Killer Growth
In Episode 53, Samuel sits down with Melissa Hall — CEO of Susan B. Allen Memorial Hospital in El Dorado and one of those rare executives who actually did every job on the way up. She started volunteering at a hospital at 14, was trained as a CNA by her own grandmother, served breakfast to assisted living residents before high school, and has spent 25-plus years figuring out how healthcare actually works from the inside out. This conversation is part origin story, part operational deep-dive, and part community reckoning. Melissa grew up in Burlington, Kansas, in a farming family where dinner happened in the field and you didn't complain about the work. Her grandmother, who had paid off her husband's hospital bills by becoming a CNA on the job in an era before formal training existed, was probably the single biggest influence on who Melissa turned out to be. When her sister's premature son spent 14 weeks in the NICU, Melissa watched her sister talk more about the nurses than the fear and the stress, and that was enough to flip everything - she scrapped her plans for ag business and spent her senior year of high school finding the right nursing program. She eventually landed in labor and delivery at Stormont Vail, circled back to Burlington when family made the commute impractical, and kept picking up new skills - surgery, ER, IT - until she understood how every part of a hospital actually functions. That range is what eventually put her in the CEO chair at Susan B. Allen. When Melissa arrived as COO, the hospital was financially upside down and had a reputation problem in the ER. Wait times were over 2 hours. Patients were checking in and leaving before being seen. She brought in a new provider group, worked on the relationship between ER providers and hospitalists, and started pushing on every metric. Average wait time to be seen is now under 30 minutes. Patients leaving without being seen dropped by nearly 75%. The quality scores submitted to CMS improved across the board. Most of that progress happened in roughly 2 years. Then came July 2025, which the hospital staff now refer to simply as "the event." A ransomware attack at 3:00 AM took down the entire server infrastructure. For 45 days, the hospital couldn't generate a single bill. Staff worked on paper. Melissa drove to Best Buy and bought 40 laptops so departments could function while their own IT team audited the damage, wiped everything, and rebuilt the infrastructure from a replicated server rack in Iowa. The financial hit landed on a hospital that already didn't have deep reserves. That's the context behind the 1% sales tax measure heading to the August ballot - and Melissa explains plainly what a no vote means: not closure in September, but a set of decisions that prioritizes survival over the future. Susan B. Allen is an independent nonprofit - no parent health system, no shareholders, no mothership. It's a board, a team, and a community. The conversation gets into what that actually means operationally: how decisions get made at the table instead of four levels up, why nurses at smaller hospitals cover each other's shifts so someone can make it to a Valentine's party, and why 31% of nursing staff being contract workers is a problem that nobody has a clean answer to. Melissa is clear-eyed about all of it, and she doesn't pretend any of it is simple. Learn more at https://killergrowth.com [https://killergrowth.com/]
60 episodios
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