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 In his seminal  work, The Fifth Discipline, Dr. Peter  Senge of MIT said:  "Most of us at one time or  another have been part of a great 'team'," a group of people who  functioned together in an extraordinary way - who trusted one another, who  complemented each  other's strengths and compensated for each other's  limitations, who had common goals that were larger than individual goals, and  who produced extraordinary results. I have met many people who have experienced  this sort of profound teamwork - in sports, or in the performing arts or in  business. Many say that they have spent much of their life looking for that  experience again. What they experienced was a learning organization. The team  that became great didn't start off great - it learned how to produce  extraordinary results.”  SETMA is such a team as this.  We did not start out that way, but we have  learned from one another, supported one another, grown with one another and  together, we have created a team which has become an extraordinary  organization. Together, we have done what none of us could have accomplished  alone. Our patients, our community and our profession, as well as we ourselves,  are benefiting from this team work.  In April, 1995,  four physicians in Beaumont, Texas began discussing the formation of a group  practice. One of the four had a fifth physician who worked for him. These  physicians had individually been in the private practice of either family  medicine or internal medicine from ten to twenty years. On Tuesday, August 1,  1995, SETMA opened the doors on this new adventure.  The primary  motive was to respond to the challenges of managed care which we all saw as a  challenge to our future. As the pressures of managed care increased, we pushed  back. We resented the need to hire people for dealing with referrals and  pre-authorizations. We saw managed care as an intrusion upon the way we had  practiced medicine all of our careers.  While we were  judicious in our utilization of studies, procedures, tests, etc., we still saw  the business-side of our practice as a function of doing more tests, more  procedures, more studies, etc. We measured and reported provider productivity  and from the first day, we produced a daily cash flow report which told us what  we owed, when we owed it, what our bank balances were, how much money we needed  to collect every day in order to sustain the practice, what each provider  produced and collected, etc. This focus on measuring, auditing, tracking and  reporting would become critical to our future. But gradually, we began to see  that what we were measuring, tracking and following were not the important  issues for our future or for the future of medicine. Before SETMA  understood that Twenty-First Century medicine could not be practiced with  pencil and paper (19th Century Medical Record Methodology) or with Dictation  and Transcription (20th Century Medical Record Methodology), both of which  drove us to Electronic Medical Records in 1998, SETMA understood that the  demands of 21st Century medicine would require a team approach to healthcare  delivery. All of the team building concepts in this chapter about SETMA’s beginnings  were enunciated in 1995 and 1996. They have been repeated and refined but they  have been part of the organizational spirit of SETMA from the beginning.  Formed by four  partners and from five practices, the new organization was made up of employees  who had loyalties to different employers, each of whom had different styles of  practice and all of which had worked independently for years. Creating a team  out of this group would be challenging. Some medical records were done by  handwriting and others were done by dictation and transcription. Some records  were organized alphabetically and others numerically. All practices had  laboratory equipment, none of which interacted with each other. One practice  had sacks of laboratory test results which had never been filed and another had  accordion files with thousands of pages of lab results which had never been  placed in the patients’ charts. It would take over ten thousand dollars of  paper products just to convert the five practices to a common paper filing  system. One provider  mentioned electronic medical records, but none of us knew what that looked  like. We needed a team but we had no tools with which to build a team.  Nevertheless, team building was the most important part of the early days of  SETMA. In reality, our efforts at team building were directed toward making our  “business” run better, but we shortly would discover that without that team  spirit and effort, we could not produce the results we desired in the delivery  of excellent healthcare. We discovered that 21st Century medicine could not be  performed excellently without all members of our practice working together to care  for patients. Roles and duties were going to have to change. Each member of  that team would need to gain new respect and appreciation for the contribution  of every other member of the team. As if our  differences were not enough of a barrier to the success of the new enterprise,  only four months after the founding of SETMA, on December 4, 1995, one of our  partners was injured in an automobile-pedestrian accident which resulted in  multiple fractures to both lower extremities. This was the first major  challenge to SETMA’s success; and, it was the first of what would be many  challenges to our commitment to a team-based practice. For the eight weeks our  colleague was out, I would be in my office one day and in his office the next.  