The qualities of data: how nurses and their managers act on patient feedback in an English hospital

IF 0.9 Q4 MANAGEMENT Journal of Organizational Ethnography Pub Date : 2023-06-14 DOI:10.1108/joe-06-2022-0014
Amit Desai, Giulia Zoccatelli, S. Donetto, G. Robert, D. Allen, A. Rafferty, S. Brearley
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Abstract

PurposeTo investigate ethnographically how patient experience data, as a named category in healthcare organisations, is actively “made” through the co-creative interactions of data, people and meanings in English hospitals.Design/methodology/approachThe authors draw on fieldnotes, interview recordings and transcripts produced from 13 months (2016–2017) of ethnographic research on patient experience data work at five acute English National Health Service (NHS) hospitals, including observation, chats, semi-structured interviews and documentary analysis. Research sites were selected based on performance in a national Adult Inpatient Survey, location, size, willingness to participate and research burden. Using an analytical approach inspired by actor–network theory (ANT), the authors examine how data acquired meanings and were made to act by clinical and administrative staff during a type of meeting called a “learning session” at one of the hospital study sites.FindingsThe authors found that the processes of systematisation in healthcare organisations to act on patient feedback to improve to the quality of care, and involving frontline healthcare staff and their senior managers, produced shifting understandings of what counts as “data” and how to make changes in response to it. Their interactions produced multiple definitions of “experience”, “data” and “improvement” which came to co-exist in the same systematised encounter.Originality/valueThe article's distinctive contribution is to analyse how patient experience data gain particular attributes. It suggests that healthcare organisations and researchers should recognise that acting on data in standardised ways will constantly create new definitions and possibilities of such data, escaping organisational and scholarly attempts at mastery.
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数据的质量:英国医院的护士及其管理人员如何对患者的反馈采取行动
目的从人种学角度研究英国医院中,患者体验数据作为医疗保健组织中的一个命名类别,是如何通过数据、人和意义的共同创造性互动而被积极“制造”的。设计/方法论/方法作者利用了对五家英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)急诊医院患者体验数据工作进行的13个月(2016-2017)的民族志研究的现场笔记、访谈记录和成绩单,包括观察、聊天、半结构化访谈和文献分析。研究地点的选择基于全国成人住院患者调查的表现、地点、规模、参与意愿和研究负担。作者采用受行动者网络理论(ANT)启发的分析方法,研究了临床和行政人员在一个医院研究地点举行的一种称为“学习会”的会议上,如何获得数据的含义,并使其采取行动。研究结果作者发现,医疗保健组织对患者反馈采取行动以提高护理质量的系统化过程,以及一线医护人员及其高级管理人员的参与,使人们对什么是“数据”以及如何应对数据做出改变的理解发生了转变。他们的互动产生了对“经验”的多重定义,“数据”和“改进”在同一次系统化的遭遇中共存。原创性/价值这篇文章的独特贡献是分析患者体验数据是如何获得特定属性的。它表明,医疗保健组织和研究人员应该认识到,以标准化的方式对数据采取行动,将不断为这些数据创造新的定义和可能性,从而逃脱组织和学术界对掌握数据的尝试。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
37.50%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The Journal of Organizational Ethnography (JOE) has been launched to provide an opportunity for scholars, from all social and management science disciplines, to publish over two issues: -high-quality articles from original ethnographic research that contribute to the current and future development of qualitative intellectual knowledge and understanding of the nature of public and private sector work, organization and management -review articles examining the history and development of the contribution of ethnography to qualitative research in social, organization and management studies -articles examining the intellectual, pedagogical and practical use-value of ethnography in organization and management research, management education and management practice, or which extend, critique or challenge past and current theoretical and empirical knowledge claims within one or more of these areas of interest -articles on ethnographically informed research relating to the concepts of organization and organizing in any other wider social and cultural contexts.
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