Sources of Professional Fulfillment Among Physicians
|
|
|
- Sarah Stevens
- 5 years ago
- Views:
Transcription
1 Viewpoint: Enhancing the Professional Fulfillment of Physicians Shanaree Brown and Richard B. Gunderman, MD, PhD Abstract Academic medical centers (AMCs) devote countless hours to studying the diagnosis and treatment of disease, yet little or no time to determining the factors that enhance or detract from physicians professional fulfillment. This is unfortunate because physicians degree of professional engagement, the quality of care they provide, and their tendency to burn out all depend on the fulfillment they find in work. Indeed, if AMCs are to thrive, it is vital to understand and promote the professional fulfillment of physicians. This article reviews the sources of professional fulfillment among physicians and outlines ways to enhance it within physicians organizations. Acad Med. 2006; 81: If academic medical centers (AMCs) are to thrive in the years to come, it is vital that we understand and promote the professional fulfillment of physicians. We physicians must ask ourselves, What makes us feel excited about our work and motivated to do a good job? What discourages us, leaves us feeling burnt out, and perhaps even leads us to seek other career options? These are not trivial questions. When work is challenging, promotes our personal growth, and enables us to make a difference in the lives of others, our organizations, as well as our patients, students, and communities, are greatly rewarded. On the other hand, if we experience confusion, stagnation, or a lack of appreciation, we are unlikely to perform at our best, and those who depend on us may suffer. While the term most frequently employed in the literature to describe career contentment is satisfaction, we believe that fulfillment better captures the sense of professional engagement and reward we seek to elucidate. Satisfaction merely means enough, but fulfillment implies completion the thorough realization of our potential. Ms. Brown is a third-year medical student, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana. Dr. Gunderman is associate professor of radiology, pediatrics, medical education, philosophy, liberal arts, and philanthropy, Indiana University Schools of Medicine and Liberal Arts, Indianapolis, Indiana. Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Gunderman, Indiana University School of Medicine, 702 Barnhill Drive, RI 1053, Indianapolis, IN ; telephone: (317) ; fax: (317) ; ([email protected]). This article provides an introduction to the sources of professional fulfillment among physicians. We begin by reviewing lessons about the importance of professional fulfillment from industries outside health care. Next we discuss key findings from the literature on the professional fulfillment of physicians. We then consider one of the most extensively empirically validated and coherent theories of worker motivation advanced in the past fifty years, that of Frederick Herzberg. Finally, we present some practical steps that leaders in AMCs can take to enhance the motivation and professional fulfillment of our most important human resource the physicians we work with every day. In this article we do not delve into the impact of personal factors on the professional lives of physicians; however, we recognize that personal factors play a major role in achieving fulfillment. No matter what level of professional success we physicians may enjoy, we are unlikely to feel fulfilled if our personal lives are in shambles. Organizations seeking to enhance the professional fulfillment of their employees cannot afford to ignore the influence of personal factors on overall fulfillment. At the very least, policies that indirectly stress the personal lives of physicians, such as promotion and compensation programs that require excessive work hours, often undermine personal fulfillment and should be avoided. The potential for workplace policies to enhance the personal lives of physicians also should be taken into account. For example, an academic department might permit physicians with significant family responsibilities to enter into job-sharing arrangements, while also allowing time and providing recognition for physicians to engage in voluntary service outside of medicine. Lessons from Nonmedical Industries Most physicians have devoted considerably more time to the study of medicine s scientific and technical aspects than its psychological, social, and organizational aspects. Compared to business school curricula, medical school curricula tend to devote relatively little attention to such topics as motivation and work performance. Yet the future of academic medicine hinges on whether AMCs and health care organizations are led effectively, and we must be prepared to look beyond the bounds of medicine for insights into these critical leadership practices. How seriously do leaders in nonmedical industries regard the professional fulfillment of their employees? What benefits do corporations reap through efforts to enhance worker fulfillment? What are the effects of such programs on employee turnover, costs of operation, and revenues? Do unsuccessful and successful companies differ in the importance they attach to their employees fulfillment? A 1997 study from the Harvard Business School (HBS) found that the stock prices of companies that invested extensively in employee loyalty and satisfaction rose 147% over a ten-year period. This increase was almost double the increase in stock prices of their nearest Academic Medicine, Vol. 81, No. 6 / June
2 competitors. 1 Similarly, the stock prices of companies identified as Fortune magazine s 100 Best Companies to Work for in America outperformed those identified in the Standard and Poor (S&P) 500 by 430%. 2 In terms of actual dollars, a meta-analysis of 7,939 business units in 36 dissimilar companies showed that productivity and income were strongly tied to employee satisfaction. Business units in the top 25% for employee motivation and satisfaction had, on average, monthly revenues $80,000 to $120,000 higher than those in the lower 75%. Translating this figure into yearly revenue, the difference in income amounted to $960,000 to $1,440,000 per business unit. 3 Southwest Airlines and Sears, Roebuck, & Co. provide specific case studies of the importance of cultivating employee satisfaction. Southwest Airlines prides itself on its culture of employee communication, recognition, and involvement. Over an eight-year period, Southwest had the highest profitability of any U.S. carrier, and a total market value that surpassed all the other U.S. carriers combined. Although their employees were the most highly unionized and were paid at or below the industry wage standard, they also demonstrated the highest productivity of any U.S. airline. 4 A study at Sears, Roebuck, & Co. found that increasing employee satisfaction by 4% enhanced customer satisfaction and boosted sales by $200 million. After accounting for price earnings ratios and after-tax margins, this extra revenue increased Sears market capitalization by $250 million. 5 Examples of employers reaping the rewards of enhanced employee fulfillment are not restricted to the nonhealth services arena. When Memorial Medical Center, Inc., in Las Cruces, New Mexico, committed to enhancing cooperation, communication, and achievement among its employees, employee satisfaction increased, turnover decreased, and patients access to care was improved. Since instituting its employee-centered policies, the medical center has realized a 40% increase in employee productivity. Memorial estimates that this has produced a return of $1.74 on every dollar invested in the program. 