Remote Work Mandated in Virtual Wellness

 






HRM BLOG SERIES · POST 3

Beyond the Ward:

How Flexible and Remote Work Can Support Hospital Staff During Fuel Crises

Lakeside Adventist Hospital · Human Resource Management · 2026

 

Traditionally, “remote work” feels incompatible with hospitals: patients need hands-on care, and most roles are location-bound. Yet in times of fuel shortages, fuel-driven public holidays, and staff shortages, hybrid and flexible-scheduling models can become powerful tools for maintaining both service continuity and staff wellbeing. This post explores how Lakeside Adventist Hospital can use remote and flexible work principles  where possible  to support staff, reduce stress, and strengthen resilience in a crisis-pone environment.

 

1. Why Flexibility Matters in a Fuel-Affected Context

In Sri Lanka, fuel quotas and Wednesday public holidays have made commuting unpredictable. Staff may face long queues, rising transport costs, and last-minute timetable changes. When these pressures hit, fixed, rigid schedules amplify stress and absenteeism.

Research on Sri Lankan hospitals during the 2022–2025 economic and fuel crisis shows that rigid shift patterns and limited flexibility worsened staff fatigue and turnover (Madiwala Gamage Don, 2024). In contrast, hospitals that adopted flexible rosters and staggered hours reported better morale and fewer unplanned absences (Wickramasinghe et al., 2025). For Lakeside Adventist Hospital, this suggests that flexibility is not a luxury  it is a resilience strategy.

 

Chart 1: Flexible vs. Rigid Scheduling  Impact on Staff Wellbeing Indicators

Metric

Rigid Scheduling

Flexible Scheduling

Est. Impact

Staff Absenteeism

↑ High

↓ Reduced

−28%

Unplanned Leave

↑ Frequent

↓ Lower

−22%

Staff Morale Score

↓ Low

↑ Higher

+31%

Commute-Related Stress

↑ High

↓ Reduced

−35%

Turnover Intention

↑ High

↓ Lower

−24%

Training Completion Rate

↓ Low

↑ Higher

+40%



Sources: Madiwala Gamage Don (2024); Wickramasinghe et al. (2025). Estimated impacts based on synthesised findings.


2. Flexible and Remote Roles in Healthcare

Not all hospital roles can be fully remote, but many can be partially flexible or adapted into hybrid models. Examples include:

Administrative and HR Functions

Tasks like scheduling, payroll, HR-related communication, and quality-management reporting can be done remotely or in hybrid mode. This reduces the number of staff needing to commute every day and frees up fuel for clinical staff.

Training and Development

E-learning modules, virtual workshops, and online HR-led sessions on mental-health support or crisis management can be accessed off-site. A 2025 study on HRM adaptation under disruption stresses that digital-learning platforms help maintain training and development even when in-person attendance is difficult (Arefin & Jannat, 2025).

Tele-Support and Documentation

Some patients can receive follow-up consultations, wellness-centre advice, or documentation support via phone or video. Nurses and counsellors can manage parts of their caseload remotely, reducing fuel-related stress and daily commuting demands.

Flexible Scheduling Options

 

Where fully remote work is not possible, flexible scheduling can still help: • Staggered start times to avoid rush-hour queues • Clustered shifts (longer days, fewer commutes per week) • “Fuel-sensitive” shift planning for staff living far away

 

Chart 2: Flexible Work Options for Lakeside Adventist Hospital


 

3. Linking Theory to Practice: HRM and Flexibility

HRM theory supports these ideas in several ways:

High-Performance Work Systems (HPWS)

HPWS emphasises that flexible work arrangements, coupled with training and supportive HR practices, increase engagement and performance. Applied to Lakeside, this means designing flexible rosters that match operational needs while respecting staff constraints.

Dynamic Capabilities and Resilience

Dynamic capabilities involve sensing, seizing, and reconfiguring resources. A hospital that can reconfigure work patterns  shifting some tasks online, adjusting schedules  is more resilient to fuel-related shocks (Madiwala Gamage Don, 2024).

Psychological Contract and Trust

When staff feel that HRM understands their fuel-related burdens and offers flexible options, the psychological contract between employee and employer strengthens. This reduces turnover intentions and builds loyalty, as documented by Wickramasinghe et al. (2025).

 

Chart 3: HRM Theory Applied to Flexible Work at Lakeside

HRM Theory

Link to Flexible Work at Lakeside

Key Source

High-Performance Work Systems (HPWS)

Flexible rosters + training = higher engagement and performance

Arefin & Jannat (2025)

Dynamic Capabilities

Reconfiguring work patterns builds crisis resilience

Madiwala Gamage Don (2024)

Psychological Contract

Flexible options signal employer care; reduce turnover

Wickramasinghe et al. (2025)

Resilient HRM

Adaptable HR practices protect service continuity during shocks

Arefin & Jannat (2025)

Theoretical linkages between HRM frameworks and flexible work practice in a crisis hospital context.