No patient’s needs were unmet and all of our partner’s needs were fulfilled. It  was a strain, physically, financially and emotionally but we survived it, as  did he, and it made us stronger. Fourteen months  after we started SETMA, one of the founding partners filed an injunction  against the practice on a Wednesday afternoon. The papers were served after  five in the afternoon, making it impossible for us to deal with until the next  morning. However, by 10 AM the next morning, the injunction was removed and a  negotiated settlement was reach. The partner was gone and SETMA was stable. His  departure was disappointing and particularly the way in which it was done, but  it did not stop our efforts to build a team. From the outside, it looked like  the practice was unstable, but from the inside, it was prospering with  excitement, energy and commitment. Eight months  later, a provider left SETMA involuntarily. Soon, we became aware that that  provider had filed a Qui tam law suit against SETMA alleging extensive fraud  and criminal conduct by the founding partners of SETMA. While  there was no substance to the accusation, a fact which was determined by the  Federal Justice Department, the investigation dragged on for five years. If  there were any thought on our part of “giving up” on team building, this would  have done it, but it did not?.  And, as with any  new enterprise, there were financial pressures. One of the reasons for having  principles and commitments is that they guide you through difficulties. Without  them, compromise and mistakes will occur. SETMA was founded on principles of  business-decision making and they kept us from serious mistakes. There were  three principles: ethics, equity, eternity.  
  All       decisions had to be legal. We referred to that as ethics. All       decisions had to be fair. We referred to that as equitable. Decisions had       to be good for bother parties rather than being a zero-sum game with       winners and losers. All       decisions had to be moral or right. We refer to that as being eternally       significant. Early on, SETMA’s  principles were put to the test. In January, 1996, we arrived at the point that  we wanted to provide health insurance for our employees. After applications and  interviews were done, the insurance agent told me that there was one employee  whose health history was such that if we insured her our annual premium would  be $10,000 higher than it would be if she declined the insurance or if we  dismissed her. Intuitively, the right decision was obvious, but with defined principles  to follow, this was also an easy decision to make. I asked the agent, “Is there  any legal way that I could ask her to decline the insurance?” He said that  anything we said would be a violation of the law. I then said, “She is a  faithful employee and even after knowing that once all five practices were  together she will probably not have a job, she stayed with me. Do you think it  would be fair, to dismiss her over the cost of insurance?” He agreed that he  thought it would not be. Finally, I said, “Do you think that in the grand  scheme of things that this lady came to my practice without insurance which she  desperately needed and the in the providence of God that her needs were going  to be met by our insurance?” He agreed that that was possible. I told him, “Then  we will insure her.” This was at a time when $10,000 was a serious expenditure  for SETMA. He marveled. When I called her to tell her she would have insurance,  she wept. In June, when our new office was available, we kept her on, working  at a job beneath her training, but paying her professional salary. Almost one  year later, we discovered that the person who was performing the professional  services for which this lady was trained was incompetent. Without any  disruption to care, the lady with the insurance problems was able to move into  the job for which she was trained. We had blessed her and now she was blessing  us. SETMA’s history is filled with stories like this. The principles  upon which we founded SETMA and our responses to these pressures contributed to  our building a team. We began to know that we could not only survive pressures  but we could surmount them and succeed in the face of them. And, we could do  that internally with ourselves and externally with others with whom we would  work. We began to learn that team building not only involved how we related to  one anther but also to how we related to others outside of SETMA,  It took until  June 17, 1996, for all of SETMA to be moved into a single location from the  five offices which the merging practices had occupied. Upon moving into one  location, our efforts at team building accelerated and we began publishing The SETMA Sentinel which was “irregularly  and irreverently” published. The Sentinel was an in-house publication for the  building of team spirit and for the making of one office out of five different  medical practices. It evolved over several years to be a means of communicating  the core values, the philosophy, the growth, the vision and the mission of  SETMA. The Sentinel was also used