6 Why Physician Fulfillment Matters Professional fulfillment among physicians has been linked to a multitude of desirable social and financial outcomes. Indeed, Haas et al. 7 found that a physician s self-reported satisfaction was strongly linked to patient satisfaction. Patients of physicians who rated themselves as being very or extremely satisfied with their work were found to be more satisfied with their care, suggesting that physician fulfillment affects patients perception of the quality of their health care. Similarly, Grembowski et al. 8 found that patients of physicians who rated themselves as having high job satisfaction had greater levels of trust and confidence in their physicians. Physician satisfaction has a profound effect in the practice setting and on managed care organizations (MCOs) According to Beasley et al. overall job satisfaction was highly inversely associated with turnover, and Buchbinder et al. found that physician job dissatisfaction was the most powerful predictor of physician departures. 9,10 Turnover tends to create a sense of instability, requiring remaining physicians to cover a larger patient load. This may reduce patient access to care and contribute to physician burnout, while possibly triggering a downward spiral of declining morale and additional departures. Prolonged physician dissatisfaction has also been linked to increased health problems among physicians themselves. When physicians are ill, costs to the physicians organizations rise further due to lost work hours, and additional demands are placed on those who remain at work The costs of replacing dissatisfied physicians can be exorbitant. One study estimates the total cost at approximately $250,000 per physician. 11,12 Such costs are born not only by individual practices, but by whole medical specialties. Growing dissatisfaction in a medical specialty often heralds future declines in the number of physicians choosing to practice in it. 17 As the pool of specialized practitioners shrinks, medical practices must expend more resources to attract a dwindling pool of specialists, and patient access and quality of care are placed at risk. In MCOs, physician dissatisfaction appears to undermine efforts to make the delivery of health care more efficient. When physicians are unhappy at work within an MCO, their inclination to participate in a managed care plan is adversely affected. This, too, tends to exacerbate turnover, thereby creating additional recruiting and training costs. 11 Similarly, patients of dissatisfied physicians are more likely to disenroll from managed care programs as a result of the difficulty they experience in forming and sustaining long-term patient physician relationships. 7 Physicians sense of professional fulfillment is positively correlated with patients adherence to medication, exercise, and diet regimens. 14 Reductions in physician satisfaction are associated with decreased patient adherence to prescribed disease prevention and treatment regimens, which places patients at risk for adverse health outcomes. Since these outcomes often bear high price tags, the long-term costs to MCOs increase. Sources of Physician Fulfillment The current literature provides little reason to be optimistic about the professional fulfillment of physicians. Fully 40% of young physicians state that, if given the choice, they would not go through medical school again. Twenty percent of all physicians report that they are dissatisfied with their careers. 9,17 How can we explain these high rates of dissatisfaction, and what factors should we focus on to enhance professional fulfillment? Konrad et al. 18 elucidated ten factors that should be taken into consideration when evaluating the satisfaction of community physicians: autonomy, relationships with colleagues, relationships with patients, relationships with staff, income, resources, intrinsic satisfaction, free time away from work, administrative support, and community involvement. Similarly, Coyle et al. 19 found that the following eight factors could be used to evaluate the work satisfaction of academic generalists: autonomy, professional relationships, compensation, clinical resources, institutional governance, professional status, teaching activities, and professional advancement. 578 Academic Medicine, Vol. 81, No. 6 / June 2006
3 Despite the differences in the daily routines of community and academic physicians, a similar set of factors seems to underlie work fulfillment for both. Although there is disagreement as to how much weight each factor should receive, there is broad consensus that such factors play a major role in physicians professional fulfillment and deserve more attention. 9,17,20 24 Decreased autonomy, which many physicians associate with working in an MCO structure, fosters a sense of being unable to care for patients adequately This feeling of inadequacy, in turn, tends to undermine professional fulfillment. By contrast, multiple studies have found a positive correlation between physician fulfillment and the quality of relationships with staff and the surrounding community. 20,22 If staff members or community members are confident about the capabilities of a physician or that physician s commitment to the best interests of patients, physician satisfaction tends to increase. Physician income, another factor in overall physician satisfaction, is a hotly debated topic. Some physicians, mindful of their advanced education, complex skills, and long hours, feel undercompensated, while many outside medicine believe that physicians are overpaid. The ethics of these positions are complex, but there is little doubt that income level and physician satisfaction are linked. 25,17 22 Studies show that an annual income level below $100,000 is associated with decreased physician satisfaction. As earnings rise above $100,000, physician satisfaction also rises. The positive correlation does not continue indefinitely, however; satisfaction peaks at incomes between $250,000 and $299, ,21 Moreover, the relationship between income and physician satisfaction is not symmetrical. Dissatisfaction rises more sharply with decreasing income than satisfaction rises with increasing income. The situation is similar for work hours. 16,17 As the number of hours worked per week increases, dissatisfaction rises at a steeper rate than the level of satisfaction increases as work hours diminish. Considering the relationship between dissatisfaction and physician turnover, the dynamics of income and work hours both corroborate an important finding of Pathman et al. 20 ; namely, that in regard to physician retention, reducing dissatisfaction is more important than increasing satisfaction. Geographic location, practice ownership, and age are three variables that appear to be linked to physician satisfaction, although they did not appear in either Konrad s or Coyle s analyses. Physicians in west north Central and New England states have higher levels of satisfaction than physicians in the south Atlantic, west south Central, Mountain, and Pacific states. These latter groups also report higher rates of dissatisfaction. 17 Practice ownership can affect satisfaction as well. Physicians reporting both full ownership and a low sense of ownership had decreased levels of job satisfaction. 9,17,21 The relationship between physician age and satisfaction is bimodal. Physicians younger than 35 years of age and older than 65 years of age have higher levels of satisfaction than physicians between the ages of 36 and ,21 Devoe et al. 21 found that age alone was the principal predictive factor in forecasting a physician s level of satisfaction. Of course, if physicians become dissatisfied early in their careers, they are more likely to move to another practice or even switch professions, both of which carry financial and social costs. Since physicians between the ages of 36 and 64 also wield considerable influence over the career decisions of young people interested in medicine, broad dissatisfaction among this age group may exert deleterious effects on the entire profession for years to come. Gender also plays a role in physician satisfaction. 9,17,27 29 Although gender alone is probably not a strong predictor of professional fulfillment, it is associated with other factors related to job satisfaction. When examining patients, female physicians report experiencing greater time pressure than do their male counterparts. Female physicians also earn mean incomes approximately $22,000 less than male physicians, after controlling for other variables. 