Chief Executive Officer
Company: Adapt Integrated Health Care
Location: Roseburg
Posted on: November 9, 2024
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Job Description:
The Opportunity A not-so-small miracle has taken place over the
past ten years in Southwest Oregon. Building on a legacy of over 50
years of service, the people of Adapt Integrated Health Care have
quietly built a health care powerhouse, integrating science,
compassionate care and innovation to promote the health and
well-being of individuals, families and communities in Douglas,
Josephine, Curry and Coos Counties, the four southwesternmost
counties in Oregon. In 1971, Adapt began offering addiction
treatment and prevention in its hometown of Roseburg, Oregon. Since
then, Adapt has continuously expanded its services to include
primary care and mental health as well as addiction services.
Growth over the past decade has been remarkable, as indicated by
the chart below. Importantly, that growth has been a byproduct of
Adapt's approach to community health, not a goal or strategic
driver in and of itself. Adapt has been led for the past decade by
Dr. Greg Brigham, a board-certified clinical psychologist and
Fellow of the American Psychological Association. In late
September, Adapt's board of directors shared news of Dr. Brigham's
decision to retire by May 2025, prompting the current search for
his successor. Adapt's next CEO will inherit an organization with
significant momentum: Operating revenues of over $80 million, a
highly motivated staff of over 500, and a growing, intersecting
array of primary care, mental health and addiction services
provided through multiple locations across the region. The
organization has an unusually strong balance sheet, with most of
the funding in place for a new 40-acre campus in Roseburg expected
to break ground in the first half of 2025, permitting consolidation
of many services and expansion of others within one purpose-built
campus. Perhaps most importantly, Adapt has earned the trust of the
people it serves, the partners, agencies and departments it
collaborates with, and the regulators who monitor its quality.
Adapt may look quite different from what it did a decade ago, but
the values that drive it have remained consistent: professionalism,
caring, accessibility, excellence, respect, innovation and
integrity. Far from being just slogans on a shelf, they inform
everything Adapt does for its patients and its communities. The
Organization Adapt Integrated Health Care is a CARF-accredited
nonprofit serving the people of rural southwestern Oregon. While
Adapt describes itself as "an Oregon leader," the organization's
reputation is in fact national. For example, of Oregon's 30
community health centers, Adapt is the only one to receive this
year's HRSA Health Center Quality Leader Gold Badge, placing it in
the top 10% of all such facilities in the country. Adapt is also
certified as a Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) by the National
Committee for Quality Assurance. In addition, this past summer it
was recertified as a Great Place to Work, having been so cited by
fully 82% of its 540 employees. Adapt's services are extensive,
overlapping and, wherever possible, integrated. Among its core
offerings: Substance use disorders : From its beginnings as an
outpatient substance use treatment program, Adapt has expanded to
offer a full continuum of substance use treatment services for
youth and adults, including intensive outpatient, residential
treatment, medically managed detoxification, opioid treatment
program (OTP), day treatment with supportive housing, transitional
housing and a sobering center. Mental health : In Oregon,
county-based community health programs are tasked to provide
effective, accessible safety net services to meet the mental health
needs of community members. In Douglas and Curry Counties, Adapt
has served as the Local Mental Health Authority and Community
Mental Health Program since 2016 and 2021, respectively. Depending
on location, Adapt provides such treatment and support services as
24-hour crisis care, forensic services, assessment and diagnosis,
outpatient care, psychiatric medical service, school-based services
and fidelity-based programs like ACT Teams, EASA and IIBHT. Primary
care : Adapt's patient-centered primary care was first offered in
2006 and was first recognized as a Federally Qualified Health
Center (FQHC) in 2012. In the year ending June 2023, the most
recent year for which full data has been published, Adapt's
patient-centered primary care clinics served some 7500 adults in
over 53,000 visits in person and via telehealth. Adapt's extensive
website offers numerous examples of its innovative approach to
integrated health care. Here are just a few, some with systemwide
impact and others distinctly personal: Construction on the Adapt
Recovery Campus [see rendering on left] is expected to begin in the
