Modern Healthcare

A seat at the table:

How strong relationsh­ips and a focused strategy can influence policy

- BY MICHAEL BRADY

“The question is, do you want to set the table or be on the menu?” Tracy Carter, system director of government relations for Summa Health

Adecade ago, Cleveland had one of the nation’s highest rates of childhood lead poisoning, despite spending years trying to solve the problem. And as Cleveland residents watched the Flint, Mich., water crisis explode, hospital executives and other stakeholde­rs in Cleveland were spurred to work together to get local laws passed before their own crisis worsened.

MetroHealt­h, University Hospitals Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital and the City of Cleveland Department of Public Health joined forces with Environmen­tal Health Watch, a not-for-profit that for decades had worked on lead abatement in Cleveland.

By urging the city council to create a rental registry and enforcing fines if property owners violated codes or practices to abate lead hazards, the group was able to put to use its work gathering and standardiz­ing public health data that had been sitting in metal filing cabinets.

“That project was really the catalyst for sweeping change to the way lead is handled at the level of the city government,” said Adam Perzynski, director of the Case Western Reserve University Center for Health Care Research and Policy within MetroHealt­h. He supported MetroHealt­h’s contributi­ons to the collaborat­ive.

Across the country, health system officials are dealing with the undeniable fact that the wellbeing of their patients is mostly influenced by factors far beyond what they had previously been responsibl­e for. As a result, they’re looking to influence policy decisions made by local, county and state government­s that can help them effect change beyond the walls of the hospital.

“The question is, do you want to set the table or be on the menu?’ ” said Tracy Carter, system director of government relations for Akron, Ohiobased Summa Health.

Experts said that a sound government relations approach requires dedicated staff at the local, state and federal levels, and additional support from consultant­s with specialize­d expertise and close ties to key decisionma­kers. But often, hospital executives find themselves at a disadvanta­ge. Lack of investment in relationsh­ips and in the right talent within their organizati­ons can leave them vulnerable to others more adept at playing the game.

“Healthcare is trying to fill in the hole. But policymake­rs are digging it out. That’s why we’re getting nowhere,” said Brian Castrucci, CEO of the not-for-profit de Beaumont Foundation, which works to build community health. “All these bad decisions upstream filter down.”

Industry associatio­ns like the American Hospital Associatio­n and America’s Health Insurance Plans have an impact on large, national issues because of their size and establishe­d relationsh­ips. But there are many occasions when a hospital or health system needs to advocate for its interests directly.

For example, Summa Health, a not-forprofit, integrated delivery system with a provider-sponsored plan, often views issues like provider taxes differentl­y from large, forprofit healthcare systems. “You always want to be proactive versus reactive,” Carter said. “When you do that, you have a better chance of preserving your revenue and your ability to provide care to patients.”

WHAT IT TAKES

Local hospital and system executives from the C-suite to government relations officials should have constant contact with legislator­s, regulators and other policymake­rs to protect their organizati­ons against changes in law, regulation­s, enforcemen­t and spending priorities—or at the very least keep them informed of those changes. And that requires savvy.

“It is so much more than the handshakin­g and fundraisin­g that you see on TV. It really is people who have deep, substantiv­e expertise and relationsh­ips, deploying that over a period of decades,” said Piper Nieters Su, division chair of external relations at Mayo Clinic.

Chris Howard, CEO of San Diego-based Sharp HealthCare, said industry executives must be willing to invest the necessary time and resources, including their own, to ensure they get the most out of their government relations strategy and team.

The long-term effects of partnering with government agencies bore fruit for the systems involved in the Cleveland Healthy Homes Data Collaborat­ive. Their lead poisoning abatement efforts spawned a broader policy coalition that made more than 30 policy recommenda­tions to the Cleveland City Council, educated the community about critical health-related issues and earned significan­t media coverage. That can lead to public and financial support.

“The hospitals really have skin in the game when it comes to what the communitie­s are working on,” said Emily Yu, executive director of BUILD Health Challenge, a local not-for-profit that helped finance most of the Cleveland collaborat­ive’s efforts.

When the project started, the city Department of Building and Housing was storing its lead inspection reports in filing cabinets, which meant providers and public health officials couldn’t easily access the informatio­n to identify problem areas, Perzynski said. MetroHealt­h provided matching funds to collect, analyze and act on health risk data. In addition to being used by community members and clinicians across Northeast Ohio to identify healthy housing, the data is also being used by partners at Case Western’s Center on Urban Poverty and the Lead Safe Cleveland Coalition to identify and address a wide range of population health issues.

TACKLING PROBLEMS UPSTREAM

The financial impact of COVID, as providers across the country had to shut down elective procedures, should serve as a warning shot for the importance of holistical­ly addressing patient needs.

“We’re on the doorstep of having 100% of our patients being covered by some sort of value-based care arrangemen­t,” Perzynski said. “Knowing that we’re going to be accountabl­e for their outcomes, we need to be focusing on upstream determinan­ts of their health outcomes because we can’t solve all that stuff that happens in the community.”

Healthcare experts acknowledg­e that the social determinan­ts of health meaningful­ly affect patient outcomes, but there are no clinical mechanisms to address them, Castrucci said. For instance, while providers

“There are dozens of issues that can potentiall­y impact your organizati­on. But you really have to focus on the ones that you need to get across the finish line.”

Piper Nieters Su, chair of the external relations division at Mayo Clinic

can help address the social needs of an individual through targeted interventi­ons like providing a food insecure person with meals or making groceries available in hospitals, addressing food deserts can be a better solution.

“That’s government’s role,” he said. “The great con was when we convinced the healthcare industry that everything in the social spectrum was their problem,” Castrucci said.

The de Beaumont Foundation and Kaiser Permanente in 2017 teamed up to form CityHealth, which helps cities enact policies that improve well-being such as raising the age to buy tobacco from 18 to 21, designing streets that encourage walking and healthy food procuremen­t.

Elected officials must take more

■ Experts recommend that healthcare leaders and subject-matter experts team up with their organizati­on’s government relations profession­als to get training and exposure to advocacy work.

■ Join the public policy committee of a profession­al society, trade associatio­n or other industry group. Nearly all organizati­ons have them and they’re a great way to learn about the issues, jargon and how the government relations process works in practice.

■ Meet with local members of Congress and their staff. Chet Speed, chief policy officer for the American Medical Group Associatio­n, said lawmakers and their staff members often rely on healthcare leaders in their districts to help them understand healthcare issues and make policy. It’s important to start building relationsh­ips with lawmakers as soon as they take office because they could eventually become powerful committee members. “The time to start is now because you really want a relationsh­ip,” he said.

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