28 Compared to male physicians, female physicians perceive a lower sense of control over their patient load, the selection of physicians for referral, and office scheduling. In addition, female physicians report having more patients with complex, psychosocial problems than male physicians. 28 The combination of having more complex patients and less control over day-to-day aspects of practice is associated with lower mental health indices. This may help to explain the finding of McMurray et al. 28 that women physicians are 1.6 times as likely as men to report burnout. When comparing generalists and specialists in community practice, investigators have found little difference in overall satisfaction. 20,30 There are, however, differences between the two groups when it comes to satisfaction in academic practices. Primary care faculty tend to perceive fewer opportunities to advance, greater professional role ambiguity, less collegiality, and less ability to make full use of their clinical skills than do specialty faculty. 30 Disparities among specialties are also apparent. Leigh et al. 17 found that in relation to family medicine, specialties such as geriatric medicine, neonatal/perinatal medicine, dermatology, and pediatrics are more satisfying, while internal medicine, otolaryngology, and obstetricsgynecology are less satisfying. Other studies have corroborated these results. 24,31 33 Psychiatrists and emergency medicine physicians also appear to have higher levels of dissatisfaction. 34,35 This disparity may be explained by evidence that satisfaction is lower in procedurally oriented fields than in cognitively oriented fields. 17 A Theory of Fulfillment How can we integrate these and other research findings into a coherent theory of physician fulfillment? Over the years, assumptions about employee fulfillment and productivity have spawned efforts to transform uncommitted workers into highly motivated ones. Unfortunately, most plans, from financial incentives to sensitivity training to counseling, have left employers shaking their heads, with no significant increase in employee motivation, satisfaction, or productivity. 36 Why? One possibility is that we have been approaching professional fulfillment Academic Medicine, Vol. 81, No. 6 / June
4 from the wrong point of view. Most people tend to view fulfillment and dissatisfaction as two poles of a continuum. For instance, we tend to assume that low compensation causes dissatisfaction, while high compensation promotes fulfillment. Landmark investigations performed by Frederick Herzberg and colleagues contradict this view. 36 In 1966, Herzberg studied 203 accountants and engineers, hoping to determine what factors contributed to or detracted from their levels of work motivation. He asked two simple questions. First, Think of a time when you felt especially good about your job. Why did you feel that way? Second, Think of a time when you felt especially bad about your job. Why did you feel that way? Herzberg found that in addressing each question, respondents did not refer to the same factors. Instead, different factors were associated with high and low levels of fulfillment. 36 Herzberg called the factors invoked in response to the second question de-motivators. Interestingly, these tended to be extrinsic factors not essential to the work itself, including administrative policies, supervision, salary, interpersonal relations, and workplace conditions. The factors cited in response to the first question he called motivators, and these were generally features intrinsic to the work itself. Motivators included the nature of the work, achievement, recognition, responsibility, and growth. Herzberg s findings have been supported by numerous studies in diverse populations and work environments, including professional women, agricultural administrators, managers nearing retirement, hospital maintenance personnel, manufacturing supervisors, nurses, food handlers, military officers, scientists, housekeepers, teachers, technicians, women working on assembly lines, and Finnish foremen, to name but a partial list. 36 Herzberg found that intrinsic motivators challenged people to work more efficiently at a higher level of quality and enhanced fulfillment. If these were lacking, however, dissatisfaction tended not to increase very much. By contrast, the extrinsic de-motivators played the opposite role. When these variables were deficient, deep dissatisfaction resulted. However, enhancing extrinsic factors such as compensation and workplace conditions did little to boost performance or increase the sense of fulfillment. 36 Herzberg likens efforts to enhance extrinsic factors to recharging an employee s batteries, while enhancing intrinsic factors is like installing a generator in an employee. 36 The former strategy may produce benefits initially, but the ante will need to be raised continually to maintain the same level of performance. The strategy of focusing on intrinsic factors, by contrast, tends to be self-sustaining, enabling employees to become their own sources of motivation. Installing a generator, or attending to intrinsic factors, is the only way to ensure long-term and potentially permanent improvements in performance and fulfillment. When extrinsic factors such as monetary bonuses and new offices are used to reward improved performance, the extrinsic incentives tend to shift our attention away from inherently fulfilling aspects of work. As a result, we feel less of an internal dedication to excellence. 36 Employees begin to depend on the extra income, and if it is ever removed, or if further raises are ever withheld, they experience it as a punishment rather than a mere return to baseline. According to Herzberg, no amount of attention to extrinsic factors will enhance employees professional fulfillment or performance beyond the average. 36 In order to achieve greater enhancements, employees must focus on the intrinsically rewarding aspects of work. Enhancing Physician Fulfillment Herzberg s approach provides the foundation of a strategy for fostering physician motivation and fulfillment. First, we need to identify those positions and aspects of work where changes won t be too costly, attitudes are poor, the costs of de-motivation are becoming expensive, and increased motivation and fulfillment would make a substantial difference. Certainly these features apply to many facets of academic medicine. Second, we need to understand and accept that the nature of our work itself may have to change. Leaders often do not immediately recognize that the content of work and the way it is performed can or should be changed. Fortunately, the rapidly evolving nature of contemporary medicine has accustomed physicians to the necessity for change. Third, we need to brainstorm a list of alternative approaches to enriching work. Herzberg recommends that we do so initially without regard to practicality, cost, or time. Later, we can return to the list and weed out ideas that are too costly or impractical. Finally, we need to eliminate suggestions that focus on extrinsic, de-motivating factors, such as financial bonuses. 36 In increasing professional responsibility to make a position more fulfilling, Herzberg favors vertical loading of responsibility, rather than horizontal loading. Horizontal loading augments relatively meaningless aspects of a job, resulting in a decreased sense of personal contribution and fewer opportunities for professional growth. Examples of horizontal loading include increasing production requirements, adding fruitless tasks, rotating job assignments, or removing the most challenging components of the job. It s like starting with zero and then multiplying by, adding, or subtracting another zero. The result, of course, is still zero. 36 By contrast, vertical loading involves increasing the intrinsically motivating features of work, such as responsibility, recognition, and achievement. Examples of vertical loading include increasing personal accountability, additional authority, fruitful new tasks, and encouragement to develop expertise in a certain area. Unlike horizontal loading, the end result of vertical loading can be enhanced fulfillment. Once we finalize our list of options for enhancing the intrinsically motivating features of work, Herzberg suggests that we start implementing them in a small, experimental group. By using an experimental group we can closely assess changes in performance, motivation, and sense of fulfillment. To gauge these changes, pre- and post-intervention evaluations should be conducted. In order to avoid confounding effects, extrinsic, de-motivating factors should remain unchanged. It is important to anticipate that drops in performance and fulfillment may occur during the first few 580 Academic Medicine, Vol. 81, No. 6 / June 2006
