests in mind, and be willing to provide honest assessments. They can also help you find opportunities for further learning and professional growth.

Some organizations assign mentors to physicians they want to develop for leadership roles. You can also choose specific mentors to help you in areas where you think you need more work, such as finance, quality improvement, or information systems.
 

Choose a path

There are many different paths you can take as a physician leader. In large organizations in particular, there are more leadership jobs open to physicians than ever before.

Jobs open to physicians can be found in the areas of clinical quality and safety, population health, managed care, and information technology. You can even look beyond these traditional roles to jobs that don’t usually attract physicians, such as in strategy, innovation, patient experience, and fundraising. In these roles, you are often expected to continue doing some clinical work.

Physician leaders now tend to have more influence than in the past. According to the Cejka-AAPL survey, 61% of physician executives said they had more strategic input currently than in the previous year.
 

A roster of potential physician leader jobs

1. Executive-level roles

Vice president for medical affairs. This is the traditional role for the physician executive, which involves acting as a liaison with the organization’s physicians. These officers oversee quality of care as well as hiring, training, and performance evaluation of physicians on staff.

Chief medical officer (CMO). This is now the typical term for the highest medical role in the organization. The CMO is part of the C-suite team and participates in governance, strategic planning, and business operation decisions. CMOs may be responsible for supporting value-based strategies and making sure that those strategies are efficient and medically necessary.

Physician-in-chief. This is a new term for the hospital’s top physician, who works with the senior leadership team to maintain standards of care and customer service. The physician-in-chief may also oversee operational efficiency and support organizational transformation.

Chief clinical officer (CCO). CCOs oversee patient engagement and clinical quality outcomes. They may lead initiatives to reduce waste and improve care quality, and they can be involved in implementation of electronic health records (EHRs) and data integration. They may also assist in medical staff development, clinical integration, and physician partnerships.
 

2. Quality, safety, and research roles

Chief patient safety officer (CPSO). CPSOs oversee the hospital or health system’s patient safety initiatives. Their goal is to reduce medical errors and near-misses.

Chief quality officer (CQO). CQOs are responsible for collecting quality data and supporting patient safety efforts. They advise on quality initiatives and hold clinicians accountable for meeting specific quality indicators. They may also be involved in developing a culture of continuous improvement in the organization.

Chief research officer (CRO). CROs oversee the organization’s research activities, including clinical trials, internal investigator-initiated research programs, and sponsored studies.
 

 

 

3. Technology

Chief medical information officer (CMIO). The CMIO is the information technology (IT) department’s liaison with the clinical staff, working on selection and improvement of EHR systems. The CMIO finds new ways for EHRs to improve healthcare delivery in the organization.

Chief health information officer (CHIO). CHIOs deal with EHR implementation and health informatics. They may report to the chief information officer, the chief operations officer, or another C-suite executive, and they manage health informatics, telehealth, business and clinical intelligence, and predictive analytics initiatives.

Chief technology officer (CTO). CTOs oversee the organization’s technology capabilities. They are responsible for leading the IT team and contributing to the organization’s strategic plan.
 

4. Jobs not usually for physicians

There are other leadership positions that may not traditionally appeal to physicians but could be worth considering:

Chief experience officer (CXO). This involves evaluating and improving the inpatient experience. CXOs work with physicians and staff on their performance in this area.

Chief innovation officer (CIO). CIOs keep up with industry trends, market disruptions, and new opportunities, and support policy innovations and training initiatives.

Chief transformation officer (CTO). CTOs are responsible for carrying out major changes in the organization. They are supposed to act as role models for change.
 

5. Salaries for selected physician executives

In addition to placing the average salary for a physician leader at $350,000, the 2016 Cejka-AAPL survey pinpointed average salaries for specific types of physician leaders. Chief medical officers earned $388,000, chief patient safety officers and chief quality officers $375,000, and chief medical information officers $372,500, the survey found.

Several emerging physician leader roles – physician-in-chief, chief strategy officer, chief transformation officer, chief innovation officer, and chief integration officer – earned on average $499,000 a year, according to the survey.

Those jobs provided even higher salaries than the $437,500 reported by Cejka-AAPL for physician CEOs. In comparison, a CEO at a medical group with fewer than 200 physicians had an average salary of $438,500 in 2018, according to SullivanCotter, a health care workforce strategy company.2

Some types of physician leaders have seen unusually high pay raises recently. From 2013 to 2016, the average salary for CMIOs rose 18%, and physician leaders working at the corporate level in a health system saw median compensation rise 67%, the Cejka-AAPL survey found.
 

Moving ahead

For physician leaders, moving up the ladder often means reinventing yourself. If you’re leaving clinical practice, be sure to develop a solid CV for your new role so that if your leadership position doesn’t work out, you are able to find an appropriate new position.

