The idea of having to go through a checklist in your job may sound a little demeaning.

Question:

The idea of having to go through a checklist in your job may sound a little demeaning. Isn’t that what fast food restaurants use to train low-skilled employees what to do, step by step? That may be quite true, but it’s also what pilots use to be sure the complicated systems of jumbo jets are all in order before flying you to your destination. That type of thinking is why Dr. Peter Pronovost of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ran into opposition when he proposed a five-step checklist that would not only save money, but save lives.

In the United States, hospital-acquired infections affect 1 in 10 patients, killing 90,000 of them and costing as much as $11 billion each year. Many of those infections are acquired when an IV line delivering medication becomes infected. Dr. Pronovost’s checklist is simple and straightforward, including steps such as: Doctors must wash their hands before inserting an IV, and the patient’s skin must be cleaned with antiseptic at the point of the insertion. When Michigan hospitals put the checklist into practice, they not only saved over $175 million in eighteen months because they didn’t have to treat infections, but they saved nearly 1,500 lives..........


Questions: 

1. How can HR professionals overcome resistance to training? 

2. What method should hospitals use to evaluate IV checklist training? 

3. Develop a checklist that would make a process more efficient or safe for your employer or college. 

4. What is the best way to train an employee to use your checklist? How would you evaluate your training?

Fantastic news! We've Found the answer you've been seeking!

Step by Step Answer:

Related Book For  answer-question

Fundamentals Of Human Resource Management

ISBN: 9780470169681

10th Edition

Authors: David DeCenzo, Stephen Robbins

Question Posted: