Return to Virginia Business - November 2001

From red to black ink - the "poor house" hospital turns around

by Page Boinest Melton

Thomas J. Orsini knew right away what was wrong with Lake Taylor Hospital when he arrived as the CEO two years ago this month. "The problems were right in front of me - starting with all the beds that didn't have people in them." The hospital, owned by the city of Norfolk, had dizzying staff turnover, uncollected bills, and losses topping $1 million a year. Hope seemed dim: The 111-year-old, nonprofit hospital had an unshakable reputation as the "poor house" hospital, caring for largely low-income and critically ill patients. "It was the place people came to die," recalls Dr. Claude Smith, chair of the Hospital Authority of Norfolk, which oversees Lake Taylor.

Today, a thoroughly resuscitated Lake Taylor bursts with signs of life. Boasting a nearly 17 percent operating margin, the hospital is now in the black by $1 million a year. In fact, it's one of the most profitable hospitals in the state at a time when other hospitals are navigating financial upheaval. Staff turnover has stabilized with a respectable 55 percent retention rate - no small feat since the facility deals with traditional money-losing treatments for the elderly, severely disabled children and critically injured of all ages.

As its reputation improves, Lake Taylor is doing more business with local hospitals to fill its 296 beds. Lake Taylor's rags-to-riches Cinderella tale is "one of the great success stories for the city in recent memory," says Norfolk Mayor Paul D. Fraim. "Not only are they making a profit, the hospital has become a great source of pride." Not bad for a facility once so ridden with debt that city officials considered bulldozing it.

The mayor and others credit the turnaround to Orsini, a 47-year-old teddy bear of a man who dispenses hugs, morning donuts and first-name greetings to patients and staff. Yet behind the twinkling grin there's a ruthless devotion to the bottom line. Orsini imposed strict fiscal discipline and checkbook-style budgeting, a novelty to the hospital's management staff. He tracked down outstanding accounts receivables, some 15 years old. Orsini retooled staffing schedules to keep more nurses and aides on board, expanded group purchasing and built an on-site laboratory. "It was basic business management, proprietary thinking applied to a nonprofit," says Lake Taylor Admissions Director Kim Limbaugh, who like most of Orsini's new hires comes from for-profit backgrounds.

Orsini's single mission is reversing a mindset that Lake Taylor is a place where patients come to die. The new philosophy has a simple mantra: "You come here sick, you get better, you go home." The idea is to move patients steadily through a "continuum" of care toward their eventual release. In November 1999, the hospital admitted just five new patients a month and discharges were rare. Now Lake Taylor admits 60 new patients a month and discharges 25 a month to home care or a lower level of care.

The new strategy helped attract a more profitable patient mix. Like many urban hospitals, the majority of Lake Taylor's patients include a high percentage of Medicaid population patients - 60 percent - as opposed to Medicare and privately insured patients, which pay higher reimbursements for the same procedures. Orsini won a 50 percent increase in the hospital's rock-bottom Medicare discharge rates. Then he worked to attract more Medicare patients, partly by focusing on rehabilitative services. Now 20 percent of its patients are covered by Medicare, up from just 3 percent two years ago. "We knew what we were going to get paid for," Orsini says. "We needed to look at admissions, because it was like a 300-table restaurant with 150 tables taken."

A marketing campaign complements the change in the hospital's patient mix. After a management review recommended creating specialized "niches" to attract patients from local hospitals, Lake Taylor added a "ventilator weaning" program that moves ill patients off respirators for eventual discharge. In the last year, 79 percent of the patients in the program moved off ventilators - a new way of thinking for the hospital that once kept most ventilator patients indefinitely. Other new amenities include a gym, intensive therapy programs and a furnished apartment that helps prepare patients suffering from strokes or injuries for life after the hospital.

Lake Taylor's "niche" strategy makes sense because local hospitals need some place to send patients who no longer need acute care but who aren't ready to go home. "The pressure is on all hospitals to move patients through as quickly as they can, which creates a market niche for sub-acute providers," says Robert Hurley, an associate professor of health care at Virginia Commonwealth University's Medical College of Virginia who studies the health care market. Local hospital systems, like Bon Secours Hampton Roads, are referring more patients because they see results. "Lake Taylor's successful turnaround is directly attributed to their clinical excellence in respiratory therapy and ventilator management," says Dr. Stephen Moore, the system's executive vice president for care delivery. "Those programs have exceeded our expectations in successfully weaning ventilator-dependent patients."

That Lake Taylor found a profitable game plan is somewhat of a novelty. Health care is reeling from the impact of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, which cut Medicare reimbursements and piles on problems for hospitals buffeted by rising drug and labor costs. Operating profit margins are flattening out at U.S. hospitals, to 3.69 percent on average, says Illinois-based Solucient, a health care market research and intelligence firm. "A margin of 3 percent or 4 percent really isn't sustainable longer term," says Solucient President Gregg Bennett. In Virginia, operating margins are even slimmer, a "worrisomely thin" 2 percent, says Chris Bailey, senior vice president of the Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association. "Virginia hospitals and health care systems on average have seen substantial declines in financial health." Lake Taylor, he says, is "certainly going against the trend."

Bucking the profit trend, Orsini also works to keep the best of his staff happy and involved while hospitals nationwide face serious staff shortages. Even in the belt-tightening, Lake Taylor added more than 30 full-time staff jobs, increased flexible scheduling, allowed staff to work in areas they chose and created a mentoring program. The changes help address a critical labor issue for long-term care facilities: They are challenging places to work because patients often face long recoveries. "Sometimes you have to wait a long time for someone to take a step, to feed themselves," says Jan Johnson, executive director of the Virginia Nurses Association. Staff in such facilities "need a certain mindset to deal with that."

Orsini credits the success to the hospital's staff and to the autonomy he enjoys as an administrator in a stand-alone hospital - an increasing rarity in the move toward health systems. Having worked most of his 22-year career in Hampton Roads for the Arkansas-based Beverly Enterprises Inc., the nation's largest nursing home chain, Orsini relishes his freedom from highly structured corporate settings. He meets regularly with staff members for feedback and personally recruits people he wants working for him. Running an independent hospital gives him some space. "I am able to make changes. If I want to zig, I zig - I don't need three levels of OK to make it happen."

Look for more zigs as Lake Taylor heads into its third year with Orsini at the helm. With land available on the Norfolk site, he envisions building assisted- and independent-living facilities. He hopes to start at-home care services, because now other hospitals provide follow-up home visits to patients discharged from Lake Taylor. He wants a separate unit for severely disabled young adults and will ask the General Assembly to approve a new state Medicaid designation to help pay for it. And the hospital will keep working on its image - not surprising for Orsini, who twinned an undergraduate degree in journalism and public relations from Temple University with graduate work in public administration at Penn State. While Lake Taylor is a local success story, few outside of Norfolk are familiar with the turnaround. This month the hospital changed its name to Lake Taylor Transitional Care Hospital to stress the new "get-well" philosophy and to avoid confusion for patients looking for an emergency room, which it doesn't have.

Whatever changes Orsini pursues, expect him to emphasize maintaining a healthy bottom line, because that's what was ailing Lake Taylor in the first place. After all, the Orsini credo of "you come here sick, you get better," doesn't just apply to patients - it's working for his hospital as well.

Return to Virginia Business - November 2001