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The Impact of Health Care Provider Work Life on Organizations: A National Healthcare Issue, Assignments of Nursing

The importance of addressing the work life of healthcare providers as a national healthcare issue, with a focus on an organization that has consistently reported issues of unsupported, overwhelmed, and undervalued staff. The interconnectedness of the quadruple aim and the impact of poor work life on patient satisfaction, access, and healthcare professional burnout.

Typology: Assignments

2023/2024

Available from 03/24/2024

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Download The Impact of Health Care Provider Work Life on Organizations: A National Healthcare Issue and more Assignments Nursing in PDF only on Docsity! 1 National Healthcare Issue/Stressor Walden University NURS – 6053 Interprofessional Organizational and Systems Leadership National Healthcare Issue/Stressor 2 National Healthcare Issue/Stressor National Healthcare Issue/Stressor Health care provider work life is a national healthcare issue that impacts many aspects of an organization. With patient experience and satisfaction at the forefront of the health care industry, the work life of health care providers is not often taken into consideration. This needs to change. Physicians and other members of the health care workforce report widespread burnout and dissatisfaction (Bodenheimer & Sinsky, 2014). A great opportunity is being missed by overlooking this aspect of the Quadruple Aim. The purpose of this paper is to address the importance of health care provider work life and the impact that is has on the organization. Each year, this organization requires all employees to participate in an “Employee Engagement Survey”. This is an attempt to gain input from the employees and institute a change based off of the information collected. However, based on the results of the survey from 2015- 2019, there are still areas that have yet to be addressed. I identified three issues that were common among many health care providers of this organization: not feeling supported by management, feeling overwhelmed on a daily basis, pay is not competitive. These three issues were the most recurrent issues from 2015-2019. For the last four years, health care providers at this organization feel unsupported, overwhelmed, and undervalued. Small initiatives have been made to attempt to address these employee concerns; however, they continue to dominate the employee engagement survey for four years in a row. I feel that if measures aren’t taken to improve the work life of the health care providers of this organization, they will seek employment elsewhere. The average staff turnover rate at this facility over the last five years is 27%. 5 National Healthcare Issue/Stressor health care worker work life, the common issues of: not feeling supported by management, feeling overwhelmed on a daily basis, and low pay would potentially no longer be an issue for the first time in five years. Competing Needs Impacting Poor Health Care Provider Work Life When EHRs were first introduced, they were touted as a way to streamline workflows and reduce the clerical burden on physicians. In this respect, however, EHRs have had the opposite effect of creating more work (Reith, 2018). In a retrospective cohort study of 142 physicians it was noted that Clinicians spent 355 minutes (5.9 hours) of an 11.4-hour workday in the EHR per weekday per 1.0 clinical full-time equivalent. Clerical and administrative tasks including documentation, order entry, billing and coding, and system security accounted for nearly one-half of the total EHR time (Arndt et al., 2017). This organization currently has a policy in place for Health Information Management (HIM) that addresses the use of a scribe for physician EHR documentation. If a scribe were to be utilized in the Emergency Department (ED) and physician’s documentation suite it would alleviate some of the burden of the EHR on the physicians. Also, nursing staff has access to enter physician’s orders into the EHR, however, under the current organizational policy, a written verbal order form must be completed prior to the nurse entering the order. I feel that this is redundant and increases the workload on both the physician and nurse. If this policy were amended to allow nursing staff to enter orders without using a paper form first, this could assist in reducing time spent in the EHR for physicians. Ethical considerations for amending this policy are the potential for dishonesty by both the physician and nursing staff. A nurse would have the 6 National Healthcare Issue/Stressor potential to order things without the physician’s knowledge. Also, the physician would have the ability to deny giving permission for the nurse to enter an order. Health care providers are constantly asked to “do more with less”. This results in increased workloads and higher nurse to patient ratios that contribute to poor health care provider work life. Burnout and poor health care provider work life are associated with increased adverse patient outcomes and decreased patient satisfaction. The finding that burnout and poor wellbeing are both associated with poorer patient safety has significant implications for policymakers and management teams within healthcare settings (Hall et al., 2016). This organization currently has a policy in place with department-specific staffing ratios. However, though the policy exists, it is not adhered to. For example, per the existing policy, staffing ratios for the least acute floor (Med-Surg) are not to exceed 6:1 but it is not uncommon for the actual ratio to be 7:1 or even 8:1. The policy that is currently in place is a corporate policy that is supposed to be adhered to by all facilities within the organization. This facility has hired 450 staff members since January 2020. This indicates a high turnover. Understaffing is a large issue at this facility. Focus needs to be shifted from gaining employees to retaining employees. By adhering to this policy with lower nurse to patient ratios, health care provider work life is improved. This will improve staff retention and improve patient outcomes and satisfaction. No ethical concerns exist with this policy. 7 National Healthcare Issue/Stressor References Arndt, B. G., Beasley, J. W., Watkinson, M. D., Temte, J. L., Tuan, W.-J., Sinsky, C. A., & Gilchrist, V. J. (2017). Tethered to the EHR: Primary Care Physician Workload Assessment Using EHR Event Log Data and Time-Motion Observations. The Annals of Family Medicine, 15(5), 419–426. https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2121 Bodenheimer, T., & Sinsky, C. (2014). From Triple to Quadruple Aim: Care of the Patient Requires Care of the Provider. The Annals of Family Medicine, 12(6), 573-576. doi:10.1370/afm.1713 Hall, L. H., Johnson, J., Watt, I., Tsipa, A., & O’Connor, D. B. (2016). Healthcare Staff Wellbeing, Burnout, and Patient Safety: A Systematic Review. Plos One, 11(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159015 Kushnir, T., Greenberg, D., Madjar, N., Hadari, I., Yermiahu, Y., & Bachner, Y. G. (2013). Is burnout associated with referral rates among primary care physicians in community clinics? Family Practice, 31(1), 44-50. doi:10.1093/fampra/cmt060 Mchugh, M. D., Kutney-Lee, A., Cimiotti, J. P., Sloane, D. M., & Aiken, L. H. (2011). Nurses’ Widespread Job Dissatisfaction, Burnout, And Frustration With Health Benefits Signal Problems For Patient Care. Health Affairs, 30(2), 202-210. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0100
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