to develop SETMA into a  “learning organization” and into a team which creates opportunities for growth  and development of individuals. Perhaps the intent of The Sentinel was best expressed by a statement from Peter Senge’s The Fifth Discipline:  “Max de Pree, retired CEO of Herman Miller,  speaks of a ‘covenant’ between organization and individual, in contrast to the  traditional ‘contract’ (‘an honest day’s pay in exchange for an honest day’s  work’). ‘Contracts,’ says De Pree, ‘are a small part of a relationship. A  complete relationship needs a covenant - a covenantal relationship rests on a  shared commitment to ideas, to issues, to values, to goals, and to management  processes - Covenantal relationships reflect unity and grace and poise. They are  expressions of the sacred nature of relationships.” (p. 145) SETMA’s goal was  and is for everyone in SETMA to rediscover the sacred in business relationships  based on mutual respect, common goals and a commitment to common values. The  Sentinel’s goal was to employ humor, inspiration, information and education as  a means to this end. Not only did the Sentinel record and preserve SETMA’s  history; it helped make SETMA’s history. More important,  however, than the written communication, was the living dialogue that formed  SETMA. At its formation, the community believed that two of the partners could  not work together. They seemed to be too different in their approaches to live  and to medicine. Informally, and without an intentional plan, these two  partners began to spend hours and hours talking after clinic hours. In October,  1997, the two attend the Medical Group Management Association meeting in  Washington, D.C. In a pre-conference Strategic-Planning seminar, they realized they  had the same goals and while their methods and manner were different, they had  the same goals, passions and resolve. This was a great contribution to the  building of the SETMA team. Success can only  take place in the face of the potential of failure, i.e., risk taking. In  September, 1995, we addressed team building and risk taking with President  Teddy Roosevelt’s 1887 observation about risk: “It is not the  critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or  where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the  man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and  blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, and comes short again and again,  because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually  try to do the deeds; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who  spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph  of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while  daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid  souls who know neither victory nor defeat.” SETMA’s formation  did risk failure, but we were determined that if we failed, it would not be  because we did not “try.” If we failed, it would not be because we did not set  the standard very high and try to scale the wall to reach the standard! If we  failed, it would not be because we sat on the sidelines and envied what others  were achieving. In the sixties, there was a wonderful song entitled, “To Dream  the Impossible Dream.” We were willing to dream what at the time seemed  impossible. And, we realized that it was possible not to be able to achieve  SETMA’s goals, which was: 
  To  create a clinic where our patients’ Healthcare is the Only Care To  fulfill SETMA’s private motto of “Doing Good While We Do Well” To  answer every call every day from every patient To  compassionately care for those for whom no one else cared To  honorably and honestly deal with every issue which came before SETMA To  review every laboratory and x-ray report the day that it is reported To  deal courteously and kindly with discourteous and unkind people To  instill dignity and respect into every person who contacts SETMA whether in  person or on the phone To  improve the health of our patients by expanding the services which are available  to them To  set the standard for quality health care in the Golden Triangle  SETMA took the  risk and succeeded. In the process of building a team, we succeeded. It is not  surprising that team building is both a process and an outcome of risk taking. The SETMA family  did not result from our having the same mother and father, but nevertheless, we  became a family. We were of different backgrounds, nationalities, faiths,  ethnicities, genders, and ages, but we became a family. We enjoyed watching  each member of the SETMA family grow and mature. Today, we continue still  delight in seeing what each colleague can become individually and what we all  can become collectively. As the SETMA team emerged, it was a delight. And, as a  family-team, we all became protective of each other. When one hurt, we all  hurt; when one rejoiced, we all rejoiced. As pointed out above, there were  disappointments. There were those who did not want to be part of SETMA’s team  or family. Some left quietly; others used their relationship with SETMA to  build other businesses before leaving. Over time, we discovered that everyone  that left, only strengthened SETMA in leaving.  We learned that  as a family: 
