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By George W. Wiley
The Southern
California Orthopedic Institute is built on a foundation of respect and
tolerance among its partners. That is what the partners themselves say - and
in 27 years, not one of them has left the group.
 From
left, Jonathan S. Jaivin, MD, FACS; Stephen J. Snyder, MD; and
Richard D. Ferkel, MD, of the Southern California Orthopedic
Institute (SCOI), Van Nuys, Calif. |
Synergy, energy, diversity, dedication - the list could go on describing
the Southern California Orthopedic Institute (SCOI). Somewhere along the
way, one would have to toss in a little obsession, for it has taken
something like an obsession to create SCOI. After 27 years, the Institute
has 27 partners, and each of them is what founding partner James M. Fox,
MD, describes as "not exactly a shrinking violet." Partnership meetings
can be raucous and acrimonious. But when the dust settles, everyone agrees
on majority rule.
"This is a democracy," says Fox. Adds current managing partner,
Jonathan S. Jaivin, MD, FACS, "There's no question our meetings are
lively, but there's a lot of respect for seniority in our group, for those
who have 'been there and done that.' On the other end, the older guys have
a vested interest in the younger doctors as their own practices slow
down."
A Featured Player
SCOI (it rhymes with "Joey") is big, one of the biggest orthopedic
clinics in North America - and the largest on the West Coast. If UCLA, USC,
and the Kerlan-Jobe Clinic rule on the other side of the mountains in Los
Angeles proper, SCOI is the featured player in the San Fernando Valley.
(Note: If the San Fernando Valley had succeeded in its bid last year to
secede from Los Angeles, SCOI would have become part of the fifth largest
city in the nation. That gives some idea of the domain in which SCOI has
established itself.)
The mother ship in the SCOI network is the 90,000-square-foot,
four-story headquarters in Van Nuys. The headquarters sits adjacent to
Valley Presbyterian Hospital. SCOI is not affiliated with the hospital,
but it is a convenient locale for patients who need overnight care
following minor surgery, and it is one of the hospitals at which SCOI
physicians perform major surgery. SCOI had its headquarters specially
designed and built in 1991. It is home to a series of functionally
designed enclaves providing an array of services - from an MRI suite to
physical therapy to pediatrics, from vocational rehabilitation to
physiatry, from pain management to arthroscopic and other ambulatory
surgeries. The whole fourth floor is a surgery center. Live reptiles and a
tarantula are on view behind glass to entertain children in the pediatrics
waiting room. Hand surgeons, plastic surgeons, spine and pediatric
specialists - SCOI physicians run the gamut. But from the beginning, the
core focus has been sports medicine. "The only thing we don't treat is
orthopedic bone tumors," says Richard D. Ferkel, MD, one of SCOI's first
five partners. "We feel those cases are better left to the universities."
In addition to its mammoth headquarters, SCOI has seven satellite
offices. Most are in outlying areas of the San Fernando Valley, but one is
in Bakersfield, a city of 175,000 about 80 miles north of Van Nuys. The
most recent satellite to be added, manned largely by Fox, is in Beverly
Hills. The idea behind the satellites is to broaden SCOI's catchment area,
but it is also to extend care to patients who may not otherwise have
access to the specialists SCOI provides. "In some of our communities, we
have been the first to do ACL [anterior cruciate ligament] arthroscopy,"
says managing partner Jaivin. Jaivin, who travels to the West Hills and
Valencia satellites, says he loves "the joy of the small office feel" in
the satellites as opposed to the "industrial" setting of the headquarters.
Ferkel, one of those who journeys to Bakersfield, adds, "People bring in
their pies and their pickles - I enjoy it very much."