5 weeks of an intervention, as people acclimate to the new system. 36 Administrators may find it especially difficult to adjust to the new system, because of anxieties about short-term declines in performance. They may also feel as though some interventions are undermining their responsibilities. Over time, however, the rise in physician motivation and fulfillment will be accompanied by a concurrent increase in productivity and quality. With anxieties allayed, administrators may find that they have more time to attend to core managerial and supervisory functions, thus enhancing their own performance and sense of fulfillment. Because the specific sources of physician fulfillment vary widely among different groups of physicians and practice settings, a universally applicable master list of interventions is impossible to compile. The first priority in every case, however, is to accentuate the intrinsically rewarding aspects of the work. 37 Above all, we need to feel that we have made a real difference in the lives of others. As medicine has become more compartmentalized, there is a danger that this source of deep fulfillment is becoming less apparent. 33 For example, reducing face-to-face contact between physicians and patients weakens their relationship and with it physicians sense that we are making a real difference. To increase the fulfillment of academic physicians, we need to ensure that the intrinsically fulfilling aspects of the work are accentuated, not suppressed. Other fundamental factors related to physician fulfillment are growth and recognition. Given the length and rigors of medical education, as well as the vital role of lifelong learning, there is little doubt that physicians must be committed to ongoing intellectual growth. In focusing on the acquisition of knowledge and skills, however, we must not neglect personal and professional growth. Physicians should be encouraged to become involved with organizations and service opportunities that expand their personal and professional horizons, rather than to consider voluntary service a detriment to efficiency and productivity. Such service opportunities might include teaching Sunday school, serving on the board of a school corporation or community service organization, or providing free medical care in a medically underserved community at home or abroad. Few opportunities for growth are as valuable as truly constructive criticism, and few things contribute more to professional fulfillment than earnest appreciation and praise. When Austin Regional Clinic implemented a form of peer review and feedback focused on promoting fulfillment, their annual physician turnover rate dropped from 8% to 3%. 38 A structured forum for addressing and correcting problems, as well as recognizing improvements, offers immense intrinsic motivation. Conclusions We ignore the subject of physician fulfillment at our peril. For academic medicine to thrive in the coming years, we need to attend more carefully than ever to the factors that enhance and detract from the quality of work we do. If we operate with a clear understanding of the psychology of professional fulfillment and the various organizational strategies that foster it, we can promote a powerful sense of fulfillment among physicians. This, in turn, can help to rekindle the noble aspirations that drew us to careers in medicine in the first place. References 1 Heskett J, Sasser W, Schlesinger L. The Service-Profit Chain: How Leading Companies Link Profit and Growth to Loyalty, Satisfaction, and Value. New York: Free Press, Levering Robert. Transforming Your Organization: Creating a Great Place To Work. Frank Russell Company, Building Trust Conference, Washington, DC, April 14, Harter J, Schmidt F, Hayes T. Business-unitlevel relationship between employee satisfaction, employee engagement, and business outcomes: a meta-analysis. J Appl Psychol. 2002;87: Gittell J. The Southwest Airlines Way: Using the Power of Relationships to Achieve High Performance. New York: McGraw-Hill, Rucci A, Kirn S, Quinn R. The employeecustomer-profit chain at Sears. Harv Bus Rev. 1998;76: Franklin Covey Web site. Improving employee satisfaction and patient care in the face of oncoming competition ( franklincovey.com/about/investor/stories/ memorial_cs.html). Accessed 12 April Haas J, Cook E, Puopolo A, Burstin H, Cleary P, Brennan T. Is the professional satisfaction of general internists associated with patient satisfaction? J Gen Intern Med. 2000;15: Grembowski D, Paschane D, Diehr P, Katon W, Martin D, Patrick D. Managed care, physician job satisfaction, and the quality of primary care. J Gen Intern Med. 2005;20: Buchbinder S, Wilson M, Melick C, Powe N. Primary care physician job satisfaction and turnover. Am J Manag Care. 2001;7: Beasley B, Kern D, Kolodner K. Job turnover and its correlates among residency program directors in internal medicine. Acad Med. 2001;76: Buchbinder S, Wilson M, Melick C, Powe N. Estimates of costs of primary care physician turnover. Am J Manag Care. 1999;5: Berger J, Boyle R. How to avoid the high costs of physician turnover. Med Grp Manag J. 1992;39: DiMatteo M, Sherbourne C, Hays R, Ordway L, Kravitz R, McGlynn E, Kaplan S, Rogers W. Physicians characteristics influence patients adherence to medical treatment: results from the medical outcomes study. Health Psychol. 1993;12: Sundquist J, Johansson S. High demand, low control, and impaired general health: working conditions in a sample of Swedish general practitioners. Scand J Public Health. 2000;28: Linzer M, Gerrity M, Douglas J, McMurray J, Williams E, Konrad T. Physician job stress: results from the physician worklife survey. Stress Health. 2002;18: Williams E, Konrad T, Scheckler W, Pathman D, Linzer M, McMurray J, Gerrity M. Understanding physicians intention to withdraw from practice: the role of job satisfaction, job stress, mental and physical health. Health Care Manage Rev. 2001;26: Leigh J, Kravitz R, Schembri M, Samuels S, Mobley S. Physician career satisfaction across specialties. Arch Intern Med. 2002;162: Konrad T, Williams E, Linzer M, et al. Measuring physician job satisfaction in a changing workplace and a challenging environment. Med Care. 999;37: Coyle Y, Aday L, Battles J, Hynan L. Measuring and predicting academic generalists work satisfaction: implications for retaining faculty. Acad Med. 1999;74: Pathman D, Konrad T, Williams E, Scheckler W, Linzer M, Douglas J. Physician job satisfaction, job dissatisfaction, and physician turnover. J Fam Pract. 2002;51: DeVoe J, Fryer G, Harvraves J, Phillips R, Green L. Does career dissatisfaction affect the ability of family physicians to deliver high quality patient care? J Fam Pract. 2002;51: Williams E, Linzer M, Pathman D, McMurray J, Konrad T. What do physicians want in their ideal job? J Med Pract Manage. 2003;18: Academic Medicine, Vol. 81, No. 6 / June
