The Relationship Between Health Plan Type, Use of Specialty Medications, and Worker Productivity

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Fronstin ◽  
M. Christopher Roebuck
1997 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 75-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynn O. Cooper

Listening is a desirable skill in organizational settings; good listening can improve worker productivity and satisfaction. The challenge facing consul tants is how to train employees to be competent listeners. Although much research in listening has taken place over the last few years, little of that research addresses workplace listening directly and much is based on false assumptions: that listening is a unitary concept, that listening is a cognitive rather than behavioral skill, and that listening is a linear act. In a 10-year study, we developed a model of organizational listening competency that does apply directly to the workplace. It provides a basis for assessing listening abil ity largely through the observations of co-workers. The model emphasizes two effective behaviors: accuracy, that is, confirming the message sent; and sup port, that is, affirming the relationship between the speaker and the listener: This model serves as an effective basis for improving workplace listening, both through formal training programs and through individual workers' own efforts.


2014 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 15-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.N. Wilner ◽  
B.K. Sharma ◽  
A. Soucy ◽  
A. Thompson ◽  
A. Krueger
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Ibrahim Niankara

This article takes an approach to explaining the behavioral manifestations of the decision making in US companies’ offer of health insurance that is grounded not only on their cost minimizing behavior, but also in a humanness dimension based on the African concept of Ubuntu. In this way, we define an Ubuntu based Random Utility modeling framework, describing the choice process as a tripartite decision making, and implemented using a nationally representative random sample of 1,061 American companies from the Dunn and Bradstreet Business data, supplied by Survey Sampling International to the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. The results from the three sequentially implemented specifications showed that the relationship between management culture and health plan offering strategy is dependent on other relevant co-variates, which when left out, leads to the problem of omitted variables bias. However, when all variables are included but assumed to enter the relationship exogenously, this results in management culture not having any statistically significant effect on companies' decisions about scope of health plan offering. When the exogeneity assumption is relaxed through a recursively Bivariate Probit model, the system of two equations produces a highly significant management culture effect. In fact, in this later case we see that companies with groups and formal committee management culture are 1.58 times less likely to choose a multiple plan strategy over a single plan strategy, hence failing to show the more wholesome plan offering that would theoretically prevail under Ubuntu style management.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Quba Ahmed ◽  
Muhammad Saleem Sumbal ◽  
Muhammad Naseer Akhtar ◽  
Hussain Tariq

Purpose Drawing upon the theoretical underpinning of knowledge worker productivity, this study aims to examine the relationship between abusive supervision and knowledge management (KM) process (creation, application and sharing of knowledge) and its impact on the knowledge worker productivity in knowledge-intensive organizations. Design/methodology/approach Hypothesis were tested through PROCESS Macro in IBM SPSS v.26 on a sample of 204 employees working in banking sector of Pakistan. Confirmatory factor analysis was conducted to test the model fitness through AMOS v. 26. Findings The results showed that the relationship between abusive supervision and KM process (creation, application and sharing of knowledge) is negative and highly significant, i.e. greater the abusive supervision in the banking sector, the lower is the engagement in KM processes. Furthermore, there is a positive and highly significant relationship between the KM process and knowledge worker productivity. Finally, the study indicates the negative impact of abusive supervision on the knowledge worker productivity through the mediating mechanism of knowledge management processes. Research limitations/implications A key limitation is that the study is cross-sectional, and the findings may only be generalizable to developing countries context. Originality/value Previous studies have focused on supervisor–employee relationship but not in the context of knowledge worker productivity. This article fulfills this gap through understanding the impact of abusive supervision on the knowledge worker productivity in relation to KM processes (knowledge creation, sharing and application) by drawing upon the theoretical underpinning of knowledge worker productivity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximilian Buchholz

Abstract A growing body of research is demonstrating a robust positive relationship between the diversity of a city’s foreign-born population in the USA and worker productivity. Other research has focused on diversity within firms, similarly finding positive effects in many cases. Although it appears that diverse teams within firms are better at problem-solving and are more creative, the exact mechanism(s) that drive the relationship between diversity and productivity at the scale of city-regions are less apparent and underexplored in extant research. Drawing on research from several fields, I describe four mechanisms that might drive the relationship between immigrant diversity and productivity at the urban level. I explore each mechanism with a pseudo panel of workers and fixed effects OLS regressions across U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas between 2011 and 2017. The results most strongly support that at the urban level, diversity enhances productivity through what I call ‘exposure effects’ and ‘interactive problem-solving’, wherein workers become more productive and more creative through exposure to new cultures and ways of thinking and through joint problem-solving. These results suggest that positive externalities arise when coupling rising immigrant diversity with the social integration of people from diverse backgrounds.


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 316-333
Author(s):  
Leandro Fernandes de Jesus ◽  
Juliana Molina Queiroz ◽  
Marcelo Álvaro da Silva Macedo ◽  
Cláudia Ferreira da Cruz ◽  
Fernanda Filgueiras Sauerbronn

2018 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 00004
Author(s):  
Ellena Nurmasari ◽  
Mirwan Ushada ◽  
Endy Suwondo

<p class="Abstract">The worker is one of the important factors in Small Medium-sized Enterprise (SME) because of manual production. Workload and daily production target influence worker productivity. The research objectives are: 1) To measure worker physical and mental workload in Bakery SMEs; 2) To analyze the relationship between physical, mental workload and productivity. The case study of research is in SME an anonymous bakery SME in Sleman. Physical workload indicator was based on heart rate. Heart rate was measured using wrist pulsemeter. Cardiovascular load percentage was calculated using measured heart rate work and leisure time. Mental workload indicator was measured NASA-TLX questionnaire. It had six indicators as mental, physical, temporal demand, performance, effort<span lang="IN">,</span> and frustration level. Productivity was identified by the dough output. The relationship between physical, mental workload and productivity were analyzed using polynomial quadratic regression. The result concluded the worker productivity in bakery SME was influenced by physical and mental workload as much as 80.8 % and 19.2 % influenced by other factors. The result of 80<span lang="IN">.</span>8 % was significant compared to the other one in SMEs. This result provided the linear model opportunity to be used easily instead of non-linear to define the worker and production system interaction in SMEs.<o:p></o:p></p>


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