Military Review English Edition July-August 2016 | Page 14

(Photo courtesy of U.S. Army) Col. Evan Rentz (right), Brooke Army Medical Center (BAMC) commander, discusses hospital performance with some of his leadership team. As the largest Department of Defense medical treatment facility, BAMC has become an Army leader in assessing and managing organizational performance. Sessions to assess performance should be short and attended by key leaders, contain a balance of lagging and leading indicators, and be focused on the actions and decisions needed to fix underperforming areas. Brooke Army Medical Center (BAMC) at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas, exemplifies Army best practice in this area. Consider the number of metrics and goals that are required to manage the largest medical center in the Department of Defense. The leadership at BAMC must monitor a multitude of metrics that include medical accreditation, safety, patient satisfaction, quality, and cost, in addition to all the other mandatory requirements of an Army organization. Without a system to manage and act on all these assessments, any commander would quickly become overwhelmed with data, and—in that environment—failure to recognize a downward trend could have tragic consequences. To manage this flow of information, the BAMC leadership team has developed an extraordinarily sophisticated battle rhythm of assessments, each only taking an hour or less. On the same day of each week, the commander meets with his department heads and, 12 on a rotating basis, discusses areas of organizational importance. For example, on the first Tuesday of the month, human resources indicators such as the status of awards, evaluations, and civilian personnel actions are reviewed. On the second Tuesday of the month, operations indicators such as the status of taskings, quarterly training tasks, deployments, and professional-filler-system readiness are reviewed. On the third Tuesday of the month, the business plan is reviewed, and clinical departments brief their performance compared to business plan targets and address actions they are taking to correct any performance gaps. Finally, on the fourth Tuesday of the month, quality is addressed. Department heads provide an update on all open major events and risk-control actions. When reflecting on the success of the system, the current commander, Col. Evan Renz, remarked, “All meetings are tailored for efficiency, utilize ‘dashboards’ to emphasize only the relevant metrics in real time, and allow leaders to get back to their mission in less than one hour.”12 Optimize your processes and supporting information technology systems. This tenet focuses on July-August 2016  MILITARY REVIEW