first half of 2025. The plans are set, the funding is in place, and
discussions with potential contractors are underway. When complete,
the campus will combine residential treatment, outpatient services,
mental health and primary care resources within one 14-acre
purpose-built facility. The new Sobering Center provides a haven
for recovery while reducing stresses on local jails and emergency
services. Available exclusively through law enforcement referrals,
Adapt offers a secure, supervised environment for publicly
intoxicated individuals. The Sobering Center is a testament to
effective cross-system collaboration. Adapt's full-service mobile
clinic makes much-needed services more accessible to families in
some of the region's most rural area communities. Adapt's latest
annual report to the community, available here, contains a fuller
summary of the organization's approach and services. Adapt
Integrated Health Care has clearly evolved into a complex,
multifaceted organization, but its overall mission remains
straightforward: To provide our communities access to world-class
primary care, addictions treatment, behavioral health care and
prevention services to promote health and restore lives. The
Mandate Adapt's next CEO will lead an organization of committed
professionals providing life-changing and life-enhancing services
to thousands of residents in rural Oregon who otherwise might go
underserved, if not unserved. Following a decade of growth that an
observer in 2014 could hardly have imagined, Adapt in 2024 is a
trusted, dependable and even irreplaceable resource that impacts
the region in multiple ways, all of them consistent with a
commitment to improved community health. Adapt's leadership team is
an unusually humble group. To a person, they are proud of Adapt's
impact, and they relish the spirit of inventiveness and innovation
that pervades their work and their collective aspirations.
Admittedly, some are tired- growth can be exhausting-but the
overall atmosphere is decidedly upbeat, dampened only by
uncertainty triggered by the present executive search. Adapt's next
CEO can expect a mandate with several overlapping priorities, among
them: Stability. Adapt's leadership team is a highly tenured one.
Several executives have been with the organization for decades, and
only a few are within their first five years with Adapt. One senior
leader will be retiring at the end of 2024,? and another
long-serving leader has said she will be stepping down next August.
There may be other opportunities for restructuring or realignment,
but overall Adapt's day-to-day operations are overseen by a devoted
cadre of executives with enormous, shared respect for their CEO.
The new CEO's first mandate, therefore, will be to provide a steady
hand, ensuring the stability of Adapt's services following the
change in top leadership. That is not to say anything is cast in
stone, just that a measured approach to leadership will likely
serve long-term goals best. Whatever the assets the next CEO brings
to bear, reinforcing the existing climate of trust, collaboration
and mutual respect-a "culture of kindness," as one member of
management put it, but also a culture of high expectations-will be
important to a successful transition. Catalytic leadership. Adapt
has proven itself to be an exceptional place, and its network of
stakeholder-including providers, community leaders at county and
state levels, program partners and individual champions as local
chiefs of police-is accustomed to catalytic leadership with a soft
touch. In short, the CEO will not have to create a mandate for
progress; rather, the CEO will inherit one. High expectations can
be a blessing or a curse; in this case, they come with the
territory. Infrastructure. While strains on Adapt's infrastructure
are not obvious, the growth of the last decade inevitably means
that some systems are not fully fleshed out and others may simply
be new. The CEO must ensure that Adapt's services and people are
supported by the right systems and that decision-makers have access
to relevant, useful data for integration and expansion (geographic
and programmatic) to continue. Execution. Several projects underway
will need to be brought to fruition, and several new initiatives
are ripe for attention. Chief among these is the new Recovery
Campus. Funding commitments are in place, land has been acquired
and plans have been approved. The CEO will not be the project
manager, of course, but Adapt's largest capital investment in the
organization's history will need care and attention. Similarly,
Adapt's initiatives in housing are an important part of the future
mix. Affordable housing in general is a challenge in much of
Adapt's service area, and the chance of houselessness continues to
grow. True integration in Curry and Coos Counties will require
additional infrastructure. Telehealth is ripe for expansion, but
only if patients in outlying areas have access to the technology.