It would be a mistake to think of SCOI as homespun, however. That is
only one of its facets. Another facet can be seen in display cases that
line the halls in the headquarters building. On view are dozens of
textbooks or chapters of textbooks authored by SCOI physicians. Also on
view are dozens of devices and appliances invented by the same doctors,
who hold hundreds of patents. The group has international impact. SCOI
physicians travel the world lecturing on surgical techniques they have
developed. Jaivin calls this focus on research and education "a university
setting without the controls," and he says young physicians admitted into
the practice are conditioned to think they should publish and lecture. "We
generate more papers per year than we did out of our residency programs,"
says Jaivin. So pronounced is the emphasis on research that one of SCOI's
400 employees is a medical editor who helps the doctors get materials
ready to publish. Jaivin says SCOI is too businesslike for true academics,
and too academic for pure business doctors. "This place isn't for
everybody," says Jaivin, "but becoming part of SCOI has surpassed my own
expectation of what my career would be in orthopedics. I can practice what
I'm best trained for, foot and ankle surgery, with highly skilled and
available partners in the other specialties."
 Hand,
upper extremity surgery, and fracture care specialist Gregory J.
Hanker, MD, in the OR. |
The Vision
In the 1970s, Fox was one of the first sports medicine fellows ever,
when he completed a fellowship at the Kerlan-Jobe Clinic in Los Angeles.
Fox, the son of a physician, says he has known since third grade that he
would become a physician. A year after his fellowship, Fox spent 2 years
in the Air Force as a surgeon at Kessler Air Force Base in Mississippi. He
was one of four fellowship-trained orthopedists on the base. He says the
experience changed his vision of how orthopedics should be practiced.
According to Fox, "Back then, everybody was trained to do everything.
At Kerlan-Jobe everybody had done everything. But in the Air Force I was
grouped with subspecialists. I thought what a phenomenal situation for the
patient and what a security blanket - why should I do a hand surgery, for
instance, that I might do once every 6 months, when down the hall was a
guy who did it twice last week. I realized this was the way I wanted to
practice in my professional life. I wanted to surround myself with talent
that could supplement my abilities." By 1976, Fox, a knee specialist, was
back in Van Nuys laying the groundwork for SCOI. In the service he had
been given access to an arthroscope - and he was captivated by the device
and determined to learn how to use it. Fox's father had been a medical
professor and an expert on infectious diseases. Fox wanted the same sort
of intellectual rigor he had observed as a child to characterize SCOI.
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The Business of SCOI
SCOI is organized as a partnership, and managing partner Jonathan
Jaivin, MD, says each partner gets one equally weighted vote. When
it comes to approving expenditures, Jaivin says he is empowered to
spend up to $10,000, after which a management committee must give
the nod. Overhead is reimbursed from fees based on a system that
distributes some costs equally to all partners, while others are
weighted by specialty. "The equal segment hits all the same, while
in the other segment the high-earners pay more because they use
more. This is the best Solomon-like decision we have been able to
make," Jaivin says.
When it comes to the specifics of SCOI finance, the grosses and
nets are proprietary. Cindy Lesonsky, CPA, is SCOI's CFO and CEO,
positions she attained in 1997 and 1999, respectively, after working
as SCOI's controller for nearly a decade.
Lesonsky says SCOI physicians see about 8,000 patients per month,
including visits to the satellites. Medicare patients make up about
10% of the patient load, while workers' compensation cases account
for an additional 30%. She says economies of scale allowed the group
to fund its surgical center, and all capitalized expenditures, such
as construction, are accomplished with conventional financing.
According to Lesonsky, there are many advantages for SCOI because of
its size. "A group this size is very attractive to a vendor. If I
need x-ray or office supplies, most vendors will want to bid with
us."
SCOI has no contracts with HMOs and no capitated contracts,
Lesonsky says. Most of its contracts are with insurance carriers and
PPOs. Contracting with PPOs is a process SCOI is just starting.
"Some will negotiate with us and some won't," she says.
She says reimbursement generally is on the decline. "The
physicians are working harder than they ever have, but medicine is
changing." Workers' compensation reimbursements are particularly
troublesome, she says.
Lesonsky says the future for SCOI may see an expansion of imaging
and physical therapy services to some of the satellites. Building
another ambulatory surgical center is also under discussion, she
adds.
"What makes my job most challenging is keeping everybody on the
same page," she says, "when they are at different stages in their
lives and at different stages of their practice."