  We  were more interested in solutions than in blame. When we discovered a problem,  or when we experienced a problem, our first thought was, “How can I solve this  problem,” rather than, “Whose fault is this?” A family wants everyone to  succeed. Early in SETMA a memo stated, “You will never be as successful as when  you help someone else fulfill their potential while you are succeeding  yourself.” Blame is cheap and therefore worthless; solutions are expensive, and  therefore extremely valuable! We  wanted to support others when they were having a “bad hair day,” or when they  have a special, personal need. We wanted to support them with enthusiasm! We  wanted support them with an eye to making their load lighter, even if it meant  a brief increase in our load! In the long run, this approach to a team spirit will  make us all winners. We  wanted others, especially the guests of our family - who are our patients - to  think well of our family and to speak well of our family. It’s so much more  encouraging to our guests when they hear us say, “Can you believe how busy our  front office is, and yet they still get the job done. I’m sorry for your delay,  but they are a great team!” Rather than, “That dumb front office lost your  chart!” When we speak well of other members of our family, we really speak well  of ourselves. When we speak badly of them, our guests associate that negative  attitude with us as well. We  wanted our guests to have the best possible experience with our family.  Therefore, the first contact with us had to be positive. The receptionists had  to be friendly, attentive and helpful. No one could be ignored in our waiting  room. The file clerks needed to reflect an attitude of wanting to help the  entire team function well. They needed to speak kindly to one another, and they  needed to do their best to facilitate our guests having a good experience while  in SETMA’s office. We wanted our guest to look into our front office, and say,  “This is the kind of place I want to come to.”  We did not know it at  the time, but the culture and team we were building was the foundation for our  becoming a Patient-Centered Medical Home. The team leaders  of SETMA - some people call them physicians or health-care providers - but we  called them what they are, team leaders - needed to be leaders especially when  things are going badly. Rather than succumb to frustration and irritation, team  leaders needed to encourage those around them to avoid: 
  Anger - there is not a more destructive  emotion in a family, in that it reflects a low regard for the person-hood of  the one toward whom anger is expressed. Impatience - this is a condescending and  demeaning attitude, which suggests that the one toward whom impatience is being  expressed is less important than the one who is impatient. The truth is that  everyone in our family is important and no one is unimportant. If they a person  are not important, then they don’t need to be here. If they are here, they need  to be treated with the dignity and appreciation which their importance  requires. Rudeness - a rude and thoughtless person  reflects their own poor character, not anything about the one toward whom they  are rude. Rudeness is unthinkable from anyone, but especially from a leader. On  the anniversary of his hundredth birthday, friends and acquaintances of Albert  Einstein were asked to remember him. The most common memory was the he was KIND.  Rudeness and kindness are mutually exclusive. Selfishness - nothing is more unattractive in a  family than self-centeredness, which is reflected in ignoring the needs of  others in order to “get what you want.” Leadership means that you put aside  your needs for the benefit of others. Physicians, as team leaders, look to the  meeting of the needs of those who support them, even before team leaders' needs  are met. This often means neglecting the leader’s business, interests, pastimes  and friends until the needs of other team members are met, such as getting to  lunch on time at noon or getting home on time in the evening. A leader also  puts the interests of his or her guests above his own, which means delaying  other activities and treating his or her guests with preferential attention.  A leader is one  who keeps his or her cool when everyone else is loosing theirs. A leader is not  one who occupies a “position,” but one who overcomes pressure, rises above it  and shows others how to do the same. A leader is one whom others can “lean on”  when they are down, discouraged or disappointed. Every team member, no matter  what their position, has the potential of being a leader. And, leadership is  what a company looks for when rewarding service. A team cannot  exist without leaders, but leaders are not commanders; they are colleagues,  examples and they are those who see something which needs to be done and they  do it. By example, they lead members of their team to become leaders  themselves.  “Momentum” and  “inertia” explain why it takes less energy to maintain a course and speed once  they have been achieved, than it does to gain that speed and course. In  1995-1997, SETMA had both “momentum” - it would take tremendous energy and  effort to stop what we were doing - and “inertia” - SETMA, LLP had a tendency  to maintain the course and speed which had been established. Every day, each  one of us realized how much easier it was to maintain what we had started than  it was to “get it started” to begin with, i.e., that which seemed to take such  a huge effort, had become a daily routine. 
