logo
Lewis: Regina hospital physician culture is both tragedy and farce

Lewis: Regina hospital physician culture is both tragedy and farce

Yahoo19-07-2025
Life is short, and based on a lifetime of experience with the genre, I cannot recommend you spend much of it reading reports on health care. But should you find yourself awaiting a root canal, a phone scroll through the 2024-25 External Review of Regina Hospital Physician Culture might make you feel a bit better about your impending chair time.
In a bracing 30 pages, including appendices, the report describes a litany of dysfunctions among physicians working in what is supposed to be the most professionally managed precinct of health care. It's not all bleak. There are no allegations of American-style billing for non-existent surgeries or fistfights in the doctors' lounge.
But it is plenty bad enough. The highlights:
Physicians in Regina have largely held themselves apart from the mission, vision and values adopted by the SHA (Saskatchewan Health Authority) since its formation in 2017.
We heard examples of divisions and departments where it appears pursuit of financial compensation has overtaken the priority for high quality accessible care for patients.
There is no functioning electronic health record, and no database that allows either effective wait list management or workforce planning.
The Ministry of Health allows interests to plead their cases directly, undermining the SHA mandated to run the system.
Whether rooted in illness, aging or personality factors, disruptive patterns of behaviour have often been in place for many years and not addressed in a decisive fashion.
Very few physicians were able to describe how they monitor and improve quality in their services.
Leaders who have identified problematic behaviours and acted appropriately to protect patients and teams should not be vilified or suffer retribution.
In some cases, efforts to recruit have been thwarted by physicians to preserve their service volumes despite wait times.
There are legacy contracts, deals and arrangements that create inequity and inconsistency in negotiating with physicians and groups.
It is embarrassing to have to commission a review to make blindingly obvious recommendations. A report on a school system in similar disarray would recommend having principals who are actually in charge. The schools should teach the students to read and write. They should know what students' needs are and organize to meet them. There should be no side deals and special privileges for a few teachers.
Records should be computerized and generate data to plan and assess performance. Evaluate your staff. Discipline teachers who throw tantrums and abuse their colleagues. Is it any wonder why people misbehave when bad behaviour is not only tolerated, but rewarded?
The Regina physicians have told the SHA to park its mission, vision and values where the sun don't shine for eight years, with zero consequence. So much for a unified provincial system. Medical groups have frozen out new recruits to protect their incomes while wait lists ballooned. Physician leaders who tried to impose some order and civility were abused and left hung out to dry.
Don't for a moment think these problems are unique to Regina. Do a quick search of conflict of interest in Alberta, or pediatric chaos in Kelowna. The only difference between Regina and dozens of other communities is that Regina's pathologies are now out in the open.
Like all reports written by physicians about physicians, professional self-governance is assumed to be entirely in the public interest, fully compatible with fulfilling public and professional obligations found routinely unfulfilled, and despite acknowledgement that 'some physicians have lost the plot of why we are here.'
And therein lies the problem. The report says as much: 'Physician autonomy is clashing with the broader social contract to ensure quality and safety.' Workers at Starbucks or Toyota can tell you how their work is organized and monitored to produce quality. Most physicians in Regina are tongue-tied. This is what you get when a profession is accountable to itself, and self-evaluation in a data-free environment is standard operating procedure.
A cultural problem? Sounds so much more anthropological than negligence, cowardice, greed, and abdication of responsibility. As a wise physician friend told me years ago, what you permit, you promote. The rot has been called out. What next?
Steven Lewis spent 45 years as a health policy analyst and health researcher in Saskatchewan. He can be reached at slewistoon1@gmail.com
The Regina Leader-Post has created an Afternoon Headlines newsletter that can be delivered daily to your inbox so you are up to date with the most vital news of the day. Click here to subscribe. With some online platforms blocking access to the journalism upon which you depend, our website is your destination for up-to-the-minute news, so make sure to bookmark leaderpost.com and sign up for our newsletters so we can keep you informed. Click here to subscribe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UnitedHealth Group's (UNH) Healthcare Dominance: A Key Player in the Dogs of the Dow
UnitedHealth Group's (UNH) Healthcare Dominance: A Key Player in the Dogs of the Dow

