|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Hospital Capacity Management: Insights and Strategies details many
of the key processes, procedures, and administrative realities that
make up the healthcare system we all encounter when we visit the ED
or the hospital. It walks through, in detail, how these systems
work, how they came to be this way, why they are set up as they
are, and then, in many cases, why and how they should be improved
right now. Many examples pulled from the lifelong experiences of
the authors, published studies, and well-documented case studies
are provided, both to illustrate and support arguments for change.
First and foremost, it is necessary to remember that the mission of
our healthcare system is to take care of patients. This has been
forgotten at times, causing many of the issues the authors discuss
in the book including hospital capacity management. This facet of
healthcare management is absolutely central to the success or
failure of a hospital, both in terms of its delivery of care and
its ability to survive as an institution. Poor hospital capacity
management is a root cause of long wait times, overcrowding, higher
error rates, poor communication, low satisfaction, and a host of
other commonly experienced problems. It is important enough that
when it is done well, it can completely transform an entire
hospital system. Hospital capacity management can be described as
optimizing a hospital's bed availability to provide enough capacity
for efficient, error-free patient evaluation, treatment, and
transfer to meet daily demand. A hospital that excels at capacity
management is easy to spot: no lines of people waiting and no
patients in hallways or sitting around in chairs. These hospitals
don't divert incoming ambulances to other hospitals; they have
excellent patient safety records and efficiently move patients
through their organization. They exist but are sadly in the
minority of American hospitals. The vast majority are instead
forced to constantly react to their own poor performance. This
often results in the building of bigger and bigger institutions,
which, instead of managing capacity, simply create more space in
which to mismanage it. These institutions are failing to resolve
the true stumbling blocks to excellent patient care, many of which
you may have experienced firsthand in your own visit to your
hospital. It is the hope of the authors that this book will provide
a better understanding of the healthcare delivery system.
Hospital Capacity Management: Insights and Strategies details many
of the key processes, procedures, and administrative realities that
make up the healthcare system we all encounter when we visit the ED
or the hospital. It walks through, in detail, how these systems
work, how they came to be this way, why they are set up as they
are, and then, in many cases, why and how they should be improved
right now. Many examples pulled from the lifelong experiences of
the authors, published studies, and well-documented case studies
are provided, both to illustrate and support arguments for change.
First and foremost, it is necessary to remember that the mission of
our healthcare system is to take care of patients. This has been
forgotten at times, causing many of the issues the authors discuss
in the book including hospital capacity management. This facet of
healthcare management is absolutely central to the success or
failure of a hospital, both in terms of its delivery of care and
its ability to survive as an institution. Poor hospital capacity
management is a root cause of long wait times, overcrowding, higher
error rates, poor communication, low satisfaction, and a host of
other commonly experienced problems. It is important enough that
when it is done well, it can completely transform an entire
hospital system. Hospital capacity management can be described as
optimizing a hospital's bed availability to provide enough capacity
for efficient, error-free patient evaluation, treatment, and
transfer to meet daily demand. A hospital that excels at capacity
management is easy to spot: no lines of people waiting and no
patients in hallways or sitting around in chairs. These hospitals
don't divert incoming ambulances to other hospitals; they have
excellent patient safety records and efficiently move patients
through their organization. They exist but are sadly in the
minority of American hospitals. The vast majority are instead
forced to constantly react to their own poor performance. This
often results in the building of bigger and bigger institutions,
which, instead of managing capacity, simply create more space in
which to mismanage it. These institutions are failing to resolve
the true stumbling blocks to excellent patient care, many of which
you may have experienced firsthand in your own visit to your
hospital. It is the hope of the authors that this book will provide
a better understanding of the healthcare delivery system.
From angry shareholders to concerned chief executives, almost
everyone knows at a gut level that the present political system is
not working. This book finds the root cause to be poor corporate
governance. In the prequel to this book, The Emperor's Nightingale,
Robert A. G. Monks, one of the world's foremost shareholder
activists, had warned corporations against putting short-profit
ahead of long-term value for all stakeholders. Few listened - and
the result was system-wide trauma that only bold solutions can
heal. In The Emperor's Nightmare, his latest book, Monks reveals
what can happen when corporate leadership abandons the common good
to court and conquer a powerful elite. This insightful, honest, and
direct portrayal of corporate governance and the surrounding
political system will be of immense value to those interested in
corporate governance - particularly shareholder and stakeholder
advocates, and the true corporate leaders who serve them. In the
end, better corporate governance means better democracy. This book
shows the way.
Shareholder control over large corporations is worryingly weak and
the unrestrained hunt for profits is taking a toll on the
environment and society. In "Corpocracy, " corporate lawyer,
venture capitalist, and shareholder activist Robert Monks reveals
how corporations abuse their power and what we the people must do
to rein them in. In a clear and careful analysis, Monks outlines a
plan for reconciling the competing interests of corporations and
society through thoughtful shareholder activism.
Democratic capitalism-the source of America's vast wealth, the
foundation of our entire economic system-is threatened as never
before, not from without but from within. Shareholders today no
longer own, except in the narrowest legal sense, the corporations
they have invested in. Emboldened by the Supreme Court and enabled
by a compliant Congress and compromised regulators, America's CEOs
have staged a corporate coup d'etat. They, not the titular owners
of the businesses, decide where and how company resources will be
deployed, what laws will be evaded in the pursuit of short-term
gain, what offshore havens profits will be stashed in to avoid
taxation, and critically, how lavishly the CEOs themselves will be
compensated. Far too much of American business is being run for the
personal enrichment and glorification of its manager-kings. This
book shows how that happened and unveils, for the first time, a new
study showing that corporations "un-owned" by their
shareholders-corporate "drones"-are far worse corporate citizens
and have significantly lower average shareholder returns than firms
in which owners still exercise authority over management.
Manager-kings, it turns out, are bad both for society and for
business itself.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Hampstead
Diane Keaton, Brendan Gleeson, …
DVD
R66
Discovery Miles 660
|