Assess the implications of various health issues and methods of managing them on operational performance of healthcare organizations.
How will accomplishing these objectives support your success in management?
What risks or challenges might a health care manager encounter if he or she has not mastered these objectives?
Incorporate perspectives based on readings regarding the challenges of the health care system. Explain.
Health Care Management Practices
There are many healthcare management challenges today. Some of these problems have evolved slowly overtime as a result of growing, complex, and diverse healthcare offerings. Rising costs in almost every area have been impacting hospitals and other healthcare providers as well as patient willingness to seek care. It is important to note the impact of fraud, waste, and abuse created by providers. The Washington Health Alliance found that 46% of low-cost services in the state were considered unnecessary [Luthi, 2018]. The prevalent use of smartphones by patients offers unique opportunity to manage healthcare problems with mobile applications. Providers can offer services like appointment scheduling, billing, as well as records and test results communication. There are many issues arising within this complex healthcare system. A key challenge is increasing interoperability between disconnected providers and leveraging technology to make up for decreasing staff and an improved focus on value-based care over quantity treated.
In the world of business, and rather esoterically, doublespeak can be easy to miss if you are not paying attention or lack knowledge on the topic discussed. Because of this, Lutz demonstrates that in 1978, an airline was able to refer to a plane crash as an involuntary conversion to self-protect against the magnitude of the tragedy. Here, the doublespeak of jargon functions as verbal shorthand used to conceal rather than reveal the truth; under similar circumstances, medical malpractice can become therapeutic misadventure (387) and glass occasional bureaucratese, and Lutz highlights the winding, incomprehensible dialect of Federal Chairman, Alan Greenspan (383) as an example to show how language is often bastardised to overwhelm an audience and make things obscure.
In like manner, when words are used to convey a heightened sense of value, or when a convoluted sense of authority or importance is assigned to a person or thing or event, they are in action as inflated language. To put it differently, when a company announces the initiation of a career alternative enhancement program, what it really means is that workers will be laid off; the term for car mechanic is inflated to mean automotive internist, used cars identify as experienced and the U.S. military describes a premeditated ambush of American troops as engaging the enemy on all sides (383). This type of language extends into academia where doublespeak can also be used when trying to describe things that don’t necessarily have to be bad; that is, it is employed to simply enhance the truth. For this reason, libraries are referred to as learning resource centres.
Ultimately, Lutz urges a reversal of linguistic decay which, according to him, is a necessary step towards political revival and language appreciation. Stressing doublespeak as a matter of i