6 Teaching and Learning Moments 23 Williams E, Skinner A. Outcomes of physician job satisfaction: a narrative review, implications, and directions for future research. Health Care Manage Rev. 2003;28: Wetterneck T, Linzer M, McMurray J, et al. Worklife and satisfaction of general internists. Arch Intern Med. 2002;162: Gunderman R, Hubbard M. The wages of healing: ethical issues in the compensation of physicians. Med Sci Monit. 2005;11:SR5 SR Linzer M, Konrad T, Douglas J, McMurray J, et al. Managed care, time pressure, and physician job satisfaction: results from the physician worklife study. J Gen Intern Med. 2000;15: Frank E, McMurray JE, Linzer M, Elon L. Career satisfaction of US women physicians. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159: McMurray JE, Linzer M, Konrad TR, Douglas J, Shugerman R, Nelson K. The work lives of women physicians: results from the physician worklife study. J Gen Intern Med. 2000;15: End A, Mittleboeck M, Piza-Katzer H. Professional satisfaction of women in surgery: results of a national study. Arch Surg. 2004; 139: Bergus G, Randall C, Winniford M, Mueller C, Johnson S. Job satisfaction and workplace characteristics of primary and specialty care physicians at a bimodal school. Acad Med. 2001;76: Siu A, Beck J. Physician satisfaction with career choices in geriatrics. Gerontologist. 1990;30: Weinberg D, Engasser P. Dermatologists in Kaiser Permanente-northern California: satisfaction, perceived constraints, and policy options. Arch Dermatol. 1996;132: Frank E, Rock J, Sara D. Characteristics of female obstetrician-gynecologists in the Unites States. Obstet Gynecol. 1999;94: Sturm R. Datapoints: are psychiatrists more dissatisfied with their careers than other physicians? Psychiatr Serv. 2001;52: Gallery M, Whitley T, Klonis L, Anzinger R, Revicki D. A study of occupational stress and depression among emergency physicians. Ann Emerg Med. 1992;21: Herzberg F. One more time: how do you motivate employees? Harv Bus Rev. 2003;81: Gunderman R, Willing S. Motivation in radiology: implications for leadership. Radiology. 2002;225: Greene J. Higher morale ground. Mod Phy. 2003;7: Teaching and Learning Moments A Call from the Chairman As a burned-out intern on one of the more difficult rotations of the year, I immediately guessed that a call to schedule an appointment to meet with the department chairman was probably not good news. I was barely keeping my head up from the exhausting routine of the renal service at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago, where I was about midway through my internship. At the end of each day, I had a continuous low-grade headache and my thigh muscles burned with each flight of stairs I climbed. I recall trying to remember if I may have done anything wrong that would have gotten me in trouble, but to be honest, I was so tired that I quickly moved on to indifference concerning the meeting it was just another box to check off as done on the scut list that I kept attached to my bent aluminum clipboard. The chairman of my department was Jordan Cohen, and our brief conversation that day had a significant impact on my career. I was not the typical internal medicine intern in some ways. I was relatively young and from the start of my medical career I knew that I was interested in a career in public policy. I had already spent two summers as an intern on Capitol Hill during college, and I knew that it was not likely that I would take a traditional career pathway in medicine. While at Michael Reese, I had begun to explore attending either law school or a doctoral program in health policy. I was miserable, and had begun to regularly complain to my classmates and attendings that internal medicine was not for me. Every day I asked myself why I was putting up with the grueling internship and the prospect of two more years beyond that when I was already heading toward a career in which I would probably not practice medicine in the traditional sense. Somehow the word got back to Jordan, and that was what prompted the call to meet. I don t recall the details of the discussion, but I do remember that Jordan started off with a general question about how I was dealing with the stress of internship. At this point, I had made up my mind to leave, but I thought I would be polite and listen. Jordan asked me about my career goals. When I told him that I was headed toward a career in health and science policy, he did not miss a beat. He talked about the potential impact I could have as an internist in public policy and went on to lay out why he thought completing residency would provide important experience and credibility for a career in health policy. Somehow I left that meeting surprising myself by agreeing to stick it out a bit longer in the program. As often happens in circumstances like this, the I m-not-putting-up-with-thisanymore moment passed. Throughout my residency, Jordan continued to demonstrate his support for my unusual career path. In my senior year of residency, he allowed me to complete an unusual elective rotation with the policy office of the American College of Physicians in Washington, DC, an experience that reinforced my desire to pursue a career in policy. I completed the internship and the residency, and Jordan was always on my list of mentors I stayed in touch with as I moved along in my career. He encouraged me when I applied to the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars program and again when I applied to the graduate program of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. After completing my fellowships and graduate school, I went on to the RAND Corporation and later to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. When I became deputy director of the National Institutes of Health and Jordan was president of the Association of American Medical Colleges, I was delighted to be in regular contact with him again. In the health and science policy community in Washington, Jordan is uniformly respected for his ability to bring constituencies together in the interest of the public an extraordinarily valuable and rare skill within the Beltway these days. I recently ran across my internship class photograph with Jordan seated in the middle of the front row. It reminded me that Jordan was what so many of us wanted to be when we grew up a compassionate physician, an excellent teacher, a skilled researcher, an active member of the broader medical community and on top of all of that, he had this cool Omar Sharif thing going on. I know that I was not the only intern in our class to receive a call for a welltimed one-on-one conversation that had a lasting impact. We all chose different careers paths, but we all benefited from his leadership, his mentorship, and most importantly, his standard of excellence though none of us ever became quite as cool as Jordan. Raynard S. Kington, MD, PhD Dr. Kington resides in Takoma Park, Maryland. 582 Academic Medicine, Vol. 81, No. 6 / June 2006
MICHELLE BAILEY, MD, FAAP DIRECTOR, MEDICAL EDUCATION DUKE INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE
ANNIE NEDROW, MD, MBA ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR DUKE INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE MICHELLE BAILEY, MD, FAAP DIRECTOR, MEDICAL EDUCATION DUKE INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE EMILY RATNER, MD, FAAMA CLINICAL PROFESSOR STANFORD UNIVERSITY
The Benefits of Employee Volunteer Programs
JA Worldwide The Benefits of Employee Volunteer Programs A 2009 Summary Report Introduction There are ample quantitative and qualitative studies that show that being a good corporate citizen can also be
Family physician job satisfaction in different medical care organization models
Family Practice Vol. 17, No. 4 Oxford University Press 2000 Printed in Great Britain Family physician job satisfaction in different medical care organization models Carmen García-Peña a, Sandra Reyes-Frausto
Employee Engagement & Health: An EAP's Role & Perspective. Insights from the Shepell fgi Research Group
Employee Engagement & Health: An EAP's Role & Perspective Insights from the Shepell fgi Research Group Employee Engagement & Health: An EAP's Role & Perspective EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Employee engagement has
HOW TO RETAIN HIGH-PERFORMANCE EMPLOYEES
HOW TO RETAIN HIGH-PERFORMANCE EMPLOYEES Beverly Kaye and Sharon Jordan-Evans Abstract: Keeping high-performing employees has become a top priority for today s organizations. A two-year study by the authors
Sales Force Management 2013 Course Outline (5/10) Krzysztof Cybulski Ph.D. Marketing Chair Faculty of Management Warsaw University
Sales Force Management 2013 Course Outline (5/10) Krzysztof Cybulski Ph.D. Marketing Chair Faculty of Management Warsaw University Program of Sales Force Management Course 1. Creating The Sales Force 2.