- George Wiley |
SCOI Fellowships
Within a year of its founding, SCOI had its first fellow. For several
years, it offered only one fellowship. Now it offers five fellowships per
year in sports medicine. Two other hand surgery fellows it cosponsors with
the University of Southern California Medical School. The fellows are
selected from more than 140 applicants annually. Richard Ferkel was one of
SCOI's first fellows and one of only three SCOI fellows to later join the
practice. In addition to conducting his shoulder, foot, knee, and ankle
sports medicine practice, Ferkel is in charge of the SCOI sports medicine
fellowship program. He calls it a labor of love. "As you teach, you have
to be better. Teaching makes you a better doctor. You need to have a
scientific basis for what you are saying or you're going to be
challenged."
A look at Ferkel's range of activities is one example of why the word
obsessive can be applied to SCOI doctors. Ferkel does not sleep much. He
says he is up every night until 1:30 am and then rises again at 5:45 am.
"I've been doing it for years and years," he says. Ferkel needs the extra
time. He has published many articles, authored a textbook on foot and
ankle arthroscopy, and co-edited a text on prosthetic ligament
reconstruction of the knee. He also has his own practice. He teaches at
UCLA. He runs SCOI's fellowship program, pairing the five fellows
one-on-one with mentor doctors. Ferkel started an athletic training
program at SCOI, and he still acts as team physician for three high
schools and a community college. "Some weekends I cover three football
games," he says. Between them, SCOI doctors, with the help of the fellows,
provide physician coverage for 14 high schools and two community colleges.
On Saturday mornings, SCOI holds a free diagnostic sports clinic with free
x-rays and examinations. On Wednesdays, there is a similar free clinic for
members of the student football teams.
Ferkel says working with the teams is great training for the fellows.
"As a sports medicine doctor, you have to take care of athletes." For
SCOI, it is a way of building a patient base also. At least it used to be.
"As you've been in practice with these young kids, they come back to you
years later with their wives and families," Ferkel says. "Now, it doesn't
affect my practice, but initially it was a practice-building exercise. I
do it now because I love doing it."
The SCOI fellows also are expected to do research and write it up. This
year the research projects involve follow-ups on SCOI patients who have
undergone reconstructive shoulder surgery and cartilage reconstruction.
"We want the fellows to become experts in the techniques that we use,"
Ferkel says, "and you need to have a big commitment to do what we do."
CLAS - Meet Alex
Put Stephen J. Snyder, MD, back in the Idaho farm country where he grew
up and he might look right at home on a tractor. He has an easygoing,
casual way of relating with people. But under the surface, Snyder is not
all that easygoing. He is driven. He is a world-renowned arthroscopic
shoulder surgeon. He might also be the most obsessive of SCOI's
physicians. Snyder's obsession has been to find a way without using
cadavers to teach hands-on shoulder arthroscopy - a difficult art he says it
took him 10 years to learn. "The shoulder is a complex joint," he says.
"You can get lost in there. It's real tough. When it comes to anchors,
knots, and sutures, there aren't a lot of shortcuts."
Snyder joined SCOI in 1981. He was fascinated by arthroscopy after he
saw Fox using the device on knee patients. "I thought, what an opportunity
for the shoulder." That was in 1991. By 1994 , Snyder had done enough of
what he jokingly calls "practicing on a side of beef at home." He became
one of two physicians in California to do shoulder arthroscopy. He has
just published a textbook on shoulder arthroscopy that he says is already
a best-seller for his medical publisher.
In his quest to learn shoulder arthroscopy, Snyder had all along been
readying himself to teach it. "I just love to teach," he says. He says
that with only 2 days in the OR, he does not see enough patients to train
students. Cadavers are expensive and they deteriorate quickly, he adds.
His solution has been to pioneer the use of "dry cadaver" shoulder models
and simulators.
 K.