According to a 2003 assessment, CMOs typically lasted 18-24 months on the job.3

Expect to make mistakes and try to learn from them. If necessary, move on to the next job. There is always a market for seasoned physician executives who took a few punches, learned something from the experience, and found something new.
 

Start to network

One way to navigate the challenges of a new role is to have a strong network, a group of colleagues and mentors who can help you figure out your path forward. They can serve as sounding boards and contacts for new jobs in an industry that is constantly changing.

A well-functioning network takes constant maintenance.

You can find people for your network by attending a variety of different meetings that physician leaders and other healthcare executives attend. Make a point of keeping their contact information on file and periodically reaching out to them.
 

Learn in a dyad

Some healthcare organizations assign physician leaders to dyads, where they are matched with nonphysicians who have skills that the physician lacks, such as finance, data management, or organizational politics.

Dyads are less effective when the nonphysician has all the authority and the physician is basically a figurehead. But in an effective dyad, both partners share authority and they can teach skills to each other. While the physician in the dyad brings clinical insight, the nonphysician can provide managerial know-how.
 

Seek out coaching

There may be points in your leadership career when you become aware of areas where you need improvement. You may have gotten negative feedback on communication skills or political sensitivity. Consider hiring an executive coach; coaches provide concentrated sessions over limited periods of time.

Coaches can also help you prepare for the future. They can help you find ways to promote yourself for new projects or create a network of allies. They also can help you establish yourself as a thought leader in a particular field through writing and speaking engagements.

Some organizations provide in-house coaches. It is worthwhile to take advantage of this benefit. If you need to find a coach on your own, ask mentors or people in your network for recommendations.
 

Getting to the top

It can take years to rise to the level of the corporate C-suite or even to CEO of a large organization. At the top levels of management, you often have to cut back substantially on clinical work or even give it up entirely.

Becoming CEO of a hospital can be a logical fit for physicians. A physician CEO can relate to doctors on staff, who are a key constituency, and understands what clinical care is all about. However, physician CEOs also need to have a large degree of knowledge about finance, strategy, crisis management, quality improvement, and other nonclinical considerations, not to mention good people skills.
 

Physicians on boards

Some physicians would rather sit on the board of trustees than take the reins of CEO. Board membership allows you to continue practicing while still having a great deal of influence over the organization. Some physicians hold board seats for many years and enjoy a great deal of respect as the go-to person on clinical care.

Physicians are increasingly serving on the boards of hospitals and health systems. Trustees welcome physicians because they want more input from clinicians in decision-making. They tend to choose physicians who already have executive duties, such as having been a department head.
 

Which new skills should you learn?

Physician executives often put off learning business and management skills until after being appointed to a leadership position. Even then, they may prefer to take courses focused on a particular topic rather than earn a degree such as master of business administration (MBA).

Learning on the job

A number of executive skills can be learned on the job, such as dealing with quality measures, utilization, billing and coding, disease management, committees, and interpreting data. If you are not in a dyad model, you can ask someone knowledgeable in one of these skills to take you through the steps.

Many physicians could benefit from finance and business courses in order to learn some of the budgetary, accounting, and operational skills required to perform the job optimally.

In a survey of healthcare CEOs, only 30% said their most senior physician leader had a business or medical management degree, and only 21% required a degree.4

Taking classes

Physician executives who want to brush up on a particular topic can “mix and match,” taking short, focused classes on the particular topic whenever they feel the need. In addition to resources offered by SHM, courses are available from organizations such as the AAPL, American Hospital Association, the Medical Group Management Association, or the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, to name a few examples.

Pursuing degree programs

Degree programs like MBA, master of public health (MPH), and master of health care administration (MHA) are popular with many physician executives because they get a full overview of needed skills and the potential to earn more money with their new credentials. Physician leaders with an MBA earned 13% more in 2016 than did those with no MBA, according to the Cejka-AAPL survey.

Getting a master’s degree, however, takes time and money. For example, an MBA can cost $20,000 to as much as $100,000.5 MBA, MHA, and MPH degrees take 2 years to complete, while a master of medical management (MMM) and a physician-executive MBA – focusing specifically on what physician leaders need to learn – take 1 year.

Many part-time degree programs are available for those with full-time jobs. You can find them at nearby universities as well as far-off institutions. Much of the coursework is done online, but some on-site work is usually required. You’ll find that working directly with others enriches the learning experience and helps you build your network of colleagues.
 

Straight MBA or other degree?

In general, degree programs cover finance, communication, strategy, information systems, marketing, organizational behavior, operational management, and quality improvement. Straight MBA programs don’t focus on healthcare, but some physician executives still prefer this route, especially if it involves degrees from prestigious business schools.

