Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Strategies For Achieving Sustainability Of Home Healthcare Agencies, Robert J. Gagnon
Strategies For Achieving Sustainability Of Home Healthcare Agencies, Robert J. Gagnon
Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
AbstractSome organizational leaders of home healthcare agencies (HHA) experience financial pressures to sustain within the changing regulatory landscape. Organization healthcare leaders who develop sustainability strategies remain competitive and employ the community. Grounded in the balanced scorecard framework, the purpose of this descriptive, qualitative multiple case study was to identify strategies home healthcare agency (HHA) leaders used to maintain sustainability. The participants were five organizational leaders of three HHA and two home health industry consultants in the Northeast United States who implemented sustainability. Data collected came from semistructured interviews, archival records, and organizational documentation. Three themes emerged from the thematic analysis: …
Cost-Containment Strategies Used By Hospital Business Leaders For Pharmaceutical Inventory, Julie Carlene Mccaughan
Cost-Containment Strategies Used By Hospital Business Leaders For Pharmaceutical Inventory, Julie Carlene Mccaughan
Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
Ineffective strategies to contain the costs of medical supply inventory can result in financial loss and are a significant challenge for hospital leaders. Grounded in complex adaptive systems theory, the purpose of this qualitative single case study was to explore the cost-containment strategies that private hospital business leaders use to reduce the expense of pharmaceutical inventory. The participants comprised six private hospital business leaders in one healthcare organization in Myanmar. Data were collected from semistructured interviews, internal company documents, and publicly available annual reports. Four themes emerged from Yin’s five-step data analysis method: (a) management controls, (b) specialist engagement and …
Successful Strategies To Sustain Practice Changes In Healthcare, Erin Gable
Successful Strategies To Sustain Practice Changes In Healthcare, Erin Gable
Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
Healthcare managers implement evidence-based practice to meet the growing needs of aging populations. However, many healthcare leaders fail to sustain newly implemented practices. Grounded in the promoting action on research implementation in health services conceptual framework, the purpose of this qualitative interpretative descriptive study was to explore strategies healthcare leaders use to sustain practice changes to meet increasing demands for quality care of the aging population. The participants included eight healthcare managers from Canada and the United States who led strategies to sustain practice change. The four themes that emerged using semistructured interviews and thematic analysis were staff buy-in, staff …
American Urologists’ Concerns With Nonclinical Activities Moderating Burnout, Nichele Lynn Greer
American Urologists’ Concerns With Nonclinical Activities Moderating Burnout, Nichele Lynn Greer
Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
As burnout continues to increase in the healthcare field and specifically in the specialty of urology, gaining knowledge of certain risk factors associated with burnout can potentially help prevent further increases. Intervention programs may also be developed as a result of understanding these relationships. The purpose of this quantitative correlational analysis was to determine whether hours worked on nonclinical activities moderated the relationship between age and burnout as well as gender and burnout in American urologists. The theoretical foundations utilized in this research were the jobs demands resources model, which suggested that burnout occurs as a result of job demands …
Generational Differences In Nursing Turnover, Adam Bennett
Generational Differences In Nursing Turnover, Adam Bennett
Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
Nursing is currently the largest job category in U.S. health care requiring proper recruitment and retention of nurses. As the current generation of nurses ages out of the workforce due to retirement, new nurses will need to cover the gaps in the workforce. The purpose of this quantitative correlational study was to examine the relationship between voluntary turnover, involuntary turnover, and career change among nurses who were born between 1980 and 1995 (Millennials) and those born between 1965 and 1979 (Generation X). The theoretical framework was Mannheim’s theory of generations. Secondary data were collected from exit interviews with 811 respondents …
Relationship Between Incentive Program Costs, Incentive Payments, And Profitability, Claire Claire Turner
Relationship Between Incentive Program Costs, Incentive Payments, And Profitability, Claire Claire Turner
Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
The lack of profitability among primary care businesses can have harmful impacts on business operations. Primary care businesses owners must remain profitable to remain in business and provide quality health care to patients. Grounded in Freeman’s stakeholder theory, the purpose of this quantitative correlational study was to examine the relationship between incentive program costs, incentive payments, and profitability. Data were collected from 73 primary care physician business owners in the Inland Empire region of southern California. The multiple linear regression analysis results indicated the model was able to significantly predict profitability, F(2,70) = 1343.6, p <.001, R2 = .975. Incentive payments (t = 51.837, p < .001, = .928) was the only statistically significant predictor. Key recommendations include educating primary care physicians on the potential financial benefits of full participation in the commercial line of business pay-for-performance incentive programs and creating a campaign to bring in patients for wellness visits. The implications for positive social change include the potential for an additional revenue stream for primary care physician business owners, which could support more clinics, increasing patient access. Patients having better access to healthcare could positively affect the health and wellness of individuals in local communities.