 

4. Implementation at Lakeside: Practical HRM Steps

For Lakeside Adventist Hospital, an HRM-led approach to flexible and remote work might include:

5. The Uneven Impact: Not All Roles Are Affected Equally

One of the most critical  yet often overlooked  dimensions of flexible work in a fuel crisis is that the burden does not fall equally across all roles. A nurse cannot work from home. A ward doctor cannot defer their shift. But an HR officer or payroll clerk may have far more options. This inequality is not just a logistical issue  it is a matter of HRM fairness and organisational justice.

 

Key insight: When flexibility is offered without acknowledging role-based inequality, the result is a policy that appears equitable but functions inequitably. Frontline clinical staff bear the highest fuel burden with the least access to relief. HRM must design role-differentiated responses  not one-size-fits-all policies.

 

Evidence: Who Bears the Heaviest Burden?

During Sri Lanka’s 2022 fuel crisis, the unequal impact across healthcare roles was stark and documented. The Lancet Regional Health  Southeast Asia (2022) reported that nurses were working double shifts because daily transport to work had become unaffordable, while their official monthly fuel allowance covered less than three litres of petrol (WSWS, 2022). Meanwhile, senior consultants  with higher salaries and access to private vehicles  faced a different but still serious risk: emigration. Over 1,700 doctors left Sri Lanka in two years, with junior and mid-grade doctors citing unmanageable personal costs as the primary driver (Al Jazeera, 2024).

This creates a dual crisis within the crisis: frontline staff are trapped, overworked, and underfunded to commute; senior staff face the pull of emigration. HRM must recognise and respond to both ends of this spectrum through differentiated, role-sensitive policies.

 

Chart 4: Uneven Fuel Crisis Impact by Hospital Role  and HRM Responses

Role

Flexibility Available

Fuel Impact

Evidence

HRM Response

Nurses / Ward Staff

None — must be physically present

HIGHEST

Nurses worked double shifts as daily transport became unaffordable (Lancet SEA, 2022)

Priority transport allowances, on-site rest facilities, mental health check-ins

Junior Doctors

Very limited — on-call duties require presence

VERY HIGH

Over 1,700 doctors left Sri Lanka; those remaining faced doubled workloads (Al Jazeera, 2024)

Fuel allowances, recognition schemes, workload redistribution policies

Lab Technicians / Allied Health

Partial — some remote reporting possible

HIGH

Allied health workers struck over inability to afford fuel to reach hospitals (WSWS, 2022)

Staggered shifts, partial remote reporting, transport coordination

Community / Outreach Staff

Moderate — field visits fuel-dependent

HIGH

PHI allowance of LKR 1,200/month covered less than 3 litres of fuel (WSWS, 2022)

Clustered visits, digital follow-up substitution, fuel reimbursement

Administrative / HR Staff

High — most tasks can be remote or hybrid

MODERATE

Administrative roles are most adaptable to hybrid models (Arefin & Jannat, 2025)

Prioritise hybrid/remote first; free up fuel quota for clinical staff

Senior Consultants / Specialists

High — resources and private transport more available

LOWER

Higher salaries provided private transport buffers; still at risk of emigration (Al Jazeera, 2024)

Retention packages; equitable fuel policies to prevent resentment

Sources: Lancet SEA (2022); WSWS (2022); Al Jazeera (2024); Arefin & Jannat (2025). Impact ratings are indicative.

 

HRM Equity Theory: Why Role-Differentiated Policy Matters

Adams’ Equity Theory, a core HRM framework, holds that employees compare their inputs (effort, risk, cost) against their outputs (pay, support, flexibility). When a nurse sees that an administrative colleague can work from home while she queues for fuel before a 12-hour shift, the perceived inequity damages morale, commitment, and trust in the organisation. As Madiwala Gamage Don (2024) found, crisis-era HR practices perceived as unfair directly increased turnover intentions among frontline healthcare workers.

An equity-informed HRM strategy for Lakeside would involve compensating those who cannot be flexible  through fuel allowances, on-site rest facilities, and recognition programmes  rather than only rewarding those who can adopt hybrid models. Wickramasinghe et al. (2025) specifically noted that hospitals which applied role-sensitive support measures during the crisis retained significantly stronger staff cohesion than those that applied uniform policies.

 

HRM Equity Principle for Lakeside: Flexible work must be paired with compensatory support for inflexible roles. Every nurse who cannot work from home deserves an equivalent benefit whether a transport allowance, a rest room, a meal subsidy, or a reduced shift load. Fairness is not giving everyone the same thing; it is giving everyone what they need.

 

 

Consider these questions to deepen your thinking about flexible HRM and role equity in healthcare:

Q1

Can you think of any roles in your own organisation that could be done partially or fully remotely, even in a service-oriented setting?

 

 

Conclusion

Flexible and remote work are not just modern HR trends  in fuel-crisis contexts, they are essential tools for organisational survival. For Lakeside Adventist Hospital, embedding flexibility into HR design means fewer unplanned absences, stronger staff morale, and a workforce that can adapt when the fuel situation changes overnight.

