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You are busy, your mind is on other things and you choose to walk past toxic attitudes and behaviours in your workplace. It might avoid unpleasantness in the short term, but what is the long-term impact?
Many practices have a staff member with negative attitudes and toxic actions. Does yours? You know that person who comes in at the beginning of their shift as if they have a black cloud over their head, who doesn’t even say hello to the rest of the team and whose mood is infectious so that everybody starts to feel down? They may be the same person that leaves jobs they don’t consider fun to others, takes the credit for things they didn’t do or even shifts the blame for stuff they did do. Often they are people with great clinical skills – people we think the practice can’t live without.
Walking past and ignoring these behaviours can be such a relief at the time – it avoids conflict and allows us to concentrate on tasks we enjoy. It may seem like the easiest option, especially if we don’t feel like we have the power or the skills to do something about it.
Toxic attitudes in veterinary practices lead to toxic environments 1. The bad behaviour of one, or a small number, can impact the health and well-being of the entire team as people’s head space gets cluttered with thoughts of how to avoid either the toxic person or their wrath. They may spend so much time and invest so much emotional energy into coping with the situation that they have less energy and focus for their real job – that of looking after clients and pets.
They may lose trust, become defensive and withdraw their discretionary effort. And the simmering tension and conflict in the clinic create additional demands on people and contributes to burnout. People start looking for other jobs or careers.
Back in 2013, the Australian armed forces wanted to change the entrenched culture present in their workplace. Lieutenant General David Morrison (Chief of Army) told everybody that, “The standard you walk past is the standard you accept.” In saying this, he wanted each and every member of the workplace to take responsibility for the culture and to make a stand against unacceptable practices.
In your clinics – the ostrich approach may be the currently accepted way of dealing with bad behaviour. Understanding the cost of this approach, is it time to tackle it? Is it time to draw a line in the sand? Is David Morrison’s statement and message something that you could put to use in your practice?
But if we break it into small achievable steps, change can happen.
My experience as a manager is that steps 3 and 4 are the hardest.
Consistency can go out the door in the face of sickness, busy periods etc – but consistency is crucial. Everybody must be held accountable to the same code of conduct, no matter their experience, position or longevity in the role.
Helping people with established and unhelpful patterns to change their behaviour can be difficult. This is unlikely to be a smooth process– it may be one step forward and two steps backwards, and it will take time. One option you could consider is to provide a course of coaching with an experienced veterinary professional – an objective outsider who can provide a safe place to explore the reasons behind the actions and support the new ways of being, without having to simultaneously manage them. The coaching course could be part of the support you provide on a performance management plan.
And if you have provided support to meet the behavioural guidelines and it is still not happening, the next step is to make the best decision for the team, the clients you care for and your clinic’s productivity.
You can live without that toxic person and it probably will be a damned sight better than living with them.
Have any questions about managing a toxic employee? Ask Cathy in the Comments section below.
1. Moore IC et al (2015) Exploring the impact of toxic attitudes and a toxic environment on the veterinary healthcare team. Front. Vet. Sci. 2:78
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