管理委员会和医院深刻的组织变革。

M L Fennell, J A Alexander
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引用次数: 25

摘要

在过去十年中,理事会作为组织内决策制定和监督单位的重要性急剧增加。尽管这对公司和私营部门组织都是如此(Bacon and Brown 1977;Gelman 1988),它与卫生部门尤其相关。长期以来被认为在医院管理中无足轻重的医院管理委员会,最近受到了更严格的审查。理事会在影响医院战略和医院绩效的决策中的作用再次成为董事会和医院行业期刊感兴趣的话题。凯洛格基金会(S.K. Kellogg Foundation)资助了一个教学联盟,以帮助加强托管和管理委员会决策,并改善治理领域卫生服务管理人员的教育,这给人们提供了对治理重新产生兴趣的令人印象深刻的证据。该联盟的成员包括医院研究和教育信托基金、美国医院协会、美国医疗保健主管学院和大学卫生管理项目协会。该联盟正在开展的活动包括为董事会开发一种自我评估工具/方法,为执业受托人制定一份关于有效治理的参考书目和参考指南,为卫生管理项目的教师举办研究讲习班,以及制定一份关于治理和受托人领导的教学指南。尽管有这种兴趣,但我们开始本文时提出的问题仍然存在。管理委员会起到作用了吗?在我们回顾之前关于治理的工作的过程中,我们发现,这个问题往往已经转变为:董事会如何影响医院的绩效?这个问题经常被进一步缩小为:哪种董事会结构能带来更好的医院绩效?我们主张重新说明最初的问题。我们也许不应该追求对绩效最佳的管理委员会的定义,而应该把我们的注意力转移回对董事会结构和职能及其对医院变革的影响的更全面的理解上。这里开发的模型结合了四个基本的问题:1。在不同类型的管理委员会中,构成结构差异的基本维度是什么?2. 这些董事会类型如何影响医院的结构变化?3.作为医院发展、衰落、稳定或不稳定的总体模式的一个功能,董事会对变革本身的影响是如何随着时间的推移而变化的?(摘要删节为400字)
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Governing boards and profound organizational change in hospitals.

Over the past decade the importance of governing boards as policy-making setting and oversight units within organizations has increased dramatically. Although this is true for both corporate- and private-sector organizations (Bacon and Brown 1977; Gelman 1988), it is particularly relevant to the health sector. Hospital governing boards, long considered inconsequential in hospital management, have recently become subject to closer scrutiny. The role of governing boards in decisions affecting hospital strategy and hospital performance is once again a topic of some interest in boardrooms and hospital trade journals. Impressive evidence of the renewed interest in governance is provided by the funding of an instructional consortium by the S.K. Kellogg Foundation to help strengthen trusteeship