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From MD to MBA
Do Physicians Need a Business Degree
By Bob Keaveney

Crystal Run Healthcare has come a long way from its 1982 beginnings as a one-physician, one-site practice with an unfinished floor. And so has its founder, Hal Teitelbaum, MD, a former academic who launched the practice with no business experience and no money.

"I knew absolutely nothing about running a business," Teitelbaum recalls. "I spoke to my father, a CPA ... and I said to him, 'What's going to happen if my projections are off, and I don't see as many patients as I think I will?' He said, 'You'll go broke, but we won't let you starve.'"

He hasn't gone broke or hungry. On the contrary, Crystal Run has blossomed to 450 employees in seven sites in Orange and Sullivan counties, N.Y. The multispecialty practice last year opened a new 72,000-square-foot office (with a finished floor), has added a host of new services including obstetrics and gynecology, neurology, and nephrology, and has become a dominant player in its market between New York City and the Catskill Mountains.

Teitelbaum doesn't credit all his success with his decision to enter Columbia University's executive MBA program in 1996. But it's surely no coincidence that most of Crystal Run's rapid growth has come in the last few years. In 1994, the practice had two doctors, including Teitelbaum; today, it has 60, plus 10 midlevel providers. In the last year alone, Crystal Run doubled its employee size and physician base, in addition to its new clinical services. It could not have grown so quickly, says Teitelbaum, had it not been for the business planning and accounting skills he acquired at Columbia.

Nor could the practice have devised as effective and aggressive a marketing strategy as it has. Crystal Run sponsors its own cable television and radio shows in addition to doing advertising and maintaining a consistent presence at local health fairs. Teitelbaum's vision of building an "unavoidable" healthcare system to counteract the forces of managed care has been realized.
"And we've done it all with projections that are 100 percent on target," he says. "That's the power of understanding what you're doing."

Growing popularity

While there's no doubt you are a trained expert in the exam room, how well do you understand what you're doing in the back room, where payer contracts are negotiated, new physicians are recruited, staff is trained, and decisions are made about opening new offices and adding new services? How confident are you in those arenas?

If you're like most physicians, you went to medical school to treat patients, not to become a business tycoon. Your ambitions may be more modest than Teitelbaum's. But the world of shrinking reimbursement, rising expenses, overwhelming paperwork, and increasing competition has made a sharp business acumen more valuable than ever - and a lack of it more glaring.
As more doctors realize this, despite the hectic nature of their lives already, more are choosing to hit the books again. More universities are offering programs tailored to healthcare professionals, including some designed specifically for physicians.
Take the University of Tennessee, for instance. Its Physician Executive MBA (PEMBA) program is aimed at "helping physician leaders regain control of healthcare," says Mike Stahl, PhD, the program's director and a management professor. The physicians who enroll, says Stahl, come from all branches of the healthcare delivery system - from solo practitioners to hospital administrators to insurance executives - but all have in common at least five years' experience (a requirement for admission), a sense of optimism about healthcare's future, and a determination to understand it better in order to function within it more effectively.

"Many physicians ... have found that, because of the changes in the healthcare system, they have lost control," Stahl says. "Third-party payers and the government are too often positioned between them and their patients, and that interferes with their ability to deliver the quality they want. So they're looking to acquire the knowledge and skills of business to reshape that relationship to something that's more like what they're used to."

Programs like PEMBA - those that specialize in training healthcare professionals in business - are not uncommon. Some universities tailor MBA programs for healthcare; others offer master's degrees in medical management (MMM).

Many physicians, though, opt to enroll in straightforward business programs, arguing that healthcare is too insular already. A standard MBA usually takes two years to complete, but many programs tailored for busy professionals have been condensed to one year. And they often accommodate students' schedules in other ways, for example, by offering classes in person and online - in real time or when it's convenient for the student.

The PEMBA program involves all three modes. Students attend four weeklong seminars in Knoxville, Tenn., and take courses online the rest of the time. "Your assignments are all outlined in Lotus Notes on the calendar, so you pretty much know for the whole year when everything's due," says Ed Diamond, MD, a PEMBA graduate. "It's a nice balance."

Pros and cons

Should you pursue a business degree? It depends on your goals, your motivation, and your schedule.

Most academic officials argue strenuously against entering a healthcare-oriented program if you have become so disenchanted with the healthcare system that you're in danger of leaving the profession altogether. Before you enter any program, make sure you know what you want out of it. OB/GYN Brent Bost enrolled in the mid-1980s in the MBA program at Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas, where he was working as a solo practitioner, because he worried managed care might ruin medicine for him.



Additional Resources
View more articles from the March 2003 issue

View more articles related to Career Development

 
 


 

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In Summary

In Summary

Many physicians are going back to school to obtain business degrees. Before you do:

  • Decide ahead of time what you hope to get out of a business program. If you're just looking for some pointers on practice efficiency, there are probably less time-consuming ways to get them. But if you're hoping for a career in healthcare leadership, a business degree may be
    necessary.
  • Recognize that all programs are not the same. Some are better than others when it comes to accommodating professionals' busy schedules. If you don't have much time to go to campus, look for programs that offer online courses. But remember: most reputable programs require at least some face time with professors and classmates.
  • Consider what type of business education you want. A master of medical management (MMM) or healthcare-oriented MBA are good for those looking to put the lessons of the business world into a healthcare context, but they aren't right for you if you're feeling disenchanted with medicine.