  The  effort required to answer every call every day from every patient seems to be  less and less every day that we do it. The  effort to get all lab, correspondence, hospital records, consultations and  other materials into the files got to be less and less every day. (This was  while SETMA was still on paper records, but our commitments to excellence made  the adoption of electronic patient records both inevitable and essential.) The  effort to see patients within reasonable proximity to their appointment time  became less and less burdensome every day that we did it.  Teamwork requires  momentum in order to sustain its work; team leaders are a kind of “fly wheel,”  which provided the momentum to sustain the work of the team. Success doesn’t  take much more energy to achieve than failure; your goals just have to be  different. Our goals, defined in 1995-1998, were: 
  To  do well, while we are doing good. “Doing well” is our reward for “doing good,”  “doing good” is what we do for our patients. To  establish a work environment where every employee finds personal fulfillment  and satisfaction.  SETMA’s mission  was to creatively, collegially and cooperatively build a model of excellence in  the delivery of primary-health care services to Southeast Texas, such that  every employee can be proud to be a part of this unique experiment. SETMA learned a  great deal about team building when on June 17, 1996, Certified Family Nurse  Practitioner, Mrs. Sandra Amen Fowler began working with SETMA. Mrs. Fowler  represented a new dimension of health-care provider. We delighted that she  chose to join the SETMA team. Because the concept of a Nurse Practitioner was  novel to us, the following explanation was sent to our staff. 
  Unless  Mrs. Fowler instructs you otherwise, her position as an independent health-care  provider would make it appropriate for you to address her by her title, rather  than by her first name. All  of us will be learning about Mrs. Fowler’s professional capabilities and about  this new relationship. The partners of SETMA welcome Mrs. Fowler as a  colleague, and would like you to extend her your full cooperation and the  courtesies which her achieving the professional status of CFNP warrants. Mrs.  Fowler is a team member of SETMA, LLP, and like the physicians of SETMA, sees  her role as both team leader and facilitator of your success and fulfillment in  this organization. Introduce yourself to her, and let her know what a friendly  and supportive team SETMA is.  The physicians  were eager to have other Nurse Practitioners join SETMA as soon as possible.  All of SETMA was encouraged to enjoy a collegial relationship of teaching and  learning in relationship to Mrs. Fowler, the Nurse Practitioners who are  training with SETMA, and the Nurse Practitioners whom we are recruiting to  joining SETMA. Mrs. Fowler  provided the opportunity for SETMA to expand our concept of a team. Nothing  illustrated this more than an event which occurred on the second day, Mrs.  Fowler worked with SETMA.  As SETMA’s CEO  stepped into an examination room, Mrs. Fowler had just finished drawing blood.  Startled, she dropped the tube of blood and it broke. Immediately, she stooped  down and SETMA’s CEO said, “What are you doing?” She said that she was going to  clean up the blood. He told her to stand up and said, “I am going to clean up  the blood (which he did).” He added, “I want you to learn that you are not here  to do what I don’t want to do. You are not here as a scrub nurse. You are here  as a healthcare provider who has a license to practice medicine within certain  parameters. You are my colleague. I will never ask you to do anything which I  am not willing to do. And, I will never ask you to do anything which is not  legal, ethical and moral. Therefore, I will always expect you to do what I  ask.”  This established  a relationship of mutual respect between all members of SETMA’s team which has  existed ever since. In less than six months, Mrs. Fowler reached and exceeded  the goals which she and her colleagues set for her participation in SETMA.  During a difficult time in SETMA’s development, she functioned outstandingly.  In an in-house publication, the following note was sent to all of SETMA, “When  you see Mrs. Fowler, congratulate her on a job well done!! Let her know how  proud we are of her, and how proud we are that she is a part of the SETMA  family!!” All in a  supervisory role were asked to follow the following simple guidelines. We  believed that doing such would contribute to our team building efforts by  making everyone’s job more pleasant and fulfilling. The request reflected the  respect we wish for each team member to have toward others and the expectation  that anyone and everyone could become a leader in SETMA: 
  Invite  creative input about their areas of responsibility from those you manage. Involve  everyone in your department in problem solving. Be  kind to those with whom you work, and be sensitive to their feelings.  These attitudes  reflect SETMA’s belief that leadership has more to do with serving others than  you having others serve you. WE believed that how we related to one another  would communicate to our patients - the guests of SETMA’s family - to know how  pleased we are that they chose SETMA by letting them see how effectively this  family works together and above all how much we value and appreciate one  another.  We emphasized  that we should never minimize how important it is for each of us to be a  positive, constructive part of SETMA’s team. We acknowledged that such a team  does not happen without a great deal of effort on everyone’s part. The  attitudes identified above would turn into action through which building such a  team would occur. The actions are: 
