Emergency Services Management
The author of this report has been asked to complete a report about management challenges in emergency services. The report will have two major sections. The first section will be a review and summary of an interview that was completed between the author of this report and a person in the emergency services management sphere. The second and final part of the report will be a literature review that covers the topics and revelations revealed from that interview. While all realms of management have their challenges, there are some fields that have more challenges than others and emergency services certainly seems to be one of them.
Interview
As a condition of doing the interview for this report and in exchange for the person's candor, the person referenced in this section will not be identified in terms of who the person works for, what role they fill and so forth other than to say it is for an emergency services manager at a medical facility fairly close to where the author of this report lives. A few highlights and of that interview are as follows:
The manager says the pay is pretty decent but that is not why he does it. To him, it is all about serving the public and saving lives
He says that burnout is indeed a major problem. He did plenty of papers and research while going through school and read about it. He says it is just as bad as it says it is in those articles…probably worse.
Says that the key to preventing burnout (manager or not) is to have a good work/life balance. Being a workaholic in the emergency services sphere will grind down a person very quickly and this is especially true in a high-volume emergency room or facility.
Mistakes can and so happen and there is full disclosure if/when it happens
There are a lot of potentially traumatic and nasty events that happen before and during a visit to the ER. This tends to wear down nurses and having a support system both within the team and outside of work is non-optional. Extending that support system to the families of patients is beneficial as well.
He says that management and organizational culture are key. There has to be a strong culture that is focused on adherence to procedure, doing things the same way every time barring a good reason not to and so forth
Many people coming through the doors, even the patients, are worried about being able to afford and pay for the services they are receiving. We always have to assure them that we will take care of them and the money part can be worried about later. The EMTALA laws (among other ethical and legal requirements) do not permit us to do otherwise…nor would they.
Literature Review
The author of this report found a source in a fairly recent journal article that ties in directly with the talk about burnout above. Indeed, the study, which was done in 2013, speaks of the determinants of burnout in acute and critical care for military nursing personnel. To be sure, treating and helping injured soldiers in an active military zone and/or in a hospital that is on standby (e.g. Rammstein in Germany) can be very stressful along the lines of what the interviewee assessed. To assess burnout, there is apparently what is known as the Maslach Burnout Inventory. Indeed, being very precise about the mindset and performance level of a nurse or doctor in a military setting would be paramount and important because they always have to be at the ready. The authors of that study did find a few things that were interesting. First, there was a fairly strong correlation (and perhaps a causality) between high levels of personal achievement and having children. Lastly, the study points out that they recommend that administrators should focus most on people that are younger and less inexperienced because they need the most attention in terms of teaching, monitoring and watching for signs of burnout or otherwise being in over their head (Ayala & Carnero, 2013).
The next source talks about another part of emergency services life that the interviewee mentioned before did touch on and that is the experiencing of trauma. Indeed, some of the events and happenings in an emergency services environment can be traumatic and highly affecting of the nurses and other people that practice there and/or bear witness to some of the chaos and such that can occur there. It can get so nasty, some nurses and other professionals can develop post-traumatic...
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