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Feature:

Best in Shows: Notes From Key Workforce Management Conferences and Conventions

  

The National Business Coalition on Health Annual Conference


November 5-7, the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel, New Orleans

Event: The National Business Coalition on Health Annual Conference
Date: November 5-7, the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel, New Orleans

What: The membership of the National Business Coalition on Health (NBCH) includes nearly 80 employer-led coalitions across the United States, representing more than 10,000 employers and approximately 34 million employees and their dependents. The NBCH is dedicated to making the coalition movement the vehicle for meaningful change in the health care system throughout the United States.

Conference info: For more information on the annual conference, go to http://www.nbch.org/events/conference.cfm.

Conference Notes—Day 3, Tuesday, November 7, 2006

The eye of Newt: Twelve years after he led a Republican takeover of Congress and on the day when that control was ceded to Democrats, Newt Gingrich gave a keynote address that may have been his version of a health care stump speech. He laid out a vision for what he called real change in the health care system.

Keynote speeches, like leaders, are meant to inspire others to continue working toward ambitious goals. So many keynotes, like leaders, feel as fresh as recycled air. Judging by the standing ovation Gingrich received from the audience, the former House speaker’s keynote address was a success.

The health care world according to Newt can be summarized by any number of his own maxims and Ben Franklinisms. Some are specific to health care, others to the nature of commerce in the 21st century.

Others reflect the musings of a leader on leadership. Gingrich is well aware that transforming health care (after all, his organization is called the Center for Health Transformation) requires a kind of inspirational leadership that allows for ambitious goals mixed with discipline--a combination that is required to change the status quo.

On changing a health care system that is expensive, threatens American competitiveness in the world and kills tens of thousands of patients each year, Gingrich offered several insights, including his "Four Key Drivers of Health Transformation":

    1. Focusing on avoiding medical errors by improving patient safety and patient outcomes or health.
    2. Information and communication technology.
    3. A system and culture that, like the transformation of the American automobile industry 25 years ago, focuses on quality.
    4. Individual knowledge, responsibility and choice.

Metrics are at the heart of change: "The most important breakthrough of the next 15 years," Gingrich says. Real metrics start with real questions. Gingrich uses the New York Police Department's metrics tool, CompStat, which tracks crime and was developed by former NYPD Commissioner William Bratton. Real data will come through mining and aggregating health claims and putting it online.

Five keys for any leader, according to Gingrich:

    1. The leader must want different results.
    2. Real change will require real change. Define your vision and go for it.
    3. Learn to say, "Yes, if" rather than "No, because." This leads to creative solutions and positive thinking within a team. Someone asks, "Can we order pizza for lunch?" A "Yes, if" answer is: Yes, if we can scrounge up $10. A "No, because" answer is: No, because we don't have $10.
    4. New results require new ideas, new actions and, sometimes, new structures and new cultures.
    5. Look for and adopt what is already working.

Must-reads: The top seven titles, according to Gingrich, including (surprise!) his three latest books:

    1. The Art of Transformation, Newt Gingrich
    2. The Effective Executive, Peter Drucker
    3. Leadership, Rudolph Giuliani
    4. Turnaround, William Bratton
    5. Moneyball, Michael Lewis
    6. Winning the Future, Newt Gingrich
    7. Saving Lives and Saving Money, Newt Gingrich
--Jeremy Smerd


Conference Notes—Day 2, Monday, November 6, 2006

Katrina and health care: Hurricane Katrina and health care once again collided here at the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel in New Orleans, where the National Business Coalition is meeting for the employer-sponsored group's annual conference.

The storms and ensuing floods closed the city's public hospital for good. Flooding wiped out the health care system and afforded employers the opportunity to work with public health officials, hospitals and doctors to remake a broken health system by focusing on health care quality and cost. This is now a major focus of the state-run Louisiana Health Care Redesign Collaborative, which was created in July.

Since then, the collaborative has submitted a proposal to the federal government for remaking the state's health care system that could be a model for the rest of the country by reducing the number of uninsured and improving the quality and cost of health care.

The heads of employer health care coalitions in Minnesota, Seattle and Detroit spoke about the need to get chief executives of local companies involved in health care. By using the power of the executive suite, business leaders can push for health plans to rate their doctors and hospitals.

The plans with the best networks would compete for business. In Minnesota, this has allowed employers to steer employees to doctors who provide better health care and improve the health of employees.
—JS


Conference Notes—Day 1, Sunday, November 5, 2006

Hurricane Katrina is not a thing of the past for New Orleans. Likewise, rising health care costs threaten every day to depress wages and stagnate business growth. That may seem an odd comparison, but in New Orleans everything still has the whiff of Katrina about it.