MHA, MMM, physician-executive MBA, and other degree programs focused on healthcare are popular with many physicians on the executive track. The MPH is less business-oriented but may be preferable to some because of its focus on population-based health, which fits well with decision-making on health insurance and value-based care.
 

Conclusion

Physicians need to prepare for leadership because these roles are very different from clinical work. It’s easy to stumble and lose direction without mentors, a network of helpful colleagues, and at least some education in business principles.

Finding a mentor should start early in your new career. A seasoned physician executive can help you understand your options and point out your strengths and shortcomings. Beyond that, concentrated work with an executive coach can help you improve your skills and choose from among the many executive roles that are now available.

You can learn many skills on the job through dyads and other relationships with more seasoned colleagues, or take short classes on particular skills that need to be learned or sharpened. Many physician executives go a step further and get a master’s degree, such as an MBA, MHA, or MMM. This involves a year or two of study, but much of it can be done online.
 

This article is excerpted from the Medscape Physician Business Academy course “How to become an effective leader.” You can find more information on the course at www.medscape.com/courses/business/100018.

References

1. Cejka Executive Search. 2016 Physician Leadership Compensation Survey results released. Cejka and the American Association for Physician Leadership. Nov 3, 2016.

2. Knowles M. Salaries on upswing for physician executives. Becker’s Hospital Review. Sept 25, 2018.

3. Birrer RB. Becoming a physician executive. Health Progress: Journal of the Catholic Health Association of the United States. Jan-Feb 2003.

4. Witt/Kieffer. Transformation of physician executives: New accountability for quality, performance, integration. Fall 2010.

5. Jurica J. Does an executive salary stand up to a clinical salary? Vital Physician Executive. 2016.
 

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The best ways to start

It’s been said that physicians tend to fall into leadership roles. Few physicians set out to become leaders, and then one day they realize that they desire to be a leader and an agent for change.

They may be rotating through the chairmanship of a clinical department or the management of a small practice and decide they like the work. In a large organization, doctors get assigned to committees, or specialists agree to run a new service line for a while, and it changes their lives.

Some physicians have a natural aptitude for managerial work. Often, colleagues tell them they are a good fit, but they may still have some reservations. In any case, it’s good to do a bit of soul-searching before taking the leap.
 

1. Weigh the pluses and minuses of a leadership role

When you stand at the precipice of a totally new career in physician leadership, it’s worthwhile to step back and consider the pluses and minuses of the work.

One plus is that there may be fewer work hours than on the clinical side, but being a physician leader is by no means a 9-to-5 job. In a large organization, a physician on the executive team can be on administrative call – dealing with institutional crises on off-hours – for a length of time. Board and strategic planning retreats tend to occur on weekends, and you may need to attend frequent dinner meetings.

Another plus is that the pay is pretty good. In 2016, physician leaders in large organizations earned an average of $350,000 a year, according to a survey by Cejka Executive Search and the American Association for Physician Leadership (AAPL).1

On the minus side, an executive probably won’t be as beloved as a clinician serving a host of grateful patients. And you will not have the kind of job security that most clinicians have. There may be frequent turnover among health care executives because of change of top leadership, pressure for more profitability, or a host of other reasons.
 

2. Try on different roles

To decide whether you want to make a career of being a physician leader, it’s useful to try out several different jobs. Volunteer for committees or take on a special project if it’s possible to do so in your organization.

You can also volunteer for posts outside the organization, such as joining the board of your local cancer or heart association or helping them out on a committee. You might volunteer for Little League or a school or civic organization. Your choices are wide open. The goal is to get a feel for directing an organization and whether that fits your lifestyle.

Also, talk to current physician leaders. Contact a cross-section of people, including those who are unhappy with their jobs and those who had to struggle with their new roles. This will give you some good perspective into whether the work is right for you, as well as tips on how to cope.
 

 

 

3. Find a mentor

This is also a good time to find a mentor for your new calling. Choose a seasoned physician leader who can help you over the long haul – someone who can get you up to speed and then advise you during crucial junctures in your career.

Good mentors should be willing to spend the time with you, have your best interests in mind, and be willing to provide honest assessments. They can also help you find opportunities for further learning and professional growth.

Some organizations assign mentors to physicians they want to develop for leadership roles. You can also choose specific mentors to help you in areas where you think you need more work, such as finance, quality improvement, or information systems.
 

Choose a path

There are many different paths you can take as a physician leader. In large organizations in particular, there are more leadership jobs open to physicians than ever before.

Jobs open to physicians can be found in the areas of clinical quality and safety, population health, managed care, and information technology. You can even look beyond these traditional roles to jobs that don’t usually attract physicians, such as in strategy, innovation, patient experience, and fundraising. In these roles, you are often expected to continue doing some clinical work.

Physician leaders now tend to have more influence than in the past. According to the Cejka-AAPL survey, 61% of physician executives said they had more strategic input currently than in the previous year.
 

