Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1992. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Nothing prepared me to manage AIDS.
Harv Bus Rev. 1992 Jul-Aug;70(4):26-8, 30-3. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE AHA/92363394 Banas GE; Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Abstract:
Articles and seminars about AIDS in the workplace are not adequate preparation for the genuine problems faced by actual managers in real organizations. There are no easy, win-win solutions to the impossible dilemmas AIDS presents, only various forms of damage control and, at best, more or less humane compromises. Gary Banas knows. Over a period of four years, two of his direct reports developed AIDS, and he watched them suffer through debility, slowly deteriorating performance, and eventual death. He also watched the gradual decline of their subordinates' productivity and morale. He found that, to different degrees, both men refused to acknowledge their illness and their decreasing organizational effectiveness. One of them resisted the author's efforts to give him an easier job at no loss in salary. Both insisted on confidentiality long after the rumor mill had identified their problem. In the course of these two consecutive ordeals, Banas discovered that AIDS patients fall into no single, neat category. AIDS is not an issue but a disease, and the people who get it are human beings first and victims second. He also learned that AIDS affects everyone around the sick individual and that almost every choice a manager makes will injure someone. Finally, he came to understand that while managers have an unequivocal obligation to treat AIDS-afflicted employees with compassion and respect, they have an equally unequivocal obligation to keep their organizations functioning. "Don't let anyone kid you," Banas warns. "When you confront AIDS in the workplace, you will face untenable choices that seem to pit your obligation to humanity against your obligation to your organization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Keywords: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/*PSYCHOLOGY Confidentiality Denial (Psychology) Efficiency Employee Performance Appraisal Homosexuality Human *Interpersonal Relations *Interprofessional Relations Male *Morale Personnel Management/*METHODS United States JOURNAL ARTICLE
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