  Doing  more than is expected of you, and expecting nothing for it. Doing  someone else’s work when they are overwhelmed and expecting no thanks for it.  And, also, not expecting others to do your work. Interesting dynamic isn’t it?  When everyone is operating on these two principles, you will be amazed how much  work can get done, and how “good you will feel” about having done it. Working  by these principles results in the attitude: “I’m going to do this now, because  if I don’t someone else will do it or will have to do it!” rather than the  attitude, “If I just procrastinate or neglect this, someone else will do it.” You’ll  be amazed at how your job satisfaction will increase when you work in an  environment where everyone is trying to do the job so that someone else doesn’t  have to do it. Seeing  pressures and problems as opportunities for non-verbally expressing your  appreciation for others. Not  complaining when you feel pressured, or when you are asked to do something,  which you would rather not do. Anyone can complain and cause dissension, that’s  easy. But, it takes a creative and constructive person to turn their  irritations into opportunities to promote teamwork and team spirit. Remember,  the best insurance which you have against layoffs is to make yourself such an  integral part of the SETMA team that you would be the last person anyone would  ever think about “letting go.”  A team is built  by the response team members have to stress, problems and crisis. They may be  little, like being asked to do something you don’t like to do, or they may be  larger, like feeling overwhelmed by the amount of work in a day, or they may be  huge like having a child critically ill, but however large, when responded to  positively, they can build character and team spirit. The process of  team building never ceases. On Nov 22, 2012, at 4:51 AM, SETMA’s CEO sent the  following note to all of SETMA’s team: “Yesterday, Dr. Caesar Deiparine and I  decided that as our Thanksgiving Gift to our associates we would see all of the  patients at Baptist on Thanksgiving Day. We have done that - all of Baptist has  been seen.” “I hope that you  learn from this that ‘random acts of kindness,’ are the most valuable gifts to  others. The only debt you incur in receiving this gift is that you are now  obligated to do the same, not necessarily for us but for others. On this  Thanksgiving day, we hope that this gives you an additional reason to thank God  for your life and for your living.” When one of  SETMA’s physicians responded with a “thank you;” the following response was  sent:“Thank you; the only appropriate repayment for  a random act of kindness is gratitude and that some day, you extended to others  your own random act of kindness.”
 The principle was  explained that a “random act of kindness” cannot be repaid to the one who acted  kindly but it must be repaid to another, creating in the team a culture of  “random acts of kindness” which are repaid to others. From one  perspective, the most important character trait which will help make us  successful is “flexibility.” The characteristics of flexibility are: 
  Sensing  and adapting to the wishes of other members of the team Conserving  my time and energy to complete my priorities as a member of the team Remaining  free to accept the best course of action Changing  plans if unexpected conditions require it.  Understanding the  application of, “sensing and adapting to the wishes of the one I serve,”  depends upon understanding who it is that “I serve.” In reality, there are four  groups SETMA serves: 
  We all are here to SERVE our clients,  our customers, whom we call “patients.” All employees are here to serve the  employers at SETMA. The employers must understand, if they  are going to be as successful as they can be, that they are the servants of  their employees and that their employees are the servants of their fellow  employees.In fact, everyone is here to serve  everyone else.  At SETMA, through  the principles of and commitment to professionalism, and now through the  philosophy of the patient-centered medical home, SETMA colleagues want to go  beyond professionalism to where we care personally and individually for and  about each person who seeks care at SETMA.  When the attitude  of a servant is adopted by everyone -- especially the owners -- rather than an  entitlement attitude of privilege and prerogative -- the creative dynamic of  the organization becomes constructive, compassionate and concentrated on  success. The next element of understanding this aspect of “flexibility” is  determining what “wishes” means in the phrase “adapting to the wishes of the  one I serve.” In the work place, most employees' desires revolve around: 
  Being  treated with dignity and respect. Making  a contribution, which instills within one’s self the sense of worth and  achievement. Believing  and knowing that what they are doing is important and necessary to the  organization. Being  recognized for the quality of their contribution, and particularly having  special recognition for doing more than is required. Being  able to achieve their personal financial goals within the context of the  choices they have made for their lives. Having  a work place which gives something back rather just taking everything away. And,  having a work place which is physically and emotionally bearable as to the work  load. This generally is reflected in the feeling that there is an endpoint at  which time or place “the job is done,” and that a sense of resolution and  completion can be sensed.  The second aspect  of “flexibility” is “conserving my time and energy to complete my priorities.”  At SETMA, our “priorities” are: 
  The  health and well-being of our patients. The  success of our organization. The  maintaining of professionalism, placing the patient’s interests first, which  reflects our character and commitment.  This is just  another way of saying that our priority is “doing good, while we do well.” How  can we “conserve our time and energy to complete our priorities”? 