A roster of potential physician leader jobs

1. Executive-level roles

Vice president for medical affairs. This is the traditional role for the physician executive, which involves acting as a liaison with the organization’s physicians. These officers oversee quality of care as well as hiring, training, and performance evaluation of physicians on staff.

Chief medical officer (CMO). This is now the typical term for the highest medical role in the organization. The CMO is part of the C-suite team and participates in governance, strategic planning, and business operation decisions. CMOs may be responsible for supporting value-based strategies and making sure that those strategies are efficient and medically necessary.

Physician-in-chief. This is a new term for the hospital’s top physician, who works with the senior leadership team to maintain standards of care and customer service. The physician-in-chief may also oversee operational efficiency and support organizational transformation.

Chief clinical officer (CCO). CCOs oversee patient engagement and clinical quality outcomes. They may lead initiatives to reduce waste and improve care quality, and they can be involved in implementation of electronic health records (EHRs) and data integration. They may also assist in medical staff development, clinical integration, and physician partnerships.
 

2. Quality, safety, and research roles

Chief patient safety officer (CPSO). CPSOs oversee the hospital or health system’s patient safety initiatives. Their goal is to reduce medical errors and near-misses.

Chief quality officer (CQO). CQOs are responsible for collecting quality data and supporting patient safety efforts. They advise on quality initiatives and hold clinicians accountable for meeting specific quality indicators. They may also be involved in developing a culture of continuous improvement in the organization.

Chief research officer (CRO). CROs oversee the organization’s research activities, including clinical trials, internal investigator-initiated research programs, and sponsored studies.
 

 

 

3. Technology

Chief medical information officer (CMIO). The CMIO is the information technology (IT) department’s liaison with the clinical staff, working on selection and improvement of EHR systems. The CMIO finds new ways for EHRs to improve healthcare delivery in the organization.

Chief health information officer (CHIO). CHIOs deal with EHR implementation and health informatics. They may report to the chief information officer, the chief operations officer, or another C-suite executive, and they manage health informatics, telehealth, business and clinical intelligence, and predictive analytics initiatives.

Chief technology officer (CTO). CTOs oversee the organization’s technology capabilities. They are responsible for leading the IT team and contributing to the organization’s strategic plan.
 

4. Jobs not usually for physicians

There are other leadership positions that may not traditionally appeal to physicians but could be worth considering:

Chief experience officer (CXO). This involves evaluating and improving the inpatient experience. CXOs work with physicians and staff on their performance in this area.

Chief innovation officer (CIO). CIOs keep up with industry trends, market disruptions, and new opportunities, and support policy innovations and training initiatives.

Chief transformation officer (CTO). CTOs are responsible for carrying out major changes in the organization. They are supposed to act as role models for change.
 

5. Salaries for selected physician executives

In addition to placing the average salary for a physician leader at $350,000, the 2016 Cejka-AAPL survey pinpointed average salaries for specific types of physician leaders. Chief medical officers earned $388,000, chief patient safety officers and chief quality officers $375,000, and chief medical information officers $372,500, the survey found.

Several emerging physician leader roles – physician-in-chief, chief strategy officer, chief transformation officer, chief innovation officer, and chief integration officer – earned on average $499,000 a year, according to the survey.

Those jobs provided even higher salaries than the $437,500 reported by Cejka-AAPL for physician CEOs. In comparison, a CEO at a medical group with fewer than 200 physicians had an average salary of $438,500 in 2018, according to SullivanCotter, a health care workforce strategy company.2

Some types of physician leaders have seen unusually high pay raises recently. From 2013 to 2016, the average salary for CMIOs rose 18%, and physician leaders working at the corporate level in a health system saw median compensation rise 67%, the Cejka-AAPL survey found.
 

Moving ahead

For physician leaders, moving up the ladder often means reinventing yourself. If you’re leaving clinical practice, be sure to develop a solid CV for your new role so that if your leadership position doesn’t work out, you are able to find an appropriate new position.

According to a 2003 assessment, CMOs typically lasted 18-24 months on the job.3

Expect to make mistakes and try to learn from them. If necessary, move on to the next job. There is always a market for seasoned physician executives who took a few punches, learned something from the experience, and found something new.
 

Start to network

One way to navigate the challenges of a new role is to have a strong network, a group of colleagues and mentors who can help you figure out your path forward. They can serve as sounding boards and contacts for new jobs in an industry that is constantly changing.

A well-functioning network takes constant maintenance.

You can find people for your network by attending a variety of different meetings that physician leaders and other healthcare executives attend. Make a point of keeping their contact information on file and periodically reaching out to them.
 

Learn in a dyad

Some healthcare organizations assign physician leaders to dyads, where they are matched with nonphysicians who have skills that the physician lacks, such as finance, data management, or organizational politics.