Bhattacharyya, MD (left), and JoAnn Connair, co-technical director
of CLAS Room (SCOI's shoulder arthroscopy teaching laboratory), work
with a virtual reality surgical simulator. |
A year and a half ago, Snyder and SCOI opened a shoulder-arthroscopy
teaching laboratory called CLAS. It is open to doctors, to technicians,
even to manufacturer's reps who want to learn arthroscopy in order to sell
equipment. CLAS stands for Center for Learning Arthroscopic Skills. The
CLAS Room is a converted library at SCOI headquarters where mock-ups and
3-D video consoles allow students to learn and practice skills in shoulder
arthroscopy. Snyder convinced his partners to donate royalties from
patents and publications to build CLAS. He estimates the cost so far at
"under $1 million" but it is approaching that figure. The CLAS Room is one
of a kind. Hundreds of students every year spend 3 days to 2 weeks
studying and practicing shoulder arthroscopy. Snyder hopes soon to add
simulators and models for other joints, so that more than shoulder skills
can be taught. CLAS is not meant as a profit center. The cost to students
is $200 per day, which does not meet the overhead, Snyder says. He
solicits donations from equipment manufacturers and others to try to keep
CLAS in the black.
At CLAS, students can use computers to access and interact online with
other centers. From the SCOI surgical suite, they can follow live
surgeries as they are performed. The feeds that go to the surgeon's video
screen go into CLAS also. Beyond that, CLAS contains several simulators
that have been given affectionate names. ALEX the shoulder professor is a
lifelike model that can be used with an arthroscopic scope and camera to
practice surgery and suturing.
SAMMY is a virtual reality arthroscopic simulator that gives a 3-D
video simulation of the shoulder environment. It teaches hand-eye
coordination, triangulation, anatomy, and technique. It is complete with
fluid and "blood" when a vessel is cut in error. Procedures like
subacromial decompression and capsular shrinkage can be performed on
SAMMY, and Snyder will soon have simulation for cuff and labral
reconstruction and capsular plication too, he says.
MISTY is yet another video simulator. MISTY is used with hand tools to
teach surgeons how to be efficient and precise when operating while
watching a screen.
In addition to CLAS, Snyder also conducts an email chat room for
arthroscopic shoulder surgery where he responds to queries and posts
updates. Snyder says he would like to see other CLAS Rooms pop up around
the world. "We have all the plans and dimensions of our stations, and
anybody who wants them can have them for free."
As for the impact of CLAS on SCOI, Snyder says one thing it is meant is
that SCOI's sports medicine doctors "are the best trained in the world."
"I'd send my own mother to any one of them," he says.
The Next Phase
Add to CLAS SCOI's Center for Orthopedic Surgery (COSI), which occupies
the fourth floor, and its 9,000-square-foot Center for Rehabilitative
Medicine (CRM); its pediatric wing; its 900-square-foot therapeutic pool;
its many offices and examination rooms; and the scope of SCOI comes into
focus. But for all its size, SCOI is growing. Co-founder Fox says three
more doctors are on track to join the current partners.
 Wilson
Del Pizzo, MD, specializes in arthroscopic and reconstructive knee
and shoulder surgery, as well as total joint replacement and sports
medicine. |
Both Fox and managing partner Jaivin are pushing SCOI hard into the age
of the electronic medical record (EMR). Fox already attends his patients
with a small touch-screen laptop in hand. He says SCOI has a mainframe
computer linked to its own servers and its own "intranet" of hard-wired
transmission lines to all of its satellites.
Jaivin says one reason he ran for his 2-year term as managing partner
was his desire to "adequately use the modern technology that's out there
to increase our efficiency and improve patient care." He says SCOI is
considering digitizing its x-ray units. Like Fox, he would like to see a
laptop EMR environment develop, although for now, he adds, all electronic
records will be backed up by paper charts for legal purposes if no other.
Both Jaivin and Fox say it has been a feat to keep SCOI intact all
these years given the strong personalities of physician and surgeon
partners. Fox particularly seems to have a pedal-to-the-metal attitude
when it comes to growth. "I'm surprised we're not bigger," he says. "I
would love to see us join together with other groups so we could learn
from one another. I think there are a lot of benefits to sharing resources
and economies of scale." The research done at SCOI could not have been
done without a patient base to support it, he notes. Nor could SCOI have
added the ancillary services it has. "I would hope we would grow and reach
out and improve care."
George W. Wiley is a contributing writer for Orthopedic Technology
Review. |