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Give Peace a Chance
Is office squabbling getting in the way of patient care? Here’s how to get beyond the sandbox.< by: Shirley Grace
“No gum-snapping.” That’s what one practice’s office policy manual now includes, after one compulsive offender irked her workmates once too often. At another practice, a family physician and his assigned nurse tattled continuously on each other to the practice manager “mom” — for eight years. Still elsewhere, two job-sharing administrative employees waged a silent but vicious “the stapler goes here” war, with victory — and the stapler — flip-flopping accordingly, depending on who was working that day. Believe it or not, these are true-life scenarios. Most every medical practice experiences similar interpersonal issues, ranging from needling annoyances — “I can’t work with someone who giggles/sniffs/belches/clacks her dentures all the time” — to down ’n dirty fisticuffs in the hallway to wallet-emptying lawsuit embroilment. Do skirmishes such as these amuse us when retold at the water cooler? Oh, yes. But if such issues are ignored or handled improperly, the results can be serious: For one, staff morale can plummet, stunting work output and allowing a negative atmosphere to infect the office. This can be expensive. According to a recent Patient care and patient satisfaction may plummet, too. The negativity caused by an office staff locked in chronic conflict will trickle down to your client base, and ultimately redirect many dollars from unhappy patients who ask to have their records transferred to a kinder, gentler practice. Not so amusing. Certainly, you want a friendly, flexible atmosphere where employees feel free to express themselves, but where they also honor the practice’s policies and culture. How can you build — and lead — a cohesive, communicative medical team so that everyone will work as needed yet still enjoy coming to work everyday? Play nice with others Think about it: You’ve got a small space with a lot of people trying to work together at often stressful jobs. Interpersonal problems are a “when,” not an “if,” which makes it all the more important for everyone to re-read the peer etiquette sections of Emily Post, Miss Manners, Dr. Phil, or any other guru of good behavior. One common breach of decorum? The cancer of unified teams: Blamecasting, especially across departments. |
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