How to Fix Bullying Culture in Health Care

https://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2018/06/how-to-fix-bullying-in-health-care.html

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When we think of bullying, we’re usually worrying about our school-age kids or remembering bad experiences from high school.

We learn quickly in the health care field that bullies don’t change once they enter the clinical world. Health care, with its incredible differential in knowledge, authority and pay creates large power differentials and easily generates subordinate/superior relationship dynamics.

Bullying occurs within professions between trainees and trainers and faculty, and across clinical areas when there are knowledge differences such as between specialists and primary care. Mistreatment also frequently occurs in an interdisciplinary manner between physicians and non-physicians, supervisors and direct reports, nurses, and technicians.

For many (bully and bullied alike), this has been considered the price of entry into the healthcare arena.

The fears generated by the power differentials are very real:

  • loss of one’s job
  • loss of referrals
  • loss of business to a competitor

Through trial and error, bullies find the right formula to preserve the power dynamics.

These unspoken fears create a culture of silence. It then becomes very difficult to achieve a culture of high reliability, which operates on a framework of deference to everyone’s expertise with an intense preoccupation with avoiding errors and failure.  I have seen this culture of silence lead to OR fires and use of new OR equipment and procedures without adequate training or supervision.

An organization-wide “anti-bullying statement” should stop the problem, right? Not likely.  An organization where I once served in administration had such a statement but also had a “hidden agenda,” i.e., ‘”We need these doctors to bring in business and need these nurses’ experience.”  It led to confusion as to what the organization would stand for.  Staff began accepting physician rounding at 10 p.m. and used equipment in the OR without proper training.

Working with the medical staff leadership, we opened some honest conversations around patient safety. Both groups were surprised. The medical staff thought administration was OK with the unsafe behaviors; the administration team hadn’t even been made aware of them until that point.

Having a policy against disruptive physicians and nurses is a Band-Aid for a much deeper issue. Many physicians rightly resent the implication that a legitimate disagreement with another healthcare professional can immediately and irrevocably label one “disruptive” without a fair hearing.  Stories of false accusations fuel the need for physicians to protect each other, to the detriment of improving the system.

There are more effective ways to address this complex problem. Those on the “wrong side” of the power differential need scripting to defuse the confrontation. For example, a nurse being yelling at by a physician about being paged at 2:00 a.m. regarding “non-urgent orders” could neutralize the situation by calling attention to the behavior, while still allowing an escape route for de-escalation by saying “It sounds like you are having a bad night. Are you yelling at me or simply venting?” Simple lines like these can empower line staff to safely de-escalate these situations and re-train those on the “right side” of the power differential.

Now, a single physician or nurse practicing scripting won’t be able to implement a culture change. It’s up to medical and nursing officers to establish the expectation that physicians and nurses will learn and apply such tools.

Medical staff officers must enlighten clinicians on how a culture of fear leads to more complications and patient harm. Medical errors occur when the safety systems designed to catch an error before it reaches a patient are short-circuited, which is commonplace if physicians give in to the doctor yelling the loudest.

Research from the Vanderbilt Center for Patient and Professional Advocacy in Patient Advocacy Reporting System (PARS) and Co-Worker Observation Reporting System (CORS) databases supports the notion that truly disruptive physicians are the minority and can be identified by staff and patient complaints. It further validates the potentially adverse outcomes and unsafe environment physician bullies perpetuate.

Their research also shows that “what gets measured, matters” as these “disruptive providers” don’t always need to be reported to NPDB. Some physicians simply need to understand that their behavior, though considered acceptable in past generations, needs to change.

With new scripting to manage an increasingly difficult health care environment and clear expectations laid out by medical staff officers, it’s entirely reasonable to expect the same zero tolerance for bullying in health care environments that now exists in our children’s schools.

 

 

6 Ways Leaders Bully People Without Realizing It

6 Ways Leaders Bully People Without Realizing It

Bullying at Work

In the latest edition of Leaders Behaving Badly, the University of Maryland has placed multiple members of the men’s football team staff on administrative leave, including head coach DJ Durkin, while the school investigates their role in creating a toxic culture that contributed to the death of offensive lineman Jordan McNair in June after a football workout.

The ESPN report cited these examples:

  • There is a coaching environment based on fear and intimidation. In one example, a player holding a meal while in a meeting had the meal slapped out of his hands in front of the team. At other times, small weights and other objects were thrown in the direction of players when Strength and Conditioning coach, Rick Court, was angry.
  • The belittling, humiliation and embarrassment of players is common. In one example, a player whom coaches wanted to lose weight was forced to eat candy bars as he was made to watch teammates working out.
  • Extreme verbal abuse of players occurs often. Players are routinely the targets of obscenity-laced epithets meant to mock their masculinity when they are unable to complete a workout or weight lift, for example. One player was belittled verbally after passing out during a drill.
  • Coaches have endorsed unhealthy eating habits and used food punitively; for example, a player said he was forced to overeat or eat to the point of vomiting.

