Thursday, December 13, 2012

BRPT 2.0



Mentoring and managing staff, budgeting, PR and communications campaigns, grassroots and legislative initiatives… they’re all part and parcel of running any non-profit. And after you’ve been in the business long enough, you learn that whether it’s at a large trade association representing widget manufacturers, or a small charity devoted to saving endangered species, the fundamentals of non-profit management are essentially the same. So what sets them apart?  In my experience, it comes down to one word: the “issues.” 

When I interviewed for the position of Executive Director of the BRPT, I said to Cindy (BRPT President) and Janice (BRPT Past President) “I like the fact that you help people who have problems.”  And I honestly believe that. As CPSGTs and RPSGTs, your “issue” is helping people with sleep disorders. When I attended the Symposium in Reno last September, I learned first-hand just how important that is to someone’s overall health.  I listened to the sessions about co-morbidities associated with OSA and their deleterious effects on the human body.  And I also learned, apart from their own health risks, about the dangers undiagnosed sleep apnea sufferers pose to others -- from coworkers in busy factories, to fellow motorists on our nation’s highways.

And more importantly, there’s something else I observed in Reno: Passion. I saw a group of highly trained professionals who were truly committed to, and passionate about, sleep medicine and helping their patients.  I heard it from people like Lisa Bauck, an RPSGT at the Oregon Clinic, with whom I had the pleasure of sitting next to at one of the group lunches following a morning session.

I saw that passion on display several times as people vocalized their concerns about protecting and preserving the integrity and future of the RPSGT credential.  Folks like David Rusnak, from MedStar Montgomery Medical Center in Olney, Maryland.  I drive by David’s workplace on my way to music lessons in neighboring Ashton about once a month.  Little did I know there was an individual so well-versed on the Stark Act and legislative issues impacting sleep credentialing right in my backyard.  And I saw the passion in the many faces, whose names are too numerous to list here, that I met in the exhibit hall and at the registration desk.

That was three months ago.  And it’s been six months since I started as Executive Director in June.  That’s when you start getting “into the groove,” as they say, in a new job.  And what the BRPT staff and I have been trying to do along the way is listen.  Listen to what the RPSGT community is saying.  Based on all the calls and emails and questions and comments, we’re changing things.  We’re going to make the website easier to navigate.  We’re going to implement new recertification reminders.  For first-time test takers, we’re going to make the application easier to understand.  We’re going to be more proactive on the public policy front.  We’re going to continue to develop and expand the CSE program. We’re doing all of this based on feedback that you have provided to us.  Here in the office, we call it BRPT two-point-oh.  And as we roll that out over the coming weeks and months, we’ll keep listening to you and fine-tuning things along the way. So thank you for voicing your comments, concerns and most importantly your support as we enter the New Year. 


Jim Magruder
BRPT Executive Director