Guest guest Posted April 30, 2004 Report Share Posted April 30, 2004 What one must understand is that the so-called Public Utility Model is the product of one Jack Stout, an economist, and his wife, who have made a ridiculously good living from manipulating EMS services for the last 20 or so years. The PUM is founded upon the idea of system status management, a flawed doctrine that was never based upon anything other than economics. Patient care and public service were only incidental. The idea was to convince city councils, county commissioners, and city managers that a system constructed of smoke and mirrors would provide excellent patient care while expending the least amount of money possible. Clever enticements such as " all our medics will be NREMT " and other meaningless promises were used to mesmerize dumb city councilmen, county commissioners, and city managers into believing that contracts with private providers were the way to go. Artificial but high-sounding concepts such as responses within 8:59 90% of the time for urban responses and 12:59 90% of the time in rural responses came into being. They were based upon nothing other than Jack Stout's musings. None of the councilpersons, commissioners, or city managers ever had or now have even a clue about patient care issues, nor do they give a shit about those issues. Stop and think about it! What good will an 8:59 response do for a patient in cardiac arrest? Not much, even if good CPR has been done. But this figure was sold over and over to politicians who hadn't a clue and who fell for a great presentation, which Jack is perfectly capable of rendering. Thus emerged the concept of unit hour utilization which strives to force the maximum amount of work from each unit in the shortest amount of time, providing a stated amount of coverage for a very little expenditure, but not taking into consideration the level of care provided. Nobody who controls the finances actually gives a rats patoot about patient care. Care to challenge me on that? Git it on! Prove it to me. You can't. There are no considerations given by system status management to the personal comfort or needs of the employee; in fact, as Jack Stout once said to me over a lunch, the idea is to employ young people as medics, work the living shit out of them, burn them out in about 3 years, and replace them with new employees. That way you never have to give pay raises based on seniority and experience. Mr. Stout and his disciples fervently believe and adhere to this concept. Most of the people now running the big national EMS companies are Stoutians. The PUM combines the concept of SSM with a so-called " fail-safe " system where a pseudo public utility is formed which will control the provision of EMS through letting contracts to private contractors who will provide the services. The PUM typically has the ability to confiscate the rolling stock and supplies of a company that goes belly up and thus ensure continuity of service. That appeals to county commissioners, who know nothing about medicine but want to cover their butts if the contractee collapses. There ARE some PUMs that have good executive management, but they are sparse. The private contractors who bid on these contracts, big players like AMR, R/M, and others, typically " low ball " the bid in order to get the contract and then engage in a scheme to demand increased subsidies from the PUM in order to continue service. The examples of this scheme are legion. Top level managers in these services are paid corporate salaries in the multiple 6 figure ranges, and their allegiences are to their owners rather than the public. They are no different from the CEO of Halliburtin, or General Electric. Their output and accomplishments are never designed to provide excellent care to those they serve; rather their entire set of goals are intended to make money for the company and perpetuate their jobs. Since street medics are traditionally anti-union and cannot be enticed to band together for the common good, they are a corporate manager's dream. The managers exploit the workers to the max, and they play the game to remain in power by providing service as the very lowest cost to the PUM but still making a profit for the corporation. Into this mix goes Medicare/Medicaid abuse and fraud, abuse of employees by enacting schemes to deprive them of overtime, and so forth. At one time paramedics were a glut on the employment market. However, now, there are fewer and there is a shortage. But corporate providers will never respond to the market by paying better wages; rather, they will find ways to use lower level certified medics such as EMT-I and EMT basic to do the bulk of the work in their systems. Since medics are reluctant to join trade organizations, and since there is a real rift between medics who work for private contractors and FD based EMS medics, there is no unified action by medics to improve their lot. Medics who are outside the fire service typically make much less money, enjoy much less benefits, and have no job security.Medics who work for Fire typically refuse to become members of non-fire department organizatons. They don't see the need to do it. And, practically speaking, they're right. The private, hospital based, and 3rs service paramedic community encourages this by refusing to join or even be interested in organizations that might represent them. So what does the PUM do for EMS? Little except huge salaries for its managers. Somebody else please post a list of the PUMs. I'm not going to put my neck on the line any more than I have, but wouldn't it be interesting to know who the surviving PUMs are and who their managers are and where they came from. You'll find out that they all came from services that Jack Stout was hired to build and structure. Would somebody please come forward and attempt to justify the PUM. You've got the stage. Can you do it? Let's see. GG. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.