1 / 24

Healthcare Human Resource Management Flynn Mathis Jackson Langan

Healthcare Human Resource Management Flynn Mathis Jackson Langan. Organizational Relations and Employee Retention in Healthcare. Chapter 7. PowerPoint Presentation by Tonya L. Elliott, PHR. Learning Objectives.

shaun
Download Presentation

Healthcare Human Resource Management Flynn Mathis Jackson Langan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Healthcare Human Resource ManagementFlynn Mathis Jackson Langan Organizational Relations and Employee Retention in Healthcare Chapter 7 PowerPoint Presentation by Tonya L. Elliott, PHR

  2. Learning Objectives After you have read this chapter, you should be able to: • Explain the factors affecting the relationship between employees and healthcare organizations • Discuss the importance of employee retention for healthcare organizations • Identify the common reasons employees voluntarily leave organizations • Define the various organizational retention determinants • Describe how to compute the cost of organizational turnover

  3. Relationships: The Psychological Contract The Psychological Contract The unwritten expectations that employees and employers have about the nature of their work relationships Psychological Ownership Individual’s feeling of control and perceived rights Loyalty has declined in recent years

  4. The New Psychological Contract

  5. Individual/Organizational Relationship Factors Economic changes -- Shift to dot-com and technology sectors Generational differences -- Differing expectations between the generational groups Loyalty -- Psychological contract changes Career expectations for women -- Expansion into other industries other than teaching and healthcare

  6. Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment Job Satisfaction A positive emotional state resulting from evaluating one’s job experiences Organizational Commitment The degree to which employees believe in and accept organizational goals and desire to remain within the organization

  7. Individual / Organizational Performance Figure 7-2

  8. Retention Keeping employees who have been recruited, selected, and trained Retention is a growing concern due to: More patients due to increase in elderly consumers Healthcare employee shortages More demanding consumers More stressful working environments for healthcare workers Retention Officer – often an individual in an HR department who is responsible for retention efforts in the organization Retention of Human Resources

  9. Figure 7-4 Retention Determinants

  10. Organizational Components Organizational culture A pattern of shared values and beliefs giving members of an organization meaning and providing them rules for behavior Job continuity and security Loyalty Downsizing, layoffs, mergers, acquisitions, organizational restructuring

  11. Organizational Career Opportunities Key component in retention: “opportunities for personal growth” Career Development • Tuition aid may increase retention rates • Companies must identify ways to use new knowledge gained --- increases employee’s feeling of “value” Career Planning • Managers should discuss and plan career development with their employees • Job posting programs have been proven effective

  12. Rewards & Retention Key to retention: Competitive compensation practices Pay • Bigger retention issue in lower income groups Benefits • Benefits flexibility aids retention Special benefits and perks • Day care centers, salons, post offices, dry cleaners, paid parking, etc. • Reduces employee time spent after work on personal chores

  13. Rewards & Retention (cont’d) Performance differentiation of compensation • Greater rewards for higher performers • Variable pay programs • Incentive programs -- Cash bonuses -- Lump sum payments Employee recognition Tangible – employee of the month, perfect attendance awards Intangible – feedback, recognition in newsletters, banquets

  14. Job Design and Retention High turnover rates in early employment have been linked to inadequate selection screening

  15. Work Flexibility Work scheduling alternatives • Telecommuting Working from home or other locations • Flextime Flexible work schedules • Compressed work weeks 4 days/10 hours; 3 days/12 hours, etc.

  16. Work Schedule Flexibility Trends Figure 7-6

  17. Balancing Patient Care Needs & Schedule Flexibility Increased schedule flexibility accomplished with: Part-time and casual workers Some full-time employees replaced with greater number of part-time and casual employees Patient census prediction & staffing methods Establish the corestaff + Supplementing with variable staff

  18. Supervisory Retention Efforts Figure 7-7

  19. Retention Measurement and Assessment Retention measured objectively vs. subjectively Number of employee separations during the month X 100 (Total number of employees at midpoint) Turnover

  20. The Cost of Turnover Hiring costs Recruiting, advertising, search fees, staff salaries & time, referral fees, relocation/moving costs, employment testing costs Training Costs Paid orientation time, training staff time & salaries, training materials costs Productivity costs Lost productivity due to “break-in” time of new employees, lost employee knowledge of customers, organizational products & services, resources & systems Separation costs Staff and supervisory time & salaries, exit interview time, unemployment expenses, legal fees for challenged separations

  21. Simplified Turnover Costing Model

  22. Employee Surveys Employee surveys can be used to: Attitude survey Measures employees’ feelings and beliefs about their jobs Exit interview Those leaving the organization identify reasons for their departure Diagnose specific problem areas Identify employee needs or preferences Reveal areas where HR activities are viewed positively or negatively

  23. HR Retention Interventions Recruiting Process *realistic job previews Selection Process *reduce risk of hires that may create “problems” Compensation *competitive, fair, equitable pay systems Career Development & Planning *opportunity for career advancement Employee Relations *fair/nondiscriminatory treatment

  24. Retention Interventions: Evaluation & Follow-Up • Track intervention results • Review turnover data Analysis sorted by Jobs and job level Departments/units/location Reason for leaving Length of service Demographic characteristics Education & training Skills & abilities Performance ratings/levels Measure increases and decreases in turnover trends

More Related