Challenges Facing Managing, Achieving and Sustaining Quality Control Performance: To Reduce Staffing Turnover in Long-term Care Facilities.
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the Challenges Facing Managing, Achieving and Sustaining Quality Control Performance: To Reduce Staffing Turnover in Long-term Care Facilities.This paper also aim to articulate the challenges of learning and advancing in service consignment systems - that present managers with imperfect information, confounded variables, and firmly connected interactions between operational and psychological factors - and present a simulator to assist managers to overwhelm these challenges. The increasing anxiety about accountability and performance enhancement has created a system of performance- based contracting in which contractors must demonstrate their program success for ensuring consistent streams of government funding. Government agencies are inclined to need that contractors evolve individual program goals along with specific performance indicators that allow program evaluation. Consequently, the substantial pressure for performance-based accountability accelerates organizational development and changes because contractors must verify that their programs are successful in alignment to maintain government funding.
Table Of Content
ABSTRACT2
Table Of Content3
INTRODUCTION5
Background5
LITERATURE REVIEW7
Leadership And Management Problem10
The Conflicting Value Challenge12
The Micromanagement Challenge14
The Motivational Challenge17
Courses Of Staffing Turnover20
Turnover24
Work Issues26
Factors affecting unscheduled turnover27
Inadequate socialization27
Perceptions of organizational injustice and exclusion from decision-making29
Reduced Expectations For Permanent Work30
Low Tolerance For Seen Inequity32
Low Levels Of Commitment33
The Challenges Of Managing Service Quality35
Cost Effect39
Focus on Operating Costs and the Cost of Poor Quality39
Limit Rework through Enhanced Quality40
Continual Improvement of Systems, Processes, and Methods41
Attention to Customer Retention42
Reduce Employee Turnover42
Simulator Assumptions43
Service Capacity Subsystem44
Service Backlog Subsystem47
Quality/Time Pressure Subsystem49
Market Response Subsystem50
Simulator Interface51
Using the SQM Simulator54
Managers Can Trial With Alternative Strategies56
New Technologies And Strategies Can, More Competently, Be Discovered And Understood56
Managers can learn why scenarios might develop in particular ways56
Decision-Making And Communications Will Be Improved57
Solution To Reducing Staffing Turn Over57
Employer/employee relationship61
Future directions and research62
Summary And Conclusions63
REFERENCES65
Appendices76
Introduction
Background
Learning is a feedback process. Using feedback information about the impact that our actions have in the real world we can revise the decisions that we make to convey the real world to a state closer to our goals or update the models we use to make sense of the world. For learning to happen, although, the feedback process of act, assemble information, assess, and update (either decisions or models) has to work competently and fast sufficient relative to the rate at which the real world is changing and rendering our information obsolete. Yet, in the real world, this process often does not operate well. Among the reasons why the learning feedback process breaks Sterman has identified:
Dynamic complexity, imperfect information about the state of the real world, confusing and ambiguous variables, poor scientific reasoning skills[…] and the misperceptions of feedback that hinder our ability to understand the structure and dynamics convoluted systems.
Service consignment systems - more specifically, high contact, customer services - are particularly laden with such barriers for learning. Servers (employees) and customers convey to a service transaction their psychological attributes, perceptions, and expectations. Furthermore, services are made in front of customers and often with direct collaboration from them, thus conveying employees and customers physically and psychologically ...