One study suggests that worker morale is directly related to worker satisfaction. Hence, study researchers might ask you which of the following describes your mood about your job. Are you:
- Passionate about your work?
- Satisfied with your work?
- Engaged in your work?
- Apathetic about your work?
- Numb about your work?
- 10-29% are passionate about their work; they are completely engaged
- 60-80% are satisfied with their work but not engaged
- 10-20% are disengaged; they just work to get a pay check
To keep workers engaged, it's best to involve each member of the department in tasks. Yes, that means that you might be asked to do a certain task, such as teaching oxygen therapy to nurses, or becoming a Basic Life Support educator, or making a presentation at your local respiratory therapy conference.
You also may be asked to write a protocol or hospital policy, or anything that keeps you enganged. Another technique is to have you write a blog such as the RT Cave. Surely you may have no control over your work, yet you will have control over your own projects.
The more you do, the more involved you are, the greater your morale will be. This has a direct impact on your satisfaction, and the happier you are the happier your customers (patients) will be.
Another way to improve your satisfaction is for your boss to ensure you have the best benefit package possible, make sure you get an annual raise for inflation plus bonuses if possible, and to involve you in departmental decision making.
It also helps to get praise. It also helps to be listened to. It also helps when you are respected when you make a recommendation. It also helps when you have automony to use your experience and education to do what's best for the patient.
Yet doing all these things isn't always possible. RT bosses get busy, and they get a lot of pressure from their bosses to mak your RT Cave look good on paper. The end result is you may not get the results you want, and you become apathetic and disengaged.
So, how passionate are you about your job?
(see natural progression of satisfaction)
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