Dyads are less effective when the nonphysician has all the authority and the physician is basically a figurehead. But in an effective dyad, both partners share authority and they can teach skills to each other. While the physician in the dyad brings clinical insight, the nonphysician can provide managerial know-how.
 

Seek out coaching

There may be points in your leadership career when you become aware of areas where you need improvement. You may have gotten negative feedback on communication skills or political sensitivity. Consider hiring an executive coach; coaches provide concentrated sessions over limited periods of time.

Coaches can also help you prepare for the future. They can help you find ways to promote yourself for new projects or create a network of allies. They also can help you establish yourself as a thought leader in a particular field through writing and speaking engagements.

Some organizations provide in-house coaches. It is worthwhile to take advantage of this benefit. If you need to find a coach on your own, ask mentors or people in your network for recommendations.
 

Getting to the top

It can take years to rise to the level of the corporate C-suite or even to CEO of a large organization. At the top levels of management, you often have to cut back substantially on clinical work or even give it up entirely.

Becoming CEO of a hospital can be a logical fit for physicians. A physician CEO can relate to doctors on staff, who are a key constituency, and understands what clinical care is all about. However, physician CEOs also need to have a large degree of knowledge about finance, strategy, crisis management, quality improvement, and other nonclinical considerations, not to mention good people skills.
 

Physicians on boards

Some physicians would rather sit on the board of trustees than take the reins of CEO. Board membership allows you to continue practicing while still having a great deal of influence over the organization. Some physicians hold board seats for many years and enjoy a great deal of respect as the go-to person on clinical care.

Physicians are increasingly serving on the boards of hospitals and health systems. Trustees welcome physicians because they want more input from clinicians in decision-making. They tend to choose physicians who already have executive duties, such as having been a department head.
 

Which new skills should you learn?

Physician executives often put off learning business and management skills until after being appointed to a leadership position. Even then, they may prefer to take courses focused on a particular topic rather than earn a degree such as master of business administration (MBA).

Learning on the job

A number of executive skills can be learned on the job, such as dealing with quality measures, utilization, billing and coding, disease management, committees, and interpreting data. If you are not in a dyad model, you can ask someone knowledgeable in one of these skills to take you through the steps.

Many physicians could benefit from finance and business courses in order to learn some of the budgetary, accounting, and operational skills required to perform the job optimally.

In a survey of healthcare CEOs, only 30% said their most senior physician leader had a business or medical management degree, and only 21% required a degree.4

Taking classes

Physician executives who want to brush up on a particular topic can “mix and match,” taking short, focused classes on the particular topic whenever they feel the need. In addition to resources offered by SHM, courses are available from organizations such as the AAPL, American Hospital Association, the Medical Group Management Association, or the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, to name a few examples.

Pursuing degree programs

Degree programs like MBA, master of public health (MPH), and master of health care administration (MHA) are popular with many physician executives because they get a full overview of needed skills and the potential to earn more money with their new credentials. Physician leaders with an MBA earned 13% more in 2016 than did those with no MBA, according to the Cejka-AAPL survey.

Getting a master’s degree, however, takes time and money. For example, an MBA can cost $20,000 to as much as $100,000.5 MBA, MHA, and MPH degrees take 2 years to complete, while a master of medical management (MMM) and a physician-executive MBA – focusing specifically on what physician leaders need to learn – take 1 year.

Many part-time degree programs are available for those with full-time jobs. You can find them at nearby universities as well as far-off institutions. Much of the coursework is done online, but some on-site work is usually required. You’ll find that working directly with others enriches the learning experience and helps you build your network of colleagues.
 

Straight MBA or other degree?

In general, degree programs cover finance, communication, strategy, information systems, marketing, organizational behavior, operational management, and quality improvement. Straight MBA programs don’t focus on healthcare, but some physician executives still prefer this route, especially if it involves degrees from prestigious business schools.

MHA, MMM, physician-executive MBA, and other degree programs focused on healthcare are popular with many physicians on the executive track. The MPH is less business-oriented but may be preferable to some because of its focus on population-based health, which fits well with decision-making on health insurance and value-based care.
 

Conclusion

Physicians need to prepare for leadership because these roles are very different from clinical work. It’s easy to stumble and lose direction without mentors, a network of helpful colleagues, and at least some education in business principles.

Finding a mentor should start early in your new career. A seasoned physician executive can help you understand your options and point out your strengths and shortcomings. Beyond that, concentrated work with an executive coach can help you improve your skills and choose from among the many executive roles that are now available.

You can learn many skills on the job through dyads and other relationships with more seasoned colleagues, or take short classes on particular skills that need to be learned or sharpened. Many physician executives go a step further and get a master’s degree, such as an MBA, MHA, or MMM. This involves a year or two of study, but much of it can be done online.
 

