Abstract

Due to the demographic change morbidity raises the demand for medical hospital services as well as a need for medical specialization, while economic and human resources are diminishing. Unlike other industries hospitals do not have sufficient data and adequate models to relate growing demands and increasing performance to growth in staff capacity and to increase in staff competences. Based on huge medical data sample covering the years from 2010 to 2014 with more than 150,000 operations of the Department for Anesthesiology at the University Hospital Muenster, Germany, comparisons are drawn between the development of medical services and the development of personnel capacity and expertise. The numbers of surgical operations increased by 21% and "skin incision to closure" time by 17%. Simultaneously, personnel capacity grew by 16% largely resting upon recruiting first-time employees. Expertise measured as "years of professional experience" dwindled from 10 years to 5.4 years on average and staff turnover accelerated. Static benchmark data collected at fixed reference dates do not sufficiently reflect the nexus between capacity and competence and do not reflect the dynamic changes in a hospital's requirements for expertise and specialization, at all. Staff turnover leads to a loss of experience, which jeopardizes patient safety and hampers medical specialization. In consequence of the dramatic shortage of medical specialists, drop-off rates must be reduced and retention rates must be increased. To that end, working conditions need to be fundamentally converted for a multigeneration, multicultural, and increasingly female workforce.

Highlights

  • Demographic development will bring about a constantly growing need for medical treatment of longterm and chronically ill patients as well as geriatric medicine

  • The average skin-incision-to-closuretime per operation remained rather constant during the reporting period. This service development was due to consolidation within regular working hours (RWH)

  • In 2009, the RWH in anesthesiology were adjusted according to times of operating room use

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Summary

Introduction

Demographic development will bring about a constantly growing need for medical treatment of longterm and chronically ill patients as well as geriatric medicine. Demand forecasts in Germany for case figures and stay length until 2030 indicate an increase in case figures in hospitals from 19.4 million to 22 million cases of treatment while the group. Growing Pains at Hospitals of patients over 60 years will increase from 51 to 61% [1,2,3]. The productivity pressure is higher depending on how specialized the medical treatment is and the associated expense increases: in Germany, during the last few years more patients being treated in less time and with fewer facilities [8]. In many innovation-dependent industries, the relationship between full-time equivalents (FTEs), employee expertise, and framework conditions for corporate development has been discussed in terms of three main approaches [9,10,11]: 1. Strategic positioning of the company in order to attract and retain talent [12] as well as a learning orientation in order to build an efficient workforce [13]

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