A Leadership Perspective on Mental Rehabilitation and Departmental Performance Improvement in Healthcare Insurance- A Prospective Mixed Method Interventional Cohort Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.69980/ajpr.v28i1.89Keywords:
healthcare, insurance, employee, resource improvement leadership, strategiesAbstract
Background: Effective departmental management in healthcare insurance plays a vital role in institutional quality and patient satisfaction. This investigation explores operational challenges in the insurance department of one of the prestigious teaching hospitals with suggested leadership-cued interventions to correct them. Objective: To examine operational ineffectiveness within the insurance department and suggest leader-led strategies for improving performance.
Methodology: Mixed methods involving qualitative and quantitative approaches were used. Questionnaires were conducted among 50 employees of insurance departments using standard online questionnaires and semi-structured interviews. Descriptive as well as inferential statistics were utilized to make analyses of survey data using such tests as the chi-square. Thematic content analysis was adopted for qualitative response in interviews.
Results: Post-intervention data showed substantial gains on a range of measures. Workplace cleanliness and organization scores moved from a mean of 2.5 to 4.1 (p < 0.01). Morale improved from 2.8 to 4.2, and accountability from 2.6 to 4.3. Perceptions of workflow efficiency moved from 2.9 to 4.4. Qualitative comments noted increased job satisfaction, a 30% reduction in the time taken for claims processing, and a reduction in outstanding claims from 350 to 120 in three months.
Discussion and conclusion: The targeted leadership interventions effectively tackled long-standing operational inefficiencies, building a more engaged workforce and enhanced patient care. The findings emphasize the significance of proactive management in developing organizational accountability and efficiency. Limitations: The limitations of the study are small sample size and use of self-reported data, which can introduce bias. Single-institution focus limits generalizability, and lack of a control group prevents attributing change to the interventions alone. Conclusion: This research points to the critical influence of leadership in improving operational performance in healthcare insurance offices. Additional research is needed to test these results in various healthcare environments to advance leadership and operational excellence best practices.
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