This article is excerpted from the Medscape Physician Business Academy course “How to become an effective leader.” You can find more information on the course at www.medscape.com/courses/business/100018.

References

1. Cejka Executive Search. 2016 Physician Leadership Compensation Survey results released. Cejka and the American Association for Physician Leadership. Nov 3, 2016.

2. Knowles M. Salaries on upswing for physician executives. Becker’s Hospital Review. Sept 25, 2018.

3. Birrer RB. Becoming a physician executive. Health Progress: Journal of the Catholic Health Association of the United States. Jan-Feb 2003.

4. Witt/Kieffer. Transformation of physician executives: New accountability for quality, performance, integration. Fall 2010.

5. Jurica J. Does an executive salary stand up to a clinical salary? Vital Physician Executive. 2016.
 

 

The best ways to start

It’s been said that physicians tend to fall into leadership roles. Few physicians set out to become leaders, and then one day they realize that they desire to be a leader and an agent for change.

They may be rotating through the chairmanship of a clinical department or the management of a small practice and decide they like the work. In a large organization, doctors get assigned to committees, or specialists agree to run a new service line for a while, and it changes their lives.

Some physicians have a natural aptitude for managerial work. Often, colleagues tell them they are a good fit, but they may still have some reservations. In any case, it’s good to do a bit of soul-searching before taking the leap.
 

1. Weigh the pluses and minuses of a leadership role

When you stand at the precipice of a totally new career in physician leadership, it’s worthwhile to step back and consider the pluses and minuses of the work.

One plus is that there may be fewer work hours than on the clinical side, but being a physician leader is by no means a 9-to-5 job. In a large organization, a physician on the executive team can be on administrative call – dealing with institutional crises on off-hours – for a length of time. Board and strategic planning retreats tend to occur on weekends, and you may need to attend frequent dinner meetings.

Another plus is that the pay is pretty good. In 2016, physician leaders in large organizations earned an average of $350,000 a year, according to a survey by Cejka Executive Search and the American Association for Physician Leadership (AAPL).1

On the minus side, an executive probably won’t be as beloved as a clinician serving a host of grateful patients. And you will not have the kind of job security that most clinicians have. There may be frequent turnover among health care executives because of change of top leadership, pressure for more profitability, or a host of other reasons.
 

2. Try on different roles

To decide whether you want to make a career of being a physician leader, it’s useful to try out several different jobs. Volunteer for committees or take on a special project if it’s possible to do so in your organization.

You can also volunteer for posts outside the organization, such as joining the board of your local cancer or heart association or helping them out on a committee. You might volunteer for Little League or a school or civic organization. Your choices are wide open. The goal is to get a feel for directing an organization and whether that fits your lifestyle.

Also, talk to current physician leaders. Contact a cross-section of people, including those who are unhappy with their jobs and those who had to struggle with their new roles. This will give you some good perspective into whether the work is right for you, as well as tips on how to cope.
 

 

 

3. Find a mentor

This is also a good time to find a mentor for your new calling. Choose a seasoned physician leader who can help you over the long haul – someone who can get you up to speed and then advise you during crucial junctures in your career.

Good mentors should be willing to spend the time with you, have your best interests in mind, and be willing to provide honest assessments. They can also help you find opportunities for further learning and professional growth.

Some organizations assign mentors to physicians they want to develop for leadership roles. You can also choose specific mentors to help you in areas where you think you need more work, such as finance, quality improvement, or information systems.
 

Choose a path

There are many different paths you can take as a physician leader. In large organizations in particular, there are more leadership jobs open to physicians than ever before.

Jobs open to physicians can be found in the areas of clinical quality and safety, population health, managed care, and information technology. You can even look beyond these traditional roles to jobs that don’t usually attract physicians, such as in strategy, innovation, patient experience, and fundraising. In these roles, you are often expected to continue doing some clinical work.

Physician leaders now tend to have more influence than in the past. According to the Cejka-AAPL survey, 61% of physician executives said they had more strategic input currently than in the previous year.
 

A roster of potential physician leader jobs

1. Executive-level roles

Vice president for medical affairs. This is the traditional role for the physician executive, which involves acting as a liaison with the organization’s physicians. These officers oversee quality of care as well as hiring, training, and performance evaluation of physicians on staff.

Chief medical officer (CMO). This is now the typical term for the highest medical role in the organization. The CMO is part of the C-suite team and participates in governance, strategic planning, and business operation decisions. CMOs may be responsible for supporting value-based strategies and making sure that those strategies are efficient and medically necessary.

Physician-in-chief. This is a new term for the hospital’s top physician, who works with the senior leadership team to maintain standards of care and customer service. The physician-in-chief may also oversee operational efficiency and support organizational transformation.