EMPLOYER OF CHOICE RECOGNITION PROGRAM
EMPLOYER OF CHOICE RECOGNITION PROGRAM WHAT IT MEANS TO BECOME AN EMPLOYER OF CHOICE In today's highly competitive employment world, employers of all kinds are eager to differentiate themselves from other
SALES FORCE MOTIVATION AND COMPENSATION
Learning Objectives: To understand the importance of sales force motivation, compensation for creating enhanced sales, and retention of existing sales persons and attraction of the best talent in the industry.
Customer Referral Programs A How-To Guide to Help You Generate Better Sales Leads
Customer Referral Programs A How-To Guide to Help You Generate Better Sales Leads Whatare Customer Referral Programs? Customer referral programs are a simple, low cost and effective marketing strategy,
Chain Community Pharmacy: Management
Chain Community Pharmacy: Management Background Chain pharmacy provides two primary career paths for pharmacists: management and staff. This profile focuses on management, while the staff position is discussed
COMPARISON OF CLINICIAN TEACHER AND SALARIED CLINICAL FACULTY PATHWAYS, PSYCHIATRY AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES 9/22/14
COMPARISON OF CLINICIAN TEACHER AND SALARIED CLINICAL FACULTY PATHWAYS, PSYCHIATRY AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES 9/22/14 Clinician Teacher Primary responsibilities Clinical care Teaching and/or supervision Scholarship
Employee Surveys: Four Do s and Don ts. Alec Levenson
Employee Surveys: Four Do s and Don ts Alec Levenson Center for Effective Organizations University of Southern California 3415 S. Figueroa Street, DCC 200 Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA Phone: 1-213-740-9814
The Impact of Rewards Programs on Employee Engagement. research. Dow Scott, Ph.D., Loyola University Tom McMullen, Hay Group WorldatWork June 2010
The Impact of Rewards Programs on Employee Engagement research Dow Scott, Ph.D., Loyola University Tom McMullen, Hay Group WorldatWork June 00 Media Contact: Marcia Rhodes 00 N. Northsight Blvd. Scottsdale,
Personalized Career Pathway
Personalized Career Pathway An individualized approach to training in Internal Medicine Personalized Career Pathway An individualized approach to training in Internal Medicine. 4 Ambulatory Primary Care
Workforce Development Pathway 8 Supervision, Mentoring & Coaching
Workforce Development Pathway 8 Supervision, Mentoring & Coaching A recovery-oriented service allows the opportunity for staff to explore and learn directly from the wisdom and experience of others. What
Organizational Application Managing Employee Retention as a Strategy for Increasing Organizational Competitiveness
Applied H.R.M. Research, 2003, Volume 8, Number 2, pages 63-72 Organizational Application Managing Employee Retention as a Strategy for Increasing Organizational Competitiveness Sunil Ramlall, Ph.D. University
An Examination of the Graduation Rates and Enrollment Trends in Industrial Technology Baccalaureate Programs from 1988-1998
Volume 17, Number 3 - May 21 to July 21 An Examination of the Graduation Rates and Enrollment Trends in Industrial Technology Baccalaureate Programs from 1988-1998 By Dr. Tao C. Chang & Dr. John C. Dugger
Academic Program Review External Reviewers Report Template
Academic Program Review External Reviewers Report Template The report prepared by the External Reviewers will be used by the Arkansas Department of Higher Education (ADHE) to verify the student demand
1. Emotional consequences of stroke can be significant barriers to RTW
Important Issues for Stroke Survivors to Consider When Returning to Work Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research 1 Stroke is a leading cause of
Content and Process Theories of Motivation
1.4 Content and Process Theories of Motivation F O C U S The major motivation theorists and their relevance to the industry. By Rodger Stotz, CPIM, Maritz Inc., and Bruce Bolger, CPIM, Selling Communications,
2013 Survey of registered nurses
We ve earned The Joint Commission s Gold Seal of Approval 2013 Survey of registered nurses Generation Gap Grows as Healthcare Transforms AMN Healthcare, Inc., 2013 12400 High Bluff Drive, San Diego, CA
Prepared for: Your Company Month/Year
Prepared for: Your Company Month/Year This sample is a condensed version showing selections from an actual 4Cs Comprehensive Employee Survey Analysis report and balloons explaining the main features of
#3: SAMPLE CONSENT FORM
#3: SAMPLE CONSENT FORM [Key Element #3: Who is conducting the study] UPMC University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic CONSENT TO ACT AS A PARTICIPANT IN A RESEARCH
Virginia Commonwealth University Health System Postdoctoral Training Program in Clinical Health Psychology. Program Synopsis
Virginia Commonwealth University Health System Postdoctoral Training Program in Clinical Health Psychology Program Synopsis Definition: Clinical Health Psychology is the specialty that applies scientific
Mental Health Nurses and their Employers See Enhanced Role for Nursing in Milwaukee County s Mental Health System
VOLUME 100, NUMBER 5 OCTOBER 2012 Mental Health Nurses and their Employers See Enhanced Role for Nursing in Milwaukee County s Mental Health System The Forum surveyed 120 mental health nurses and 34 employers
ROLE OF HRM & OB IN TODAY S EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION/UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION
ROLE OF HRM & OB IN TODAY S EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION/UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION Dr. M.L. Vasitha Associate Professor, Department of Business Administration Jai Narain Vyas University, Jodhpur Mr. B.S. Chauhan
Philosophy Statement. Jason Champagne. Wright State University
J. Champagne Philosophy 1 Running Head: PHILOSOPHY STATEMENT Philosophy Statement Jason Champagne Wright State University J. Champagne Philosophy 2 Philosophy Statement Over the course of my career, I
Medical Communications/Drug Information
1 Medical Communications/Drug Information Background Pharmacists who specialize in medical communications/drug information provide educational services about pharmaceutical products for health care professionals,
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF CONTINUING AND PROFESSIONAL STUDIES MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT DIVISION OF PROGRAMS IN BUSINESS MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
System is a not-forprofit
ABOUT THE PROJECT The Pioneer Employer Initiative is based on the idea that employers who do good, do well. It is an effort to discover and promote the next generation of best practices in workforce management,
Job Satisfaction Among Primary Health Care Physicians and Nurses in Al-Madinah Al-Munawwara
The Journal of the Egyptian Public Health Association (JEPHAss.) Vol.81 N o. 3& 4, 2006 Job Satisfaction Among Primary Health Care Physicians and Nurses in Al-Madinah Al-Munawwara Abdullah M. Al Juhani
Quality of Work Life of Family Physicians in Wisconsin s Health Care Organizations: A WReN Study
Quality of Work Life of Family Physicians in Wisconsin s Health Care Organizations: A WReN Study John W. Beasley, MD; Ben-Tzion Karsh, PhD; François Sainfort, PhD; Mary Ellen Hagenauer, BA; Lucille Marchand,
