PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The best hospitals are run by physicians

The best hospitals are run by physicians
2011-07-07
(Press-News.org) Top-performing hospitals are typically ones headed by a medical doctor rather than a manager. That is the finding from a new study of what makes a good hospital.

The research, to be published in the elite journal Social Science and Medicine, is the first of its kind. Its conclusions run counter to a modern trend across the western world to put generally trained managers -- not those with a medical degree -- at the helm of hospitals. This trend has been questioned, particularly by the Darzi Report, which was commissioned by the U.K. National Health Service, but until now there has been no clear evidence.

Amanda Goodall PhD, the author of the study, and a senior researcher at the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) in Bonn, Germany, constructed a detailed database on 300 of the most prominent hospitals in the United States. She then traced the professional background and personal history of each leader. The research focused particularly on hospital performance in the fields of cancer, digestive disorders and heart surgery.

The study shows that hospital quality scores are approximately 25% higher in physician-run hospitals than in the average hospital.

Goodall said: "Over the last few decades there has been a growing tendency for hospital boards to appoint managers as CEOs. These findings raise some warning signs over that trend."

She said: "According to the latest data, outstanding hospitals tend to be those run by somebody with a medical degree. I was surprised by the strength of the pattern. It seems that age-old conventions about having doctors in charge -- currently an idea that is out of favor around the world -- may turn out to have been right all along."

Barry Silbaugh M.D., the CEO of American College of Physician Executives, commented: "We are watching Dr Goodall's research carefully because it seems to finally provide a real evidence-base for physician leadership. This is something we have long supported."

Goodall stressed that more research would be needed before cause-and-effect could be truly understood. The study, a cross-sectional one, uses data from 2009. "This is an intriguing pattern but these snap-shot results for a single point in time do not prove that doctors make the best heads of hospitals, although they are consistent with that claim. More research following a range of hospitals through time is urgently needed," she said.



INFORMATION:

The new study, "Physician-Leaders and Hospital Performance: Is There an Association?", by Amanda H. Goodall, is in press at Social Science and Medicine. It can be downloaded free of charge as from the IZA website (www.iza.org) as IZA Discussion Paper No. 5830: http://ftp.iza.org/dp5830.pdf


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
The best hospitals are run by physicians

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Discovering the bigger picture in chromosomes

2011-07-07
MANHATTAN, Kan. -- By mapping various genomes onto an X-Y axis, a team comprised mostly of Kansas State University researchers has found that Charles Darwin and a fruit fly -- among other organisms -- have a lot in common genetically. Their discovery, "Chromosome Size in Diploid Eukaryotic Species Centers on the Average Length with a Conserved Boundary," was recently published in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution. It details a project that compared 886 chromosomes in 68 random species of eukaryotes -- organisms whose cells contain a nucleus and are enclosed ...

Eye of Gaia: Billion-pixel camera to map Milky Way

Eye of Gaia: Billion-pixel camera to map Milky Way
2011-07-07
The largest digital camera ever built for a space mission has been painstakingly mosaicked together from 106 separate electronic detectors. The resulting "billion-pixel array" will serve as the super-sensitive 'eye' of ESA's Galaxy-mapping Gaia mission. While the naked human eye can see several thousand stars on a clear night, Gaia will map a billion stars within our own Milky Way Galaxy and its neighbours over the course of its five-year mission from 2013, charting their brightness and spectral characteristics along with their three-dimensional positions and motions. In ...

Ohio Woman Reaches Lawsuit Settlement of Post-Surgical Complications Resulting from Alleged Hospital Negligence

2011-07-07
An Ohio women and her husband recently settled a lawsuit against a Toledo area hospital for injuries suffered in a post-surgery fall soon after undergoing a knee arthroplasty procedure at said hospital. The fall led to an array of physical complications for the woman, who almost needed to amputate her leg to survive post-surgery complications stemming from the accident. According to the complaint filed in the Court of Common Pleas, Lucas County, Ohio, the patient was left unattended, out of her hospital bed, less than two hours after her reconstructive knee surgery; ...

Steps needed to reduce likelihood that pilot commuting practices could pose safety risk, but too little data now to support regulation

2011-07-07
WASHINGTON -- Commuting practices among airline pilots could potentially contribute to their fatigue, and because fatigue can reduce performance, pilots, airlines, and the Federal Aviation Administration should take steps to reduce the likelihood that commuting will pose a safety risk, says a new report from the National Research Council. However, there are currently too little data to determine the extent to which it poses a safety risk or whether commuting should be regulated. The FAA should support a study to gather data on how commuting practices are related to risk ...

Newberry SC Hotel Offers Special Discount for Senior Guests to Enjoy

Newberry SC Hotel Offers Special Discount for Senior Guests to Enjoy
2011-07-07
The Holiday Inn Express & Suites Newberry South Carolina Hotel offers a special Senior Discount for guests age 62 and older. The Senior Discount is available to qualifying guests with a valid ID or membership card to a retired person's organization. Seniors, and other guests, are sure to enjoy this Newberry SC Hotel's safe, comfortable and convenient atmosphere. Newberry is a charming city located approximately 40 miles north-west of Columbia, the capital of South Carolina. The Holiday Inn Express & Suites Newberry is conveniently situated near historic downtown ...

