Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Not the Retiring Type - January 2015 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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4 3 JANUARY 2015 | O U T PAT I E N TS U R G E R Y. N E T What makes a good action plan? It's up to you to clearly state the behavior you desire and why what you're seeing isn't measuring up to your facility's standards. Be trans- parent with employees about the specific behaviors you'd like correct- ed. During a sit-down meeting, detail what people are saying and what you're seeing, and let them know that your physicians agree with those observations. Remind them that you addressed their problem behaviors and provided the education and tools for change, which didn't work. Tell them they need to go home, think about her work- place performance and come back the next day with an action plan that contains detailed steps for change. They must present the action plan before you'll allow them back on the unit, or they can present their resignation. The choice is theirs. The action plan must be realistic and include specific, corrective steps for change. For example, one of my employees who realized her actions were detrimental to the team promised to apologize to her teammates and asked them to provide feedback if they saw her repeating old habits. All isn't forgotten once you approve the action plan. Tell employees sent home for a Decision-Making Day that they can't resort to their old ways when they return. Put them on notice: Tell them that as soon as they slip up, you will take immediate and aggressive disciplinary action toward their termination. Make sure physicians support the program and buy in when you target someone for improvement. Ask a physician leader to sit in during the first few times you confront an employee, because the meetings might be difficult, especially since word of your new hardline stance hasn't yet filtered back to the masses. Having a medical staff leader present also shows employees that they can't run to physicians for support.

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