Graduate Program Review of EE and CS
Graduate Program Review of EE and CS The site visit for the Graduate Program Review of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science took place on April 3-4. It included meetings with many constituencies
The lack of depth of women leaders in U.S. healthcare organizations continues to
C A R E E R S Leveraging Women s Leadership Talent in Healthcare Martha C. Hauser, managing director and Southern Region healthcare practice leader, Diversified Search, Atlanta, Georgia The lack of depth
Executive Summary and Recommendations
Executive Summary and Recommendations To download a free copy of the complete report, go to www.aauw.org/learn/research/whysofew.cfm. Executive Summary Women have made tremendous progress in education
Our faculty has been hand-picked for their knowledge, experience, and enthusiasm for teaching
We welcome your interest in Advocate Lutheran General Hospital s Psychiatry Residency Program. ALGH is a 638-bed teaching hospital located adjacent to Chicago on the northwest side. We proudly provide
Talent 2020: Surveying the talent paradox from the employee perspective The view from the Health Care sector
Talent 2020: Surveying the talent paradox from the employee perspective The view from the Health Care sector Deloitte Consulting s September 2012 Talent 2020: Surveying the talent paradox from the employee
HRM. Human Resource Management Rapid Assessment Tool. A Guide for Strengthening HRM Systems. for Health Organizations. 3rd edition
HRM Human Resource Management Rapid Assessment Tool for Health Organizations A Guide for Strengthening HRM Systems 3rd edition . Human Resource Management Rapid Assessment Tool Copyright 2005, renewed
THE current healthcare environment has
Crit Care Nurs Q Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 248 252 c 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. Mentoring A Staff Retention Tool Mary Louise Kanaskie, MS, RNc, AOCN Staff retention presents a common challenge
Job Satisfaction Among Elementary Level Educators
Job Satisfaction Among Elementary Level Educators Andrea Greene Dan Jensen Tim Madden Richard Maloon MBA 600 Organizational Behavior Dr. Eric Stark Table of Contents Abstract -3- Introduction -4- Theory
Making the Transition to Management
Making the Transition to Management Overview Advice on making the move to a management or supervisory position. Mistakes new managers often make The pressures and challenges new managers face Tips for
Sample Behavioural Questions by Competency
Competencies that support LEADING PEOPLE Change Leadership Please tell us about a time when you led a significant change in your organization and how you helped others to deal with the change. Tell me
California Board of Registered Nursing
California Board of Registered Nursing 2006 Survey of Registered Nurses Conducted for the California Board of Registered Nursing by the University of California, San Francisco School of Nursing and Center
Return on Investment (ROI): Calculating the Monetary Return of a Leadership Development Program
Return on Investment (ROI): Calculating the Monetary Return of a Leadership Development Program Frederick R. Rohs Professor and Extension Staff Development Specialist Department of Agricultural Leadership,
Perception is Reality: The Importance of Pay Fairness to Employees and Organizations
Third Quarter 2013 Perception is Reality: The Importance of Pay Fairness to Employees and Organizations Fairness is in the eye of the beholder, and pay fairness is no different. The perceived fairness
Managing Performance through Reward System
Journal of Education & Research for Sustainable Development (JERSD) (An Online Quarterly International Peer-Reviewed Interdisciplinary Journal of Seven Petals Foundation) Volume-1, Online Issue-1 Managing
Counseling psychologists School psychologists Industrial-organizational psychologists "Psychologist Overview"
Psychologist Overview The Field - Specialty Areas - Preparation - Day in the Life - Earnings - Employment - Career Path Forecast - Professional Organizations The Field Psychologists study the human mind
Are They the Same Thing? An ADP White Paper
Employee Satisfaction vs. Employee Engagement: Are They the Same Thing? An ADP White Paper Executive Summary There continues to be a lot of confusion in the HR industry around employee satisfaction and
Ministry of Social Development: Changes to the case management of sickness and invalids beneficiaries
Ministry of Social Development: Changes to the case management of sickness and invalids beneficiaries This is the report of a performance audit we carried out under section 16 of the Public Audit Act 2001
MOTIVATING EMPLOYEES FOR SAFETY SUCCESS
MOTIVATING EMPLOYEES FOR SAFETY SUCCESS Thomas R. Krause * and Gordon Sellers # * Behavioral Science Technology, Ojai CA, USA # Behavioural Science Technology International, Bracknell RG12 1JB, [email protected]
National Center for Healthcare Leadership SUMMARY. Health Leadership Competency Model
National Center for Healthcare Leadership Health Leadership Competency Model SUMMARY The NCHL Health Leadership Competency Model was created through research by the Hay Group with practicing health leaders
Focus On Health, Not Problems: Building A
White Paper August 2005 TM Authors: Lynn Lehman, M.Ed. Director of Marketing & Program Development James S. Rowell, M.S.Ed. Co-Founder & Senior Consultant Richard A. Pierce, Ph.D. Co-Founder & Senior Consultant
The Global State of Employee Engagement: A 2014 Study
The Global State of Employee Engagement: A 2014 Study The Global State of Employee Engagement: A 2014 Study In May of 2014, BPI group partnered with research firm BVA to survey the state of employee engagement
THE EVOLUTION of Talent Management Consulting
Talent management consulting is the giving of professional, expert advice to executives who are put in charge of handling, directing, or managing those who have a capacity for achievement or success. THE
December, 2009. Salary, Education, Benefits, and Job Descriptions of Nurses, Teachers, and Social Workers: A Comparative Analysis
December, 2009 Salary, Education, Benefits, and Job Descriptions of Nurses, Teachers, and Social Workers: A Comparative Analysis Contents Introduction 3 Problem Statement 3 Social Work within the Texas
Oswald Wellness Playbook. Program Measurement
Oswald Wellness Playbook Program Measurement Health management starts with health measurement. Introduction Health management starts with health measurement. Quality assurance through appropriate measurement
Succession Planning and Career Development
Succession Planning and Career Development Succession Planning and Career Development All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. IAAP claims no ownership interest in the trademarks. Table
Clinic. Richard Smith, LCSW Leonard Savage, Consumer Steven I. Aronin, MD FACP, Program Director
Positive Psychology Peer Led Programs Waterbury Hospital Infectious Disease Clinic Richard Smith, LCSW Leonard Savage, Consumer Steven I. Aronin, MD FACP, Program Director Ryan White All Grantee Meeting
Research Brief. Word of Mouth and Physician Referrals Still Drive Health Care Provider Choice