There is absolutely no room for that kind of behavior in sports, school, or the workplace. Leaders have to be held to a higher standard.

Bullying is not just verbal or physical intimidation of someone. Especially in the workplace, bullying can manifest itself in many subtle ways. Any behavior you use to intimidate, dominate, embarrass, harass, or purposely make someone feel inferior could be considered bullying.

Here are six subtle ways you may be acting like a workplace bully without even realizing it:

1. You are condescending—When you act in a condescending manner, whether it’s patronizing someone, being dismissive of a person’s contributions, or minimizing someone’s accomplishments in order to highlight yours, you are sending a message that you believe you are superior to the other person.

2. Wounding with sarcasm—I like sarcastic humor as much as the next guy, but there is a huge difference between sarcasm that highlights the irony of a situation and is self-deprecating, versus sarcasm that is intended to belittle and injure another person. Next time you’re ready to drop that witty, sarcastic joke, pause and consider if it will build up the other person or tear her down.

3. Being cliquish—Cliques aren’t only for high school. Unfortunately, many adults carry that same behavior into the workplace. Purposely excluding people from activities is a bullying behavior intended to send the message that “you’re not one of us” and “we’re better than you are.” Trusted leaders look for opportunities to include people so they feel valued and appreciated.

4. Thinking you know it all—Have you ever worked with a person who thinks she knows it all? How annoying is that?! Much like behaving in a condescending manner, acting like you are the all-knowing expert is a way to intimidate others to go along with your ideas or wishes. Just stop it! No one really believes you anyway.

5. Being passive-aggressive—Perhaps one of the most subtle forms of bullying and manipulation, passive-aggressive behavior poisons teams, departments, and organizations. A common trait of bullies is expressing aggression in order to intimidate another person. Passive-aggressive people are bullies who express aggression in indirect ways such as disguising hostility in jokes, stubbornness, procrastination, resentment, or giving just the minimum effort required. I perceive passive-aggressive people as double-agent bullies disguised as victims. Watch out for them!

6. Gossiping—Have you ever considered gossiping as a form of bullying? Probably not, but it easily could be considered bullying, and some experts even consider it a form of workplace violence because it’s intended to harm another individual or group. Why do people gossip? It’s to make themselves feel powerful. The gossiper believes she knows something that other people don’t and she uses that information as leverage to elevate herself above others.

Leaders are charged with bringing out the best in their people and I don’t understand how some leaders, particularly sports coaches, believe that bullying is an acceptable form of motivation. It’s not. It’s belittling, destructive, demeaning, dehumanizing, and does nothing but feed the power-hungry ego of the bullying leader.

If you’re a leader in the workplace, whether it’s in an office, factory, warehouse, construction site, or any other place, make sure you’re not being a bully without even realizing it. You’re better than that and your people deserve your best.

 

 

 

 

Sexual abuse scandals: What hospitals can learn from high-profile Hollywood, government cases of harassment

https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/healthcare/sexual-abuse-scandals-what-hospitals-can-learn-from-high-profile-hollywood-government?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWVRBeE5EQTFaREJqWVRJMiIsInQiOiJnUXl5b3pxcXlaRVo0Nm51UVcxOXdXd3IybE96SnNuOVhaNzR6UjBUMDMxdUJUN2h0MzlpNXdPRFdwcVwvS0MwQk1SSWdjMFM3T3FuN2tnbThoNjVzVmg2V0NEQmdrOXFcL05BQ1dRWCtkeExsbGxMTWJaMjUyMlwvUklJcGErd1BiYiJ9&mrkid=959610&utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

Female nurse looking stressed

While media attention has focused on the accusations of sexual misconduct among Hollywood heavy hitters, television personalities and politicians, the healthcare industry isn’t immune to misbehavior in the workplace.

Indeed, one of the biggest payouts for workplace harassment occurred in 2012 when Mercy General Hospital in California and its parent company, Catholic Healthcare West (now Dignity Health), were ordered to pay more than $167 million to Ani Chopourian, a former physician’s assistant who says she was fired after she complained of sexually inappropriate conduct, bullying and retaliation, in addition to inferior patient care by surgeons.

While USA Today reported that the judge later vacated the award after attorneys on both sides negotiated a settlement, the large payout should serve as a wake-up call to hospital leaders that they can’t ignore complaints of misconduct in the workplace.