  By  focusing on the task, and by not forgetting what we are here for. By  not allowing others to “steal our time.” Time thieves are not malicious, and  sometimes they are very pleasant. For employees that means limiting personal  calls and concerns to the necessary minimum during work time. For employers,  that means assigning certain times for personal business, and not allowing  personal business to interfere with company priorities on company time. By  knowing how to “get off the telephone,” and/or how to end conversations  politely in order to “get back on target” and/or to “get back on schedule.” By  giving friends and family the opportunity to participate in the success of our  organization, as they contribute their sensitivity to our time demands while we  are in the office. And, by gently reminding them of those demands if they  become insensitive to it. By  constantly focusing on the task at hand so that we can in a friendly and  effective way “get the job done,” as we let others know that we really care  about them.  The third aspect  of “flexibility” is “remaining free to accept the best course of action.” In  another field of enterprise, an insightful book was written about a dying  organization. The cause of death was identified by the title of the book, which  reflected the lack of “flexibility” in the organization. The title of the book  was, We Have Never Done It That Way Before! Resisting change, because “we have  never done it that way before” is the antithesis of “flexibility,” and may kill  an organization more effectively than any other mindset.  We seldom  associate resistance to change as the lack of freedom, but the one who is truly  free is the one who is willing and able to welcome change when that change: 
  Is  a “better” way of doing things. Contributes  to the well-being of the organization. Enables  me to “serve” others by changing to make their task easier.  The fourth aspect  of “flexibility” is “changing plans if unexpected conditions require it.” In  SETMA, no aspect of “flexibility” is more characteristic of our day.  Adjustments are not daily or hourly, but almost minute to minute. And, this  aspect of “flexibility” addresses the ability to make smooth and rapid  transitions from one task to another. Nothing will make an employee more  valuable to SETMA or a healthcare provider more productive than the ability to  make such transitions. Time thieves often exist in the creases created by  transitions between tasks. They are squeezed out and are unable to do their  dirty deeds when transitions are smoothly made. One employer  addressed his goal and how he viewed the people with whom he worked. He states: “A man I know owns a meatpacking plant in the  Midwest. His company’s motto is ‘People don’t make sausages; sausages make  people.’ That is, the purpose of the company is not to manufacture a product.  The purpose is to give the people who work there the sense of competent, valued  men and women. This mean products are by-products. Work lets us feel  needed...Work lets us feel creative...I would even insist that when work is  done in the right frame of mind, work can be holy.  “There is a linguistic connection between the  words ‘work’ and ‘worship.’ Work can be a way of serving God. Whatever we do  for a living, we can learn to see it not only for the money we earn, but in  terms of the blessings and benefits it brings to other people...a man who works  for a moving company brings a religious approach to his work...moving is  stressful for most people. They are unsure about what awaits them in their new  community. When he makes the experience of packing and shipping their  belongings a pleasant, stress-free one by his attitude, when he speaks to them  of the new opportunities which are theirs, he believes he is serving God by  making those people less fearful...a lingerie saleswoman...sanctifies her  otherwise ordinary job by being especially sensitive and compassionate to the  mastectomy patients who come to her store....” Lessons SETMA’s  Developmental History has taught us about Teamwork  
  Team  building is not easy. Team  building is imperative. Team  building requires relentlessness. Team  building requires genuine caring for and valuing the contribution of each  member of the team. Team  building requires leaders, but those leaders really are the servants of all  members of the team. Becoming  a member of a team is one of the most satisfying experiences of life.  This is SETMA’s  culture; this is SETMA’s concept of teamwork and this is SETMA’s declaration  that excellence in team work is not a destination at which we ultimately arrive  but a process which we continually pursue. |