Research Brief Findings From HSC NO. 9, DECEMBER 2008 Word of Mouth and Physician Referrals Still Drive Health Care Choice BY HA T. TU AND JOHANNA R. LAUER Sponsors of health care price and quality transparency
Psychology Online MSc Programmes
Online MSc Programmes 2 Why study for an online masters in psychology with the University of Liverpool? Gain a masters degree from a pioneering, globally respected university with a School of Psychology
Listen, Protect, and Connect
Page 1 Listen, Protect, and Connect PSYCHOLOGICAL FIRST AID FOR CHILDREN, PARENTS, AND OTHER CAREGIVERS AFTER NATURAL DISASTERS Helping you and your child in times of disaster. Page 2 As a parent or adult
Faculty of Health Sciences Recanati School for Community Health Professions Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Faculty of Health Sciences Recanati School for Community Health Professions 25-Jan-11 A response to the report of the Committee for the Evaluation of Nursing Study Programs January 2011 The Department
How to Cure the Retention Problems Ailing Your Health Care Organization
How to Cure the Retention Problems Ailing Your Health Care Organization CareerBuilder surveyed more than 1,000 health care workers to better understand the job challenges they face. The survey uncovered
Council-Manager Form of Government Voters Council Manager Department Heads. Mayor-Council Form of Government Voters Mayor-Council Department Heads
What Is the Local Government Management Profession? Recognizing the complexity involved in providing citizens with the services that they need on a day-to-day basis, many communities have opted to hire
Filling in the Gaps: Disability Risk Management for the Medical Community
Filling in the Gaps: Disability Risk Management for the Medical Community Executive Summary Most would agree that changes in the business world move at an increasingly rapid pace, but developments in the
2016 Survey on Leadership Development. Copyright Borderless - http://borderless.net
2016 Survey on Leadership Development Table of Contents 3 9 Executive Summary About Survey Respondents 15 Leadership Development definition & scope Leadership Development inside organizations 24 36 Leadership
Recruit the Right Talent To Increase Sales Effectiveness. ManpowerGroup Solutions Recruitment Process Outsourcing
Recruit the Right Talent To Increase Sales Effectiveness ManpowerGroup Solutions Recruitment Process Outsourcing Executive Summary The most successful sales professionals are often promoted to leadership
GUIDELINES AND PRINCIPLES FOR ACCREDITATION OF PROGRAMS IN PROFESSIONAL PSYCHOLOGY 1G&P APA OFFICE OF PROGRAM CONSULTATION & ACCREDITATION
GUIDELINES AND PRINCIPLES FOR ACCREDITATION OF PROGRAMS IN PROFESSIONAL PSYCHOLOGY 1 APA OFFICE OF PROGRAM CONSULTATION & ACCREDITATION Copyright 2013 by the American Psychological Association All Rights
Hospital Pharmacy: Management
Hospital Pharmacy: Management Background Hospital pharmacy management is a promising career option for pharmacists who enjoy the challenges presented by administrative work in an institutional setting.
Staff Development as Motivation for Paraprofessionals: A Case. Study in Southern Nigeria
Staff Development as Motivation for Paraprofessionals: A Case Study in Southern Nigeria Philip Chime Aziagba University of Port Harcourt Nigeria [email protected] ABSTRACT: Library paraprofessional
Assessing Employee Satisfaction at the Zimbabwe Open University
Assessing Employee Satisfaction at the Zimbabwe Open University Daniel Ndudzo Zimbabwe Open University, Harare, Zimbabwe ABSTRACT This study assesses employee satisfaction at the Zimbabwe Open University.
point of view The Customer Experience: People Make the Difference What Is an Exceptional Customer Experience? Why the Customer Experience Matters
The Experience: People Make the Difference You cannot generate superior long-term profits unless you achieve superior customer loyalty. Moreover, the increased speed of change, the need for flexibility
Graduate Program Course Descriptions
Graduate Program Course Descriptions The following section provides course descriptions for courses offered and required in the Research College of Nursing Graduate Programs: the Family Nurse Practitioner
Would I Follow Me? An Introduction to Management Leadership in the Workplace
Would I Follow Me? An Introduction to Management Leadership in the Workplace This dynamic program clearly shows the right and wrong ways to deal with the very important human dimension of team performance.
MASTER S IN PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING 2007-2008
MASTER S IN PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING 2007-2008 THE COUNSELING PROFESSION Professional mental health counselors facilitate the growth and development of individuals, families, and groups. The helping relationship
Expectancy Value Theory: Motivating Healthcare Workers
Expectancy Value Theory: Motivating Healthcare Workers Stefania De Simone Researcher in Organizational Behavior Institute for Research on Innovation and Services for Development National Research Council
How To Become A Health Care Provider In Alaska
COMMUNITY HEALTH AIDE get on the medical provider path 22 Is this the job for me? Take this quick quiz to find out if community health aide is a good direction for you: Do you have a desire to help people?
Medical Career Advice and Guidance Survey 2014: Initial Findings
Medical Career Advice and Guidance Survey 2014: Initial Findings In 2001, the National Institute for Career Education and Counselling (NICEC) conducted a survey for the Department of Health that identified
JULY 1, 2010 JUNE 30, 2013 STRATEGIC PLAN
DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES JULY 1, 2010 JUNE 30, 2013 STRATEGIC PLAN Introduction Human resource strategies are institutional efforts to support people (leaders, faculty and staff) to contribute to
Career Development in Human Resources According to Susan Heathfield, a Human Resources expert with 35 years in the field, many people are eager to begin a career in Human Resources because it is a fast-growing
The Psychotherapeutic Professions in Switzerland. Ulrich Schnyder & Peter Schulthess
The Psychotherapeutic Professions in Switzerland Ulrich Schnyder & Peter Schulthess I. Current situation of Psychotherapeutic Professions 1. Identity of the psychotherapeutic professions. In Switzerland,
The Right Choice for Call Recording Call Recording for Customer Retention and Superior Service
Call Recording for Customer Retention and Superior Service An OAISYS White Paper Table of Contents Leveraging Superior Service in a Down Economy...1 Tracer: The Professional Interaction Management Solution...1
Revisiting Work-Life Issues in Canada: The 2012 National Study on Balancing Work and Caregiving in Canada
Revisiting Work-Life Issues in Canada: The 2012 National Study on Balancing Work and Caregiving in Canada Linda Duxbury, PhD, Professor, Sprott School of Business, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario,
St. Luke s Hospital and Health Network Philosophy of Nursing:
St. Luke s Hospital and Health Network Philosophy of Nursing: Nursing, a healing profession, is an essential component of St. Luke's Hospital & Health Network's commitment to providing safe, compassionate,