The recent high-profile cases that have made national headlines also offers lessons to healthcare leaders. Lawyers say leaders must:

  • Establish policies that address disruptive behavior: Healthcare organizations must foster a culture of teamwork and the need for a safe, cooperative workplace, Anne Murphy, a Bloomberg Law advisory board member and partner at Hinckley Allen in Boston, told Bloomberg BNA.
  • Be willing to investigate complaints, even if they involve a high-profile physician: Hospital leaders must be willing and able to identify and avoid sexual harassment claims and apply the policies equally to everyone. Employees must feel safe to report complaints and leaders must be willing to address those complaints and not sweep them under the rug.

    “Healthcare entities must take these actions in spite of the prospect of losing a significant revenue generator or a critical skill in a single physician,” wrote Katherine Dudley Helms in National Law Review. “Failing to address the situation creates legal liability and sends a loud negative message to employees regarding the importance the organization places on its workforce versus certain key employees.”

  • Develop an action plan to address complaints: David Jarrard, president and CEO of Jarrard, Phillips, Cate & Hancock in Brentwood, Tennessee, told Bloomberg BNA that organization must have plans in place just as they would other responses to natural disasters or mass shootings.
  • Be aware of red flags: Sexual harassment claims shouldn’t come as a surprise. Often, gossip spreads among employees, so leaders should keep their ears open, Jarrard said. He told the publication that senior leaders must be visible and engaged with employees and patients.

    “Hospital leaders might hear about suspect behavior simply by getting out of their offices and walking the hospital’s hallways,” he said.

  • Monitor social media accounts: Jarrard also said that accusations of misconduct often will appear in social media platforms so leaders should monitor accounts for mentions of their organizations. This way they may be able to intervene before the situation becomes worse.
  • Consider peer intervention: Clinical leaders might be able to diffuse a situation by talking to the person accused of misconduct over coffee and before a formal complaint is filed, according to the article.

“Now is an excellent time to remind your employees of your refusal to accept this behavior,” said Helms in the National Law Review piece. “Remind employees and supervisory personnel of your harassment policies, and refresh your sexual harassment training.”

 

Words of wisdom for new nurses

http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2017/02/words-wisdom-new-nurses.html

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These are my words of wisdom. My rules. Maybe this will help you absorb the rhyme and rhythm of nursing.

1. Stay alert, take a 30-minute break, take yourself to the bathroom, decompress. 12 hours is a very long day.

2. Be kind and gentle to all, from the janitor to the CEO to the poverty stricken homeless person. Treat everyone as an equal. There is no elite; there is no VIP unless everyone is a VIP.

3. Always keep your cup half-empty. I always thought the nurse that thought she knew everything was the most dangerous nurse. Medicine, cures, procedures, diagnosis and treatments are always changing. So keep your mind open.

4. Stay far away from the “bully trap.” The lateral violence. It’s not worth it, and you can be a part of ruining a person’s self-worth. Forever. Stay far away. Stand up to the bully, fight them off. Report them. Protect your fellow nurse and nursing staff.

5. Know your facts about your patient before you call an MD, PA or NP. Write down your problems.

6. Do not ever apologize to an MD for calling him or her about a patient that you need new orders for or you need to report a new condition in the patient. That is their job to assist you. You are the protector, the teacher, the nurse of your patients.

7. Chose your battles wisely. Managers can be wonderful, but they also can be a slippery slope. Chose your friends wisely also. Deception sadly comes in sheep clothing.

8. The worst shift can be the most wonderful shift if you engage, empower and help your fellow team. It is beyond any retirement gold watch you’ll ever receive when you have a good crew to work with and to depend on.

9. Watch out for burnout. That is the wonders of being a nurse. To go from psychiatry, ER, maternity nursing to newborn ICU, trauma ICU or neuro ICU to peace corps or travel nurse, to getting your BSN, or masters degree or doctorate to become an NP or an anesthetist: The world of nursing is wide open.

My bottom line to you all:

  • Keep your chin up, decompress, take a vacation, follow your heart.
  • Be kind to each other.
  • Respect one another. The old nurse and the new nurse.
  • No question is ever dumb.
  • Questions are good and much safer than not questioning and therefore potentially making a grave mistake.
  • Empower each other.

We’re all in this together. This circle of life. From birth to dying with dignity.

Focus, love, and empower.

5 Reasons Nurses Want to Leave Your Hospital

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/nurse-leaders/5-reasons-nurses-want-leave-your-hospital?spMailingID=9509032&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=1001087312&spReportId=MTAwMTA4NzMxMgS2

Image result for 5 Reasons Nurses Want to Leave Your Hospital

Your nurses have one eye on the door if you do any of the following.

Are your nurses engaged, committed employees? Or are they biding their time until they can go somewhere better?  Job opportunities for RNs and APRNs abound, and even nurses who appear content may be planning their exit strategies.

To predict whether you face an exodus, take a look at the following five reasons why your nurses want out.