But flexibility alone is insufficient. HRM must also confront the uneven distribution of crisis burden across roles. Frontline nurses, junior doctors, and allied health workers bear the highest personal cost with the least access to flexible relief. An equitable, crisis-resilient HRM strategy must compensate those who cannot be flexible, while enabling those who can  building a hospital where every role is protected, valued, and sustainable.

Drawing on HRM theories of HPWS, dynamic capabilities, psychological contract, and equity theory  supported by Madiwala Gamage Don (2024), Wickramasinghe et al. (2025), and Arefin & Jannat (2025)  Lakeside can design a role-differentiated, crisis-resilient workforce strategy that goes beyond the ward and into the future of healthcare HRM.

 

“In a fuel crisis, the most resilient hospital is not the one with the most resources it is the one with the most equitable and adaptable HR.”

 

 

References

Arefin, M. S., & Jannat, T. (2025). Adapting HRM strategies to the challenges of global logistics and supply chain management. International Journal of Research and Scientific Innovation (IJRSI), 12(2), 90–106. https://doi.org/10.51244/IJRSI.2025.12020009

Madiwala Gamage Don, S. (2024). Human Resource Management challenges and response strategies in Sri Lankan hospitals amidst a dual crisis context [PhD thesis, Victoria University, Melbourne]. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/49809/

Wickramasinghe, N., de Silva, A., et al. (2025). Resilience and recovery of a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka during the economic and fuel crisis. PLOS Global Public Health, 25(1), e008754. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12772611/

Rao, N., et al. (2022). Sri Lanka — health in the middle of a crisis. Lancet Regional Health — Southeast Asia, 4, 100067. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lansea.2022.100067

Al Jazeera. (2024, June 20). ‘Fed up’: Doctor exodus bleeds Sri Lanka’s healthcare after economic crisis. Al Jazeera. https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2024/6/20/fed-up-doctor-exodus-bleeds-sri-lankas-healthcare-after-economic-crisis

World Socialist Web Site (WSWS). (2022, July 5). Sri Lankan health employees strike over fuel shortages and inability to travel to work. World Socialist Web Site. https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2022/07/05/msnn-j05.html

 



Comments

  1. This is a very insightful blog that clearly highlights the complexity of implementing remote work mandates in hospitals, especially in balancing operational efficiency with employee well-being and patient care quality.
    However, how can HR design flexible remote work policies for non-clinical staff while ensuring coordination, data security, and seamless patient service delivery in hospital settings?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful and perceptive comment. I’m glad the discussion around the balance between operational efficiency, employee well-being, and patient care came through clearly.

      You raise an important point about non-clinical staff. I think HR can approach this by developing clearly structured hybrid work policies that define which roles and tasks are suitable for remote work, while ensuring core on-site functions remain uninterrupted. Establishing clear communication protocols and shared digital platforms can help maintain coordination across teams.

      At the same time, strong data security measures such as secure access systems, staff training on confidentiality, and controlled use of hospital information systems are essential to protect sensitive patient information. Setting clear performance expectations and service standards can also help ensure that patient service delivery remains seamless, regardless of where staff are working.

      Ultimately, it’s about creating a system that offers flexibility without compromising accountability, coordination, or care quality.

      Thank you again for raising such a relevant and practical question.

      Delete
  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  3. This blog gives a really practical view of how flexible and remote work can actually help in a hospital setting, especially during fuel shortages. I like how it doesn’t assume everything can go remote and instead shows realistic options like flexible shifts and partial remote tasks. The part about role inequality is especially important, because not all staff have the same level of flexibility. It clearly shows that HR policies need to be fair, not just equal.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful reflection I’m glad the practical and realistic approach stood out to you.

      You’ve highlighted a key point: in healthcare, flexibility has to be fair, not just equal, because roles differ so much. Balancing those differences is where HR policies really make an impact.

      Appreciate you taking the time to share your perspective!

      Delete
  4. This is a very insightful and timely post on remote work mandates in hospitals. You clearly highlight an important modern healthcare HR issue. Do you think remote work in hospitals should be expanded for non-clinical roles, or does healthcare culture still require stronger physical presence for effective coordination?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful question.

      I think remote work should be expanded for suitable non-clinical roles, but in a balanced way. Tasks like administration, HR, and data management can benefit from flexibility, improving efficiency and staff well-being. However, healthcare still relies heavily on coordination, so some level of physical presence remains important for teamwork and responsiveness.

      So rather than fully remote, a hybrid approach is likely the most practical combining flexibility with the need for strong on-site collaboration.

      Appreciate your insightful point.

      Delete
  5. In this blog you clearly explains how flexible and remote work can support hospital staff during a fuel crisis. The use of real Sri Lankan context and research evidence makes the discussion practical and relevant. I especially like the focus on role-based inequality and how HRM fairness is addressed through Equity Theory. The connection between theory and real-world application is clear, and the recommendations for Lakeside Adventist Hospital are realistic and actionable. Overall, it’s a strong and meaningful analysis of crisis-responsive HRM.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular Posts