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Turnarounds


Emergency care



How Mike Duggan used 29 minutes to put Detroit Medical Center back on the path to profitability

By Erik Cassano


Smart Business Detroit | March 2009

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In January 2004, Mike Duggan took over the Detroit Medical Center, a health care system that had lost $500 million during the previous six years, including $130 million in 2003. The available time to turn the system around was growing short. “We basically had about six months to get the place turned around,” Duggan says. “The projection I was handed the day I started was that DMC would be entirely out of cash by May 31 of 2004. That was the very first thing our finance people handed me.” Turnarounds are nothing new to Duggan, the system’s president and CEO. The veteran Detroit-area business leader has been helping perform them for more than 20 years. But saving one of the largest hospital systems in southeast Michigan is something above and beyond what even Duggan normally encounters.

In the months prior to Duggan’s arrival, DMC had announced plans to close the receiving wing of Hutzel Women’s Hospital, which receives around 80,000 patients a year.

“A large number of them are poor, and Hutzel delivers 4,000 babies a year, many of them high-risk pregnancies,” he says. “So the effect on the community would have been catastrophic.”

On top of the financial problems, the system’s talent base had been depleted. Most of DMC’s upper and middle managers had left the organization, leaving it without a clear sense of direction or purpose.

Duggan needed to develop a plan to save DMC, find and cultivate resources to make the plan happen, and along the way, get an organization of nearly 12,000 people on board with the new vision.

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