PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT IN HEALTH CARE
The drive to improve the quality of healthcare
performance has been a consistent theme for several decades. Performance
managing the health and social care system helps involve staff in raising
standards and ultimately provide taxpayers with proof of progress in areas
that matter most to them.
In today's fast-changing healthcare sector, decision-makers are in greater demand for both Clinical and
administrative information to comply with legal and consumer specifications Requirements.
Thus, performance management (PM) is becoming more and more important with
increasing information requests. However, there is not much knowledge about the
use of PM in health care.
Public sector
organizations are differentiated in comparison with their commercial
counterparts in the private sector. “There is no profit maximizing focus,
little potential for income generation and, generally speaking, no bottom line
against which performance can ultimately be measured”
Performance management
defined
Performance Management has been defined as:
'a process which contributes to the effective management of individuals and
teams in order to achieve high levels of organizational performance. As such,
it establishes a shared understanding about what is to be achieved and an
approach to leading and developing people which will ensure that it is
achieved' (Armstrong & Baron, 2002).
Performance management in
health care is not only aiming at the systematic generation and control of an
organization’s economic value but also at the optimization of the efficiency
and effectiveness of service delivery. Therefore PM, like other management
approaches only can be implemented successfully, if strategic planning is closely
linked to operational execution and controlling.
Aims of performance
management
Performance management is
a means of getting better results by providing the means for individuals to
perform well within an agreed framework of planned goals, standards and
competency requirements.
Impact of performance
management
According to the Armstrong
Performance management is expected to improve organizational performance,
generally by creating a performance culture in which the achievement of high
performance is a way of life.
Introducing performance
management
The programmed for
introducing performance management should take into account that one of the main
reasons, why it fails, is that either line managers are not interested, or they
don’t have the skills or both. The demanding skills of concluding performance agreements,
setting objectives, assessing performance, giving feedback and coaching need to
be developed by formal training supplemented by coaching and the use of
mentors.
Performance management
issues
As a human process,
performance management can promise more than it achieves. However well designed
a performance management system is, its effectiveness mainly depends on the
commitment and skills of line managers. But that success is based on the
following facts.
Requirements for success (Armstrong,2013)
● More performance
management training;
● emphasis on employee recognition;
● the corporate culture
emphasizes the importance of performance and values engagement;
● performance management
is strategically integrated with human resource management and the business plans
of the organization;
● a positive employee
relations climate
performance management is becoming increasingly relevant for the health care sector, we wanted to know what the current state of PM adoption is and how health care organizations will develop their PM in the future.
According to this,
potential areas where performance in health care can be measured are
- · Health
care financial strength (economy): Revenue optimization, productivity
improvement, streamlining claims processing, waste and cost control,
activity-based costing.
- · Health
care operations (economy): Partner management and measurement, collaboration
opportunities, agility improvement, working capital, and asset management.
- · Health
care people development (efficiency): Provider experience measurement, provider
loyalty and the voice of the provider analysis, learning and growth measures,
innovation, knowledge, culture, and intangible value analytics.
- · Patient
service and satisfaction (effectiveness): Including patient experience,
engagement, delight, loyalty, and relationship measurement, as well as the most
important of all – measuring and tracking the voice of the patient.
- · Health
care marketing (effectiveness): Measuring and developing the growing importance
of healthcare branding, reputation and trust management, patient/customer
segmentation, patient profitability, and patient lifetime value.
Conclusions
In today's fast-changing healthcare sector, decision-makers are in greater demand for both Clinical and administrative information to comply with legal and consumer specifications Requirements. Thus, performance management (PM) is becoming more and more important With increasing information requests. However, there is not much knowledge about the use of PM in health care.
Reference
•
Armstrong M, Baron A. Performance
Management: new realities. Institute of Personnel and Development:
London, 1998.
•
Armstrong,2013, Handbook Of Human Resource
Management Practice,
•
Amaratunga, D., Baldry, D., Moving from
Performance Measurement to Performance Management, In: Facilities.

This blog shows the 0HR application to be uses in Health Management.
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