Illuminating power dynamics that influenced a relational coordination program in a tertiary hospital: An institutional ethnography study.

IF 1.7 3区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Health Care Management Review Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1097/HMR.0000000000000422
Darren McLean, Martin Connor, Andrea P Marshall, Anne McMurray, Liz Jones
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Abstract

Background: Amidst the difficulty and contentiousness of improving hospitals, a relatively new approach is the Relational Model of Organizational Change (RMOC). However, this approach has its own challenges, including reports that its focus on communication and relationships is undervalued despite evidence supporting its use to facilitate practice improvements in hospitals. Research suggests power dynamics in hospitals influences how the RMOC is used, but the precise mechanisms through which this occurs have not been fully examined.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine how power dynamics shaped the implementation of a program using the RMOC in a hospital: the QPH RC Program.

Methodology: Institutional ethnography was applied to explicate textually mediated ruling relations (power dynamics) and examine how they exerted their influence on the QPH RC Program. This involved interviewing people and analyzing texts embedded in work processes that organized the implementation of the program.

Results: The QPH RC Program was embedded in a cluster of ruling relations comprising an economic rationalist and scientific discourse and project management methodology. These ruling relations exerted their power via textually mediated social processes that influenced the focus and management of the program.

Conclusion: The ruling relations functioned to align the QPH RC Program with the priorities of the hospital, suggesting that financial objectives were prioritized over objectives to improve communication or culture.

Practice implications: Future research and practice change should include investigating and addressing the intersection of institutional contexts and the application of the RMOC to facilitate practice improvements in health care organizations, particularly hospitals.

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影响三级医院关系协调计划的启发性权力动力学:一项机构人种学研究。
背景:在改进医院的困难和争议中,组织变革的关系模型(RMOC)是一种相对较新的方法。然而,这种方法也有其自身的挑战,包括有报告称,尽管有证据支持将其用于促进医院的实践改进,但其对沟通和关系的重视被低估了。研究表明,医院的权力动态会影响RMOC的使用方式,但这种情况发生的确切机制尚未得到充分研究。目的:本研究的目的是研究权力动力学如何影响医院使用RMOC的计划的实施:QPH RC计划。方法:运用制度人种学来解释文本介导的统治关系(权力动力学),并检查它们如何对QPH RC计划施加影响。这包括采访人员和分析嵌入在组织实施该计划的工作流程中的文本。结果:QPH RC计划嵌入了一组由经济理性主义和科学话语以及项目管理方法组成的统治关系。这些统治关系通过文本介导的社会过程发挥其力量,影响了项目的重点和管理。结论:统治关系的作用是使QPH RC计划与医院的优先事项保持一致,表明财务目标优先于改善沟通或文化的目标。实践影响:未来的研究和实践变革应包括调查和解决机构背景和RMOC应用的交叉问题,以促进卫生保健组织,特别是医院的实践改进。
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来源期刊
Health Care Management Review
Health Care Management Review HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: Health Care Management Review (HCMR) disseminates state-of-the-art knowledge about management, leadership, and administration of health care systems, organizations, and agencies. Multidisciplinary and international in scope, articles present completed research relevant to health care management, leadership, and administration, as well report on rigorous evaluations of health care management innovations, or provide a synthesis of prior research that results in evidence-based health care management practice recommendations. Articles are theory-driven and translate findings into implications and recommendations for health care administrators, researchers, and faculty.
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