Pinette Shirley L
Radiol Manage. 2003 Jan-Feb;25(1):26-30, 32-6.
Have you ever asked yourself, "What will I be doing five or ten years from now?" "Will I be doing the same thing I'm doing right now?" How would you feel if the answer were "yes"? I often wonder if any of my employees think the same thing. If they do, and the answer is "yes," just how does that make them feel? A day's work for managers can run the gamut--from billing and coding, to patient issues, to staff performance reviews, to CQI, to JCAHO-just to name a few. We're NEVER bored. Can we say the same of our employees, or do they do the same thing day in and day out? If so, it's no wonder that attitudes may become negative and motivation and productivity may decline. What are we as healthcare managers and administrators doing to value and continually train our employees so that staff morale, productivity and patient satisfaction remain high? What are we doing to keep those highly motivated employees motivated and challenged so that they don't get bored and want to move across town to our neighboring hospital or healthcare center? What are we doing to stop our employees from developing the "same job, different day" attitude? A Career Ladder program holds many benefits and opportunities for the motivated employee who seeks and needs additional challenges on the job. It affords them opportunities to learn new skills, demonstrate initiative, accept additional responsibilities and possibly advance into new positions. It also affords them opportunities to grow, to be challenged and to feel like an important and valued member of the radiology team and radiology department. For the manager, a Career Ladder program affords opportunities to retain valuable employees, attract new high-quality employees and maintain a workforce of well-trained highly motivated employees, which in turn will provide high quality products and services to our customers. A Career Ladder program is a "win-win" situation for everyone. For the last twelve months, I have been working with other managers in the department of diagnostic imaging at Yale-New Haven Hospital in New Haven, Conn., to develop a Career Ladder for all diagnostic imaging staff members, called the Career Advancement Program (CAP). The process has been time consuming and has required intense discussion and debate. The draft plan is for one CAP with multiple tracks to be used by all staff, both technical and support. A copy of the draft plan is included in this article.
“五年或十年后我会在做什么?”“我会还在做现在正在做的事情吗?”如果答案是“是”,你会作何感想?我常常好奇我的员工中是否有人也这样想。如果他们这么想,而且答案是“是”,那他们会作何感想呢?经理一天的工作可谓千头万绪——从计费和编码,到患者问题,再到员工绩效评估、持续质量改进(CQI)、联合委员会国际部(JCAHO)认证等等——不一而足。我们从不感到厌烦。我们能对员工也这么说吗?他们是不是日复一日地做着同样的事情?如果是这样,难怪他们的态度可能会变得消极,积极性和工作效率可能会下降。作为医疗保健经理和管理人员,我们正在采取什么措施来重视并持续培训我们的员工,以便员工士气、工作效率和患者满意度能保持在较高水平?我们正在采取什么措施来让那些积极性很高的员工保持积极性并受到挑战,使他们不会感到厌烦,也不会想跳槽到我们隔壁镇的医院或医疗中心?我们正在采取什么措施来防止我们的员工形成“日复一日,工作照旧”的态度?职业晋升计划为那些在工作中寻求并需要额外挑战的积极员工带来诸多益处和机会。它为他们提供学习新技能、展现主动性、承担更多责任并有可能晋升到新职位的机会。它还为他们提供成长、接受挑战以及感觉自己是放射科团队和放射科重要且有价值成员的机会。对经理来说,职业晋升计划提供了留住宝贵员工、吸引新的高素质员工以及维持一支训练有素、积极性很高的员工队伍的机会,这反过来又将为我们的客户提供高质量的产品和服务。职业晋升计划对每个人来说都是“双赢”局面。在过去的十二个月里,我一直在与康涅狄格州纽黑文市耶鲁 - 纽黑文医院诊断影像科的其他经理合作,为所有诊断影像工作人员制定一个职业晋升计划,称为职业发展计划(CAP)。这个过程耗时良久,需要深入的讨论和辩论。草案计划是制定一个供所有技术和支持人员使用的具有多个轨道的职业发展计划。本文包含该草案计划的副本。