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Insights
on Excellence | "Insights
on Excellence" Archive
Using work-force management technology
to enhance operations, quality and compliance
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR |
Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
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by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
January 25, 2007
A man I know, who works for a large health care operation,
was recently given the newly-created title of vice president
of patient satisfaction. His organization has the goal
of becoming the health- care provider of choice in its
region. A work-force management technology system could
provide information that could help it achieve this goal.
Set up the right way, the system could help the organization
track employees' contact with patients and relate this
to patient satisfaction levels -- provided satisfaction
levels were measured through questionnaires, or post-discharge
interviews.
How might this work? Let's say your mother-in-law was
on such-and-such a floor in such-and-such a room on specific
days. A patient questionnaire designed to measure her
level of satisfaction could be given to her when she
leaves the hospital. It would be a matter of relate her
responses to the workers who cared for her using the
time and attendance system data. The patient survey data
and the employee activity information could be linked
and compiled to assess whether satisfaction was related
to specific employees or to events, and whether certain
employees or activities generated higher patient ratings
than others.
This process could also overlay other aspects that may
have affected your mother-in-law's level of satisfaction
and the employees charged with her care. Were they unable
to respond because they were short-staffed? Had the employees
been working double shifts? Did other patients during
the same timeframe, dealing with the same staff members,
register the same responses? Are there trends in how
employees are scheduled or put together in teams related
to the level of patient satisfaction? Do higher-paid
employees deliver more satisfactory care? And so on.
It's likely that some care givers would prove to be
more proficient than others at turning out happy patients.
It might be that certain employees work better under
particular supervisors or on certain shifts, and that
this resulted in better patient satisfaction outcomes.
The hospital might discover that ratings drop toward
the end of an employee's double shift or when an employee
is called in on a day off. Linking time and attendance
data to operational data -- such as patient surveys --
would add one more dimension to the organization's understanding
of what patients experience and the way employees are
scheduled to work and compensated. If there is a correlation
between them, employee performance can be viewed as a
key indicator of success in generating patient satisfaction.
The capabilities of work-force
management technology are moving ahead at a lightning
pace, changing the way many health-care providers and
businesses operate. A new book from Oaklea Press by
Lisa Disselkamp, called "Working
the Clock," is intended to give executives insight
into the many ways it can help them run their businesses
more efficiently. This example came from that book.
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Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
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