When the storm hit and the levees broke more than a year ago, this hotel became a refugee center for more than 2,000 people. Today, the hotel at the corner of Canal and Bourbon streets is hosting the National Business Coalition on Health's annual conference, a group composed of large employers across the country who are working, in their regions and nationally, to lower the cost of health care while also improving the quality of medicine.

The three-day conference began Sunday, and rising costs are still the No. 1 concern among employers. Another speaker was Dennis White, who directs an employer-sponsored project called evalue.org, which is aimed at using health claims data to rate doctors. Part of the aim of the project is to use those ratings so that good doctors are well compensated and bad medical care is not paid for.

Christine Whipple, director of the Pittsburgh Business Group on Health, talked about implementing the Asheville Project among some of her employer members.

The Asheville Project is a program designed to reduce the costs of diabetes by making sure diabetic employees get the treatment they need using incentives such as waived co-pays for those who meet with pharmacists and take the drugs they need to keep them healthy. It is working, and one employer wants to take the program to its other sites across the country. The question is, how?

These questions and others will be addressed during the next two days. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich will be speaking, as will Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
--Jeremy Smerd


Next Article: 4. HR.com Employers of Excellence 2006 Conference
October 24-27, 2006, Red Rock Casino Resort, Las Vegas

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Feature Contents
Top of Feature

1. Recruiting 2006 Conference and Expo.
November 8-9, Jacob Javits Center, New York City

2. HRO World Europe Annual Conference
November 6-8, the Conrad Hotel, Brussels, Belgium

3. The National Business Coalition on Health Annual Conference


4. HR.com Employers of Excellence 2006 Conference
October 24-27, 2006, Red Rock Casino Resort, Las Vegas

5. Oracle OpenWorld 2006
October 22-26, 2006, Moscone Center, San Francisco

6. Pensions & Investments' Seventh Annual West Coast Defined Contribution Conference
October 8-10, 2006, the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

7. Human Resource Executive's Ninth Annual HR Technology Conference & Exposition
October 4-6, 2006, Navy Pier, Chicago

8. The Motivation Show 2006--Business Solutions That Motivate People
September 26-28, 2006, McCormick Place South, Chicago

9. The Conference Board 2006 Human Resources Outsourcing Conference
September 19-20, the Drake Hotel, Chicago

10. 19th Annual Benefits Management Forum and Expo
September 17-19, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Chicago

11. World Business Forum 2006
September 12-13, Radio City Music Hall, New York City

12. OnRec Expo 2006—Global Summit for Online Recruitment
September 12-13, 2006, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention and Conference Center, Chicago

13. The Conference Board 2006 Hot Topics & Hot Issues HR Forum--Dilemmas, Demographics & Direction
July 18-19, 2006, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel, New York City

14. Workforce Innovations 2006
July 11-13, 2006, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, California

15. Society for Human Resource Management
June 25-28, 2006, Washington, D.C.

16. World Business Forum Chicago 2006
June 6-7, 2006 at Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois

17. 2006 Workstream User Conference
May 23-24, San Francisco Hilton Financial District, San Francisco

18. The Conference Board 2006 Leadership Development Conference—Developing a New Cadre of Global Leaders for Top-line Growth
May 24-25, 2006, at the Coronado Island Marriott, Coronado, California

19. Vurv Revolution 2006
May 21-24 at Disney's Grand Floridian Resort, Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

20. SAP Sapphire '06
May 16-18, 2006, at the Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida

21. Consumer Directed Health Care Conference and Expo and the National Health, Wellness and Prevention Congress
May 8-10, 2006, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco

22. WorldatWork Total Rewards Conference & Exhibition 2006
May 7-10, 2006, at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California

23. HRO World Annual Conference
April 26-27, 2006, at the New York Hilton & Towers, New York City

24. 2006 Human Resource Planning Society Annual Global Conference
April 23-26, 2006, at the JW Marriott Starr Pass Resort & Spa in Tucson, Arizona.

25. The 2006 World Health Care Congress
April 17-19, 2006, at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, D.C.

26. International Association for Human Resource Information Management
April 9-12, 2006

27. Lawson Software Conference and User Exchange (CUE) 2006
April 9-11, 2006

28. The Conference Board 2006 Senior Human Resources Executive Conference–Strategic Workforce Management and Growth
April 6-7, 2006

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