Chief clinical officer (CCO). CCOs oversee patient engagement and clinical quality outcomes. They may lead initiatives to reduce waste and improve care quality, and they can be involved in implementation of electronic health records (EHRs) and data integration. They may also assist in medical staff development, clinical integration, and physician partnerships.
 

2. Quality, safety, and research roles

Chief patient safety officer (CPSO). CPSOs oversee the hospital or health system’s patient safety initiatives. Their goal is to reduce medical errors and near-misses.

Chief quality officer (CQO). CQOs are responsible for collecting quality data and supporting patient safety efforts. They advise on quality initiatives and hold clinicians accountable for meeting specific quality indicators. They may also be involved in developing a culture of continuous improvement in the organization.

Chief research officer (CRO). CROs oversee the organization’s research activities, including clinical trials, internal investigator-initiated research programs, and sponsored studies.
 

 

 

3. Technology

Chief medical information officer (CMIO). The CMIO is the information technology (IT) department’s liaison with the clinical staff, working on selection and improvement of EHR systems. The CMIO finds new ways for EHRs to improve healthcare delivery in the organization.

Chief health information officer (CHIO). CHIOs deal with EHR implementation and health informatics. They may report to the chief information officer, the chief operations officer, or another C-suite executive, and they manage health informatics, telehealth, business and clinical intelligence, and predictive analytics initiatives.

Chief technology officer (CTO). CTOs oversee the organization’s technology capabilities. They are responsible for leading the IT team and contributing to the organization’s strategic plan.
 

4. Jobs not usually for physicians

There are other leadership positions that may not traditionally appeal to physicians but could be worth considering:

Chief experience officer (CXO). This involves evaluating and improving the inpatient experience. CXOs work with physicians and staff on their performance in this area.

Chief innovation officer (CIO). CIOs keep up with industry trends, market disruptions, and new opportunities, and support policy innovations and training initiatives.

Chief transformation officer (CTO). CTOs are responsible for carrying out major changes in the organization. They are supposed to act as role models for change.
 

5. Salaries for selected physician executives

In addition to placing the average salary for a physician leader at $350,000, the 2016 Cejka-AAPL survey pinpointed average salaries for specific types of physician leaders. Chief medical officers earned $388,000, chief patient safety officers and chief quality officers $375,000, and chief medical information officers $372,500, the survey found.

Several emerging physician leader roles – physician-in-chief, chief strategy officer, chief transformation officer, chief innovation officer, and chief integration officer – earned on average $499,000 a year, according to the survey.

Those jobs provided even higher salaries than the $437,500 reported by Cejka-AAPL for physician CEOs. In comparison, a CEO at a medical group with fewer than 200 physicians had an average salary of $438,500 in 2018, according to SullivanCotter, a health care workforce strategy company.2

Some types of physician leaders have seen unusually high pay raises recently. From 2013 to 2016, the average salary for CMIOs rose 18%, and physician leaders working at the corporate level in a health system saw median compensation rise 67%, the Cejka-AAPL survey found.
 

Moving ahead

For physician leaders, moving up the ladder often means reinventing yourself. If you’re leaving clinical practice, be sure to develop a solid CV for your new role so that if your leadership position doesn’t work out, you are able to find an appropriate new position.

According to a 2003 assessment, CMOs typically lasted 18-24 months on the job.3

Expect to make mistakes and try to learn from them. If necessary, move on to the next job. There is always a market for seasoned physician executives who took a few punches, learned something from the experience, and found something new.
 

Start to network

One way to navigate the challenges of a new role is to have a strong network, a group of colleagues and mentors who can help you figure out your path forward. They can serve as sounding boards and contacts for new jobs in an industry that is constantly changing.

A well-functioning network takes constant maintenance.

You can find people for your network by attending a variety of different meetings that physician leaders and other healthcare executives attend. Make a point of keeping their contact information on file and periodically reaching out to them.
 

Learn in a dyad

Some healthcare organizations assign physician leaders to dyads, where they are matched with nonphysicians who have skills that the physician lacks, such as finance, data management, or organizational politics.

Dyads are less effective when the nonphysician has all the authority and the physician is basically a figurehead. But in an effective dyad, both partners share authority and they can teach skills to each other. While the physician in the dyad brings clinical insight, the nonphysician can provide managerial know-how.
 

Seek out coaching

There may be points in your leadership career when you become aware of areas where you need improvement. You may have gotten negative feedback on communication skills or political sensitivity. Consider hiring an executive coach; coaches provide concentrated sessions over limited periods of time.

Coaches can also help you prepare for the future. They can help you find ways to promote yourself for new projects or create a network of allies. They also can help you establish yourself as a thought leader in a particular field through writing and speaking engagements.

Some organizations provide in-house coaches. It is worthwhile to take advantage of this benefit. If you need to find a coach on your own, ask mentors or people in your network for recommendations.
 