Can gulls smell out a good partner?

2011-07-07
Male and female kittiwakes smell different from each other, according to research by Sarah Leclaire from the Centre national de la recherche scientifique at the Université Paul Sabatier in France and her team. Their work also suggests that the birds' body odors might signal the genetic makeup of individual birds, and could be used in mate choice to assess the genetic compatibility of potential partners. The study is published in the July issue of Springer's journal Naturwissenschaften – The Science of Nature. Birds protect their feathers by preening them with the secretions ...

Socioeconomic status as child dictates response to stress as adult

2011-07-07
When faced with threat, people who grew up poor are more likely to make risky financial choices in search of a quick windfall, according to new research from the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management. Published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, "The Influence of Mortality and Socioeconomic Status on Risk and Delayed Rewards: A Life History Approach" by Carlson School assistant professor of marketing Vladas Griskevicius found that people respond to feeling threatened differently depending on whether people grew up in relatively resource-scarce ...

Berkeley Lab researchers apply NMR/MRI to microfluidic chromatography

Berkeley Lab researchers apply NMR/MRI to microfluidic chromatography
2011-07-07
By pairing an award-winning remote-detection version of NMR/MRI technology with a unique version of chromatography specifically designed for microfluidic chips, researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have opened the door to a portable system for highly sensitive multi-dimensional chemical analysis that would be impractical if not impossible with conventional technologies. Alexander Pines, a faculty senior scientist in Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division and the Glenn T. Seaborg Professor of Chemistry ...

Atlanta SEO Company Cardinal Web Solutions Publishes Article Explaining Google +1 Button

Atlanta SEO Company Cardinal Web Solutions Publishes Article Explaining Google +1 Button
2011-07-07
Atlanta SEO company Cardinal Web Solutions has published an original article on the Google +1 button, and its potential effect on search engine optimization and pay-per-click advertising. This most recent article is part of an ongoing effort by Cardinal Web Solutions to keep business owners informed on changes in the industry that could affect their Internet marketing campaigns. The +1 button, which Google has explained will be used to connect users with more relevant content, is viewed by the industry as Google's response to Facebook's "Like" button. The +1 ...

Climate change forces early spring

2011-07-07
Spring is hailed as the season of rebirth, but if it comes too early, it can threaten the plants it is meant to welcome. A University of Alberta study shows that climate change over the past 70 years has pushed some of the province's native wildflowers and trees into earlier blooming times, making them more vulnerable to damaging frosts, and ultimately, threatening reproduction. U of A PhD candidate Elisabeth Beaubien and her supervisor, professor Andreas Hamann of the Department of Renewable Resources, studied the life cycle of central Alberta spring blooms, spanning ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

TTUHSC’s Logsdon receives grant to study vascular side of traumatic brain injuries

Pusan National University researchers develop game-changing method to create safer, long-lasting lithium-ion batteries

Scientists uncover key to stable, high-performance, and long-life sodium-ion batteries

Age and gender influence food preferences and dietary patterns

Man’s best friend could be the spotted lanternfly’s worst enemy

Human eggs power down to protect themselves

NIST releases trove of genetic data to spur cancer research

Adults with heart-healthy metrics had better health from head to toe

Your lungs in chip form

Optimal heart health in children cuts risk of chronic diseases in adulthood

What makes debris flows dangerous

Uranium-based catalyst turns air nitrogen into ammonia

How the brain turns our intended words into the sounds of speech

Light reveals secrets encoded in chiral metasurfaces

Protecting childhood mental health after preterm birth: key factors identified

An aggressive childhood cancer case opens new avenues for advanced cell therapies

Amino acids play a key role in how cells respond to drugs

Deafness and loneliness pave the way for dementia

Food preferences, stigma among reasons students don’t eat free school meals

Depression often associated with early menopause: Why some women are at greater risk

Universal method unlocks entropy calculation for liquids

Induction effect of fluorine-grafted polymer-based electrolytes for high-performance lithium metal batteries

Intensity of opioid use appears to be higher in fentanyl era

'Adventurous’ vs ‘homebody’ anemonefish – research reveals key influences in diversification and evolution

Only Amazon MTurk’s ‘master’ workers provide reliable research data quality

Scientists find the first ice core from the European Alps that dates back to the last Ice Age

Yoga, Tai Chi, walking and jogging may be best forms of exercise for insomnia

Medical tourism for bariatric/weight reduction surgery needs urgent regulation

Funding for lifesaving global health programs forecasted to reach 15-year low, threatening to reverse decades of progress

Exercise could ease symptoms for people with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, but support and adequate guidance is lacking

[Press-News.org] The best hospitals are run by physicians