Articles-Thought Leadership Workforce Trends Shaping Healthcare | Page 4

“Many nurses older than 60 are retiring, and they are joined by administrators in every other aspect of healthcare. When these people head out the door, they are taking their vast institutional knowledge with them.” administrative structures that nurses and other clinicians rely on to keep operations running smoothly. So how to prepare for the losses? For one, look beyond the skill set these retirees possess. In a recent interview, Inova Hospital System CEO Knox Singleton said that he thought his successor shouldn’t just have his strengths, such as launching specialty programs, but also be someone with a deeper background in science, research and clinical knowledge, the better to help new systems evolve (“Why Inova’s Retiring CEO…,” 2017). Whatever the position coming open, putting programs in place that allow for training and mentorship with current employees will be crucial. While retiring leaders may not be able to pass along along everything they know in a relatively short window of time, they can impart key information that will smooth the path for their replacements. It also might be worth seeing if retirees will be available and willing to act in an emeritus, consultative capacity so that even more knowledge can be gleaned from them even after they are gone. Employee Development Adapting to Changing Learning Needs and Styles Workforce training, whether through intense, one-on- one mentorships or a more traditional classroom setting, has never been more essential in healthcare. That said, Millennials don’t learn the same way as Generation X and/or Baby Boomers, and so a one-size- fits-all approach isn’t applicable. How can effective, informative development programs be structured? First, discover what’s needed in terms of the best style for the affected workforce. Depending on age and experience, they may be learners who want to hear presentations as well as read printed or online materials, or who want one or the other. Some may thrive in a classroom setting, while others want independent, self-guided learning. A third group may want both, and they all may want or need hands-on, learning lab-style training as well. To cover all the bases, it’s likely the safest bet is to develop a multimodal style for workforce training. Guard against creating a program that’s so broad and general it’s ineffective by customizing it to the facility’s unique environment, as well as to the specific group of employees being trained. Most importantly, get feedback throughout the process to make sure it’s what employees need—and if not, step back, regroup and retool (“7 Best Practices for Hospitals’ Training, 2012). AI and The Healthcare Workforce—Partners or Combatants? Technological advances are nothing new in healthcare. Quite the opposite, given the depth and breadth of innovations that have created life-enhancing and prolonging devices, surgical techniques and treatments. But as in other industries, most notably manufacturing, there comes a tipping point when innovation becomes a threat to employment security. Can a robotic surgery device replace a doctor? Will different types of artificial intelligence, or AI, perform patient-care functions as well as, or better than, humans? Or, as seems to be the case now, will it be more of a partnership? AI and robotics aren’t coming to healthcare—they’re here. Many large healthcare systems are investing millions in the people, software, and hardware to develop what’s becoming known as the “learning healthcare system,” where a constant feedback loop of data is input by nurses and other clinicians, run through HealthStream.com/contact • 800.521.0574 •