Getting to the top

It can take years to rise to the level of the corporate C-suite or even to CEO of a large organization. At the top levels of management, you often have to cut back substantially on clinical work or even give it up entirely.

Becoming CEO of a hospital can be a logical fit for physicians. A physician CEO can relate to doctors on staff, who are a key constituency, and understands what clinical care is all about. However, physician CEOs also need to have a large degree of knowledge about finance, strategy, crisis management, quality improvement, and other nonclinical considerations, not to mention good people skills.
 

Physicians on boards

Some physicians would rather sit on the board of trustees than take the reins of CEO. Board membership allows you to continue practicing while still having a great deal of influence over the organization. Some physicians hold board seats for many years and enjoy a great deal of respect as the go-to person on clinical care.

Physicians are increasingly serving on the boards of hospitals and health systems. Trustees welcome physicians because they want more input from clinicians in decision-making. They tend to choose physicians who already have executive duties, such as having been a department head.
 

Which new skills should you learn?

Physician executives often put off learning business and management skills until after being appointed to a leadership position. Even then, they may prefer to take courses focused on a particular topic rather than earn a degree such as master of business administration (MBA).

Learning on the job

A number of executive skills can be learned on the job, such as dealing with quality measures, utilization, billing and coding, disease management, committees, and interpreting data. If you are not in a dyad model, you can ask someone knowledgeable in one of these skills to take you through the steps.

Many physicians could benefit from finance and business courses in order to learn some of the budgetary, accounting, and operational skills required to perform the job optimally.

In a survey of healthcare CEOs, only 30% said their most senior physician leader had a business or medical management degree, and only 21% required a degree.4

Taking classes

Physician executives who want to brush up on a particular topic can “mix and match,” taking short, focused classes on the particular topic whenever they feel the need. In addition to resources offered by SHM, courses are available from organizations such as the AAPL, American Hospital Association, the Medical Group Management Association, or the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, to name a few examples.

Pursuing degree programs

Degree programs like MBA, master of public health (MPH), and master of health care administration (MHA) are popular with many physician executives because they get a full overview of needed skills and the potential to earn more money with their new credentials. Physician leaders with an MBA earned 13% more in 2016 than did those with no MBA, according to the Cejka-AAPL survey.

Getting a master’s degree, however, takes time and money. For example, an MBA can cost $20,000 to as much as $100,000.5 MBA, MHA, and MPH degrees take 2 years to complete, while a master of medical management (MMM) and a physician-executive MBA – focusing specifically on what physician leaders need to learn – take 1 year.

Many part-time degree programs are available for those with full-time jobs. You can find them at nearby universities as well as far-off institutions. Much of the coursework is done online, but some on-site work is usually required. You’ll find that working directly with others enriches the learning experience and helps you build your network of colleagues.
 

Straight MBA or other degree?

In general, degree programs cover finance, communication, strategy, information systems, marketing, organizational behavior, operational management, and quality improvement. Straight MBA programs don’t focus on healthcare, but some physician executives still prefer this route, especially if it involves degrees from prestigious business schools.

MHA, MMM, physician-executive MBA, and other degree programs focused on healthcare are popular with many physicians on the executive track. The MPH is less business-oriented but may be preferable to some because of its focus on population-based health, which fits well with decision-making on health insurance and value-based care.
 

Conclusion

Physicians need to prepare for leadership because these roles are very different from clinical work. It’s easy to stumble and lose direction without mentors, a network of helpful colleagues, and at least some education in business principles.

Finding a mentor should start early in your new career. A seasoned physician executive can help you understand your options and point out your strengths and shortcomings. Beyond that, concentrated work with an executive coach can help you improve your skills and choose from among the many executive roles that are now available.

You can learn many skills on the job through dyads and other relationships with more seasoned colleagues, or take short classes on particular skills that need to be learned or sharpened. Many physician executives go a step further and get a master’s degree, such as an MBA, MHA, or MMM. This involves a year or two of study, but much of it can be done online.
 

This article is excerpted from the Medscape Physician Business Academy course “How to become an effective leader.” You can find more information on the course at www.medscape.com/courses/business/100018.

References

1. Cejka Executive Search. 2016 Physician Leadership Compensation Survey results released. Cejka and the American Association for Physician Leadership. Nov 3, 2016.

2. Knowles M. Salaries on upswing for physician executives. Becker’s Hospital Review. Sept 25, 2018.

3. Birrer RB. Becoming a physician executive. Health Progress: Journal of the Catholic Health Association of the United States. Jan-Feb 2003.

4. Witt/Kieffer. Transformation of physician executives: New accountability for quality, performance, integration. Fall 2010.

5. Jurica J. Does an executive salary stand up to a clinical salary? Vital Physician Executive. 2016.
 

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