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Think You're Professional? As physicians, we place a lot of value on the tangible results we produce — the gallbladder removed, the baby delivered, the hypertension controlled. On the other hand, some of us may tend to discount the work of our nonphysician business colleagues —"suits," mere administrators, occupied in endless meetings, mired in paperwork. What, we wonder, ever comes of that? To solidify your role as a leader in your practice, and to make your ideas a vital component of the bigger healthcare picture, a new way of looking at the business side of things may be in order. You need to consider business activities — and medicine is a business as well as a calling — as a springboard for launching new products and services, keeping departments running well, and promoting the aspirations of your staff and fellow physicians. Taking an idea and making it tangible is what businesspeople do. It's how we came to have the medical devices and processes that make our lives easier every day, from electronic medical records to billing systems to our answering service. It's how we go about putting great improvements into our practices, like telephone triage systems and staff cross-training and having each of our exam rooms set up exactly the same way. With that said, you have to realize that sometimes we physicians come off as less-than-polished professionals. Don't assume that having an "MD" or "DO" or "PhD" after your name equals de facto professionalism. Nor should you assume that you need an MBA to be taken seriously. It all starts with the basic courtesies and demeanor of an executive who can be trusted with an organization's business, money, customers, and project teams. If this is who you want to be, check yourself against these essential do's and don'ts. DO
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