Management practices impacting on the rostering of medical scientists in the Australian healthcare sector

被引:3
|
作者
Cavanagh, Jillian [1 ]
Bartram, Timothy [2 ]
Pariona-Cabrera, Patricia [1 ]
Halvorsen, Beni [1 ]
Walker, Matthew [1 ]
Stanton, Pauline [1 ]
机构
[1] RMIT Univ, Sch Management, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[2] RMIT Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
关键词
Medical scientists; Rostering; Well-being; Job demands; Job resources; Quality of patient care; HUMAN-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT; JOB DEMANDS; WORK ENGAGEMENT; BURNOUT; HRM;
D O I
10.1108/JHOM-04-2021-0124
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Purpose This study examines the management rostering systems that inform the ways medical scientists are allocated their work in the public healthcare sector in Australia. Promoting the contributions of medical scientists should be a priority given the important roles they are performing in relation to COVID-19 and the demand for medical testing doubling their workloads (COVID-19 National Incident Room Surveillance Team, 2020). This study examines the impact of work on medical scientists and rostering in a context of uncertain work conditions, budget restraints and technological change that ultimately affect the quality of patient care. This study utilises the Job-Demands-Resources theoretical framework (JD-R) to examine the various job demands on medical scientists and the resources available to them. Design/methodology/approach Using a qualitative methodological approach, this study conducted 23 semi-structured interviews with managers and trade union officials and 9 focus groups with 53 medical scientists, making a total 76 participants from four large public hospitals. Findings Due to increasing demands for pathology services, this study demonstrates that a lack of job resources, staff shortages, poor rostering practices such as increased workloads that lead to absenteeism, often illegible handwritten changes to rosters and ineffectual management lead to detrimental consequences for medical scientists' job stress and well-being. Moreover, medical science work is hidden and not fully understood and often not respected by other clinicians, hospital management or the public. These factors have contributed to medical scientists' lack of control over their work and causes job stress and burnout. Despite this, medical scientists use their personal resources to buffer the effects of excessive workloads and deliver high quality of patient care. Originality/value Findings suggest that developing mechanisms to promote sustainable employment practices for medical scientists are critical for the escalating demands in pathology.
引用
收藏
页码:149 / 163
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Benchmarking management practices in Australian public healthcare
    Agarwal, Renu
    Green, Roy
    Agarwal, Neeru
    Randhawa, Krithika
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT, 2016, 30 (01) : 31 - 56
  • [2] Barriers and Best Practices for Material Management in the Healthcare Sector
    Callender, Carlos
    Grasman, Scott E.
    [J]. EMJ-ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2010, 22 (04): : 11 - 19
  • [3] Lean management practices in healthcare sector: a literature review
    Parkhi, Shilpa Shekhar
    [J]. BENCHMARKING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2019, 26 (04) : 1275 - 1289
  • [4] Health services in Australia and the impact of antiquated rostering practices on medical scientists: a case for HR analytics and evidenced-based human resource management
    Cavanagh, Jillian
    Walker, Matthew
    Pariona-Cabrera, Patricia
    Bartram, Timothy
    Halvorsen, Beni
    [J]. PERSONNEL REVIEW, 2024, 53 (01) : 18 - 33
  • [5] Human resource diversity management practices in the Australian manufacturing sector
    D'Netto, Brian
    Shen, Jie
    Chelliah, John
    Monga, Manjit
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, 2014, 25 (09): : 1243 - 1266
  • [6] Green supply management in the healthcare public sector: Stakes, practices, and perspectives
    Rico, Jean-Charles
    Oruezabala, Gwenaelle
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTHCARE MANAGEMENT, 2012, 5 (03) : 154 - 163
  • [7] APPLICATION OF QUEUING THEORY IN QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN MEDICAL SECTOR
    Jain, Swastika
    Jain, Ruchi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ALGEBRAIC STATISTICS, 2022, 13 (02) : 487 - 496
  • [8] Depression management in medical clinics: Does healthcare sector make a difference?
    Frayne, SM
    Freund, KM
    Skinner, KM
    Ash, AS
    Moskowitz, MA
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL QUALITY, 2004, 19 (01) : 28 - 36
  • [9] Management practices in Australian healthcare: can NSW public hospitals do better?
    Agarwal, Renu
    Green, Roy
    Agarwal, Neeru
    Randhawa, Krithika
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT, 2016, 30 (03) : 331 - 353
  • [10] An analysis of medical waste management practices in the health care sector in Colombo
    Gunawardana, Kennedy Degaulle
    [J]. MANAGEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 2018, 29 (05) : 813 - 825