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

UnitedHealth Group's (UNH) Healthcare Dominance: A Key Player in the Dogs of the Dow

UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) is included among the 11 Dogs of the Dow Dividend Stocks to Buy Now. A senior healthcare professional giving advice to a patient in a clinic. The stock has dropped over 44% so far this year after reporting weaker-than-expected earnings in the first quarter. The company first reduced its full-year outlook and later chose to withdraw it entirely. Even with the underwhelming Q1 performance, UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) still posted a 9.8% year-over-year increase in revenue, reaching $109.6 billion. It earned a profit of around $6.3 billion during the quarter and maintained a solid financial position, holding close to $34.3 billion in cash and cash equivalents, along with a debt level that remains manageable. The company has added 780,000 new members so far this year. Meanwhile, Optum Health still expects to provide value-based care to an additional 650,000 patients in 2025. In addition, UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) generated $5.5 billion in operating cash flow during the quarter and returned $5 billion to investors through dividends and share repurchases. The company has been rewarding shareholders with growing dividends since 2011 and currently offers a quarterly dividend of $2.21 per share. The stock supports a dividend yield of 3.15%, as of July 26. While we acknowledge the potential of UNH as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: and Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Changes In Prior Approval Coming To Traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage
Changes In Prior Approval Coming To Traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage

Forbes

time4 hours ago

  • Forbes

Changes In Prior Approval Coming To Traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage

There were two major announcements recently regarding prior approval of treatments and services for Medicare beneficiaries. In most medical insurance, many treatments won't be covered unless it is approved first by the insurer. It's been a source of controversy for some time. Original Medicare hasn't required prior authorization of treatments and services, with a few exceptions. For most care, providers and the patient agree on a treatment. After the treatment, paperwork for approval and payment is submitted to Medicare. Medicare recently announced a new model program that will test pre-approval. The voluntary model program will test pre-approval for some services and treatments, according to a recent announcement from the Center for Innovation of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The model program is seeking medical providers to volunteer for the program from Jan. 1, 2026 through Dec. 31, 2031. The model will be restricted to New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, and Washington. Providers who volunteer and are accepted will agree to seek prior authorization for 17 items and services, including skin substitutes, deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's Disease, impotence treatment, and arthroscopy for knee osteoarthritis. A provider who volunteers for the program can choose not to seek prior approval for a case. There will be a post-treatment review of the case, and the provider will risk not being paid by Medicare for the treatment. CMS initiated the program and selected the services to be covered because of a series of reports showing waste, fraud or abuse in certain areas. For example, Medicare spent up to $5.8 billion in 2022 on unnecessary or inappropriate services that had no clinical benefit, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. Under the model, providers will submit the same information they currently submit for payment approval after a service is provided to a beneficiary. The difference is that under the model, the information will be submitted earlier and the provider will wait for approval before performing the services. CMS will select companies to receive and review the prior authorizations. It expects that they will use artificial intelligence and other tools in addition to medical professionals to review the submissions. The companies will be paid based on the extent to which they saved the government money by stopping unnecessary services. CMS said it will manage the program to avoid adverse impact on beneficiaries and providers. There was other news about pre-approval, this time involving Medicare Advantage plans. Pre-approval in Medicare Advantage plans has been controversial recently. There have been a number of recent reports and studies that found the authorization process was delaying treatment or causing patients to abandon treatment plans. Other reports indicated that a high percentage of treatments that initially were denied coverage eventually were approved if the patients or their providers appealed the than 50 major insurers who sponsor many types of insurance plans announced that they will voluntarily streamline prior authorization of treatments and services in all insurance markets, including Medicare Advantage plans. The insurers say they plan to have the new process in place by Jan. 1, 2027.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store