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Related Experiment Videos

Recruit, screen, and hire: staff selection and the decision-making process.

S D Melville

    Administration in Mental Health
    |January 1, 1977
    PubMed
    Summary

    This article details the clinician-manager

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    Area of Science:

    • Healthcare Administration
    • Human Resources Management
    • Mental Health Services

    Background:

    • Clinician-managers in mental health centers lack formal guidance on staff selection processes.
    • Current hiring practices rely on informal knowledge transfer (word-of-mouth, observation, trial-and-error).

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To examine the multifaceted components of staff selection for clinician-managers.
    • To analyze the decision-making process, including risk assessment and personal value judgments.
    • To address the emotional impact of hiring decisions on clinician-managers.

    Main Methods:

    • Analysis of the staff selection sequence from procedural assimilation to final decision-making.
    • Exploration of the influence of public authority regulations.
    • Consideration of the clinician-manager's subjective experience and value judgments.

    Main Results:

    • Staff selection involves complex steps, from understanding regulations to making final hiring choices.
    • The process is often informal, lacking standardized procedures.
    • Personal values and emotional factors significantly influence the clinician-manager's decisions.

    Conclusions:

    • Formal training in staff selection is crucial for mental health administrators.
    • Integrating selection best practices into academic programs will improve hiring outcomes.
    • Addressing the emotional and subjective aspects of hiring is essential for effective leadership.

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