The list of initiatives requiring thoughtful execution can only
continue to grow, and yet workforce capacity is not growing as fast
as funding has grown. That puts considerable pressure on recruiting
and retention, especially in more rural areas. Political
sensitivity. Adapt is largely funded by government sources, some of
which are direct and some pass-through funding. It is essential
that the CEO have the political sensitivity to lead well within a
complicated community environment. This is not about personal
politics at all, but rather about nuanced leadership at multiple
levels- community, county and state. While each may have its own
ways of engagement, all respect authentic engagement. For example,
The Oregon Health Plan and Coordinated Care Organizations (CCOs)
are central to health care and health care delivery in Oregon.
There are 16 CCOs in Oregon, and several have critical
relationships with Adapt. The CEO's ability to respect, navigate
and contribute to such relationships will have enormous bearing on
people across the region. The Candidate Adapt Integrated Health
Care deserves a passionate, committed executive with the experience
to lead a large, complicated nonprofit operating in rural Oregon. A
proven leader seasoned by the special demands of growing
organizations with integrated community-facing services and
complex, multifaceted revenue streams would be ideal. Adapt's next
CEO will succeed a well-respected clinician who has transformed the
organization over the past ten years. The most appealing candidates
will be those who are respectful of Adapt's reach impact and the
leadership that made them possible but who are undaunted by the
inevitably high expectations that characterize such a transition.
The Search Committee is open to a variety of relevant backgrounds,
but deep, credentialed grounding in at least one of Adapt's program
areas-primary care, mental health, or treatment of substance use
disorders -is likely essential. Competencies : Adapt seeks a CEO
with a diverse set of experiences, traits, and skills, among them
the following: Passion for Adapt's overall mandate to deliver
comprehensive, integrated health care to communities in southwest
Oregon An accessible, authentic leader with the operating
experience and data-informed management disciplines that such a
large and complex operation deserves The proven ability to model
and reinforce a cohesive, collaborative approach to management that
respects excellence, promotes collaboration, and expects
accountability for shared goals and strategies A leader of leaders
experienced in contexts of similar scale and complexity A manager
proficient in the work styles and habits of different generations;
someone whose approach is flexible but whose values are not A
record of impactful engagement and leadership in the nonprofit
sector, especially in the context of mental health, addiction
services or primary care In short, Adapt seeks a nimble visionary
who can help discern where the organization should focus its
energies, prioritize opportunities for attention, and then ensure
the excellence in delivery and execution for which Adapt is already
known. Culture : Adapt intends to hire a CEO who reflects and
embodies A listening heart and a curious mind A sensitive but
confident approach to management; a servant leader with the
nurturing demeanor and management disciplines a mature yet still
growing organization deserves An inviting leadership style informed
by mutual respect and accountability Comfort connecting with a
variety of constituents and stakeholders, from the addict on the
street to community, civic and political leaders across the
spectrum. Comfort with the underserved and those in harm's way is
essential An inquisitive, innovative mindset; not someone who seeks
change for change's sake, but a leader focused on ways to make
Adapt's life-changing and life-enhancing services fully accessible
to those in need Strategic thinking and deep respect for first-rate
execution; a leader who ensures that clinical or therapeutic
excellence is supported by operational and financial excellence The
empathy, and relatability to lead with care, never losing sight of
the 'why' of Adapt's work Respect for the value of transparency and
candor in communications, be they with colleagues, the Board of
Directors, program partners or funders Ego-free leadership.
Credentials : Adapt has been led by just two CEOs over the last 40+
years, both of whom were clinicians. While the search committee is
not closed to creative alternatives, the clear expectation is that
the next CEO will also be a credentialed clinician, ideally with a
terminal degree in a discipline relevant to Adapt's mission.
Employment Type: Full Time Bonus/Commission: No
Keywords: Adapt Integrated Health Care, Springfield , Chief Executive Officer, Executive , Roseburg, Oregon
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