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Executive Vice President for

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D i v e r s i t y Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs Senior Staff Meeting February 6, 2001 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Executive Vice President for


1
D i v e r s i t y
  • Executive Vice President for
  • Medical Affairs
  • Senior Staff Meeting
  • February 6, 2001

2
Vision for Diversity
  • The University of Michigan Medical Center will
    achieve and sustain an environment which
    recognizes, respects, fosters and fully maximizes
    the strengths and differences among its employees
    to be the employer and of provider of choice.

3
Agenda
  • Presentation Team Cathy Frank, Joe Katulic,
    Shelley Morrison, Leslie Stambaugh, Laurita
    Thomas
  • Purpose To share status of Health System
    Diversity Initiatives for staffing and determine
    a priority for future direction
  • Present Demographic Profile Strengths and
    Challenges
  • Summarize Status of Recent Initiatives
  • Outline Three Options for Future Focus
  • Mentoring
  • Problem-solving Strategies
  • Supervisory Skill Development
  • Select 2001-02 HS Strategic Initiative for
    Diversity

4
Demographic Profile
  • Strengths
  • We for the most part represent the population of
    the communities we serve
  • Challenges
  • Dispersion of ethnic diversity across job families

5
(No Transcript)
6
A Comparison of the Workforce with Census Figures
7
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System 1995
8
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System 2000
9
Comparison of the workforce by race and job
family for UHS.
10
In the PA job family non-whites are less likely
to stay.
11
Current Status UMHHC
12
Current Status UMHHC
13
Current Status UMHHC
14
Current Status UMHHC
Focus the Light of Diversity Retreat April, 1998.
  • Leadership is needed at all levels
  • Identify institutional champions
  • Develop concept of unit liaisons
  • Need for diversity coordination
  • Education is key
  • build supervisory skills
  • support mentoring
  • increase staff awareness

15
Hospitals and Health Centers Institutional
Objectives FY 2001
  • Goal
  • Improve customer satisfaction in all groups.
  • Strategy
  • Improve relationships, respect, and
    understanding of employees between different
    subgroups or employee population, around issues
    of diversity and differences.

16
Current Status - Medical School
  • Past Efforts
  • More Recent Efforts
  • Diversity and Career Development Committees
    Established
  • Staff Opinion Surveys and Focus Groups
  • Corrective Measures Proposed and Approved

17
Current Status - M-Care
  • M-Care is in the beginning stages of program
    development and implementation
  • Diversity leadership training workshop late
    1999
  • Action Steps
  • Developing supervisory training program
  • Conducting analysis of turnover data and
    departmental profiles
  • Conducting exit interviews
  • Establishing a diversity council

18
Current Status - M-Care (cont.)
  • Participated in December 2000 Health System
    Employee Opinion Survey
  • Work to implement additional initiatives in
    progress

19
Issues that Remain
  • Perception of unfair and/or discriminatory
    behavior
  • Frustration related to promotions, pay rates,
    career development
  • Higher turnover rates for minority personnel
  • Scarcity of minorities in higher-level positions
  • Belief that problems are not addressed effectively

20
Options for Strategic Initiatives
  • Invest in supervisory development
  • Improve employee problem solving
  • Implement strategic mentoring

21
Criteria for Selection
  • Number of people positively impacted over short
    term
  • Potential to save time/money and/or improve
    performance
  • Demonstrates significant responsiveness to
    diversity
  • Significant contribution to UMHS culture and
    ability to achieve its mission
  • Leadership commitment to the strategy
  • Feasibility
  • Impact on issues

22
Invest in Supervisory Training and Development
  • Rationale
  • Strengths or competencies which comprise a good
    supervisory development program contribute
    significantly to a successful diversity effort
    and to building and transitioning an
    organizations culture
  • Development of the supervisory staff results in
    business gains on a personal and
    professional basis

23
Invest in Supervisory Training and Development
  • Program Goals Improved skills and abilities in
  • Relationship building
  • Strategic Communication
  • Leadership
  • Teamwork
  • Influencing others
  • Business Knowledge
  • Customer Service
  • Analytical Ability
  • Change Management
  • Employee Recognition/Retention
  • Organizational savvy
  • Diversity

24
Invest in Supervisory Training and Development
  • Outcomes
  • Staff Development
  • Staff Satisfaction
  • Leadership Development
  • Creation of a workplace better adapted to
    recruiting and retaining a diverse workforce
  • Enhanced Organizational Performance

25
Improve Employee Problem Solving
Percentage of employees who strongly agree that
they are satisfied with how their workplace
concerns are addressed.
26
Improve Employee Problem Solving
  • Improve Grievance Process
  • offer ADR pre-3rd step grievance
  • implement peer review process for non-bargained
    for staff.
  • Support use of interest-based problem solving
    (IBPS) in resolving departmental and
    interdepartmental issues.
  • Build and develop leadership competency
  • Facilitate complex issues w/ internal mediators
  • Integrate IBPS into change initiatives

27
Improve Employee Problem Solving
  • Enhance employee communication skill and
    self-awareness of conflict resolution style.
  • Evaluate training options for staff
  • Difficult Conversations, Stone, Patton, Heen,
    Harvard Negotiation Project.
  • Resolving Conflict in a Diverse Workplace, Sybil
    Evans.
  • Others

28
Improve Employee Problem Solving
  • Anticipated Outcomes
  • Improved employee perception of fairness of
    grievance process
  • Reduction in number of non-bargained-for 3rd step
    grievances
  • Increased employee satisfaction per EOS
  • OCI data reflects increase in constructive styles
  • Reduction in litigation against employer

29
Implement an Institutional Mentoring Program
  • What is mentoring?
  • It is a process of guiding teaching others
    based on a strategic intent or long-term business
    and academic goals and objectives.
  • Survey responses to the question of whether
    supervisors know how to mentor staff development
  • 60 Do Not Agree

30
Advantages of Implementing a Mentoring Program
  • Expected Outcomes
  • Creates staff development opportunities
  • Identifies leaders within the organization and
    creates opportunities for them to share knowledge
    and experiences
  • Increases staff satisfaction
  • Increases the organizations ability to
    successfully recruit staff
  • Increases the organizations ability to retain
    the talent pool
  • Facilitates interdepartmental collaboration and
    enhances organizational performance

31
How do we implement a successful mentoring
program?
  • The Chrysalis Process
  • Refine the strategic intent or business reason
    for developing the program
  • Determine expected outcomes and measurement
    criteria
  • Publisize the program and identify champions.
  • Select mentors and mentees
  • Conduct education and orientation programs
  • Link mentors and mentees
  • Monitor the progress of the mentees and the
    impact of the overall program.

32
How committed are we, as an organization, to
diversity?
  • Responses to 1999 Medical School staff survey
    diversity question regarding staff belief that
    personnel decisions (hiring promotions, etc.) in
    (their) department reflect a commitment to
    diversity indicated
  • 9 Strongly agreed
  • 31 Agreed
  • N1196
  • The program is only as successful as the
    organizations willingness to embrace it.

33
APPENDIX
34
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
35
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
36
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
37
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
38
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
39
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
40
A comparison of the workforce by race for Health
System
41
A comparison of the workforce by race for HHC
42
A comparison of the workforce by race for MCare
43
A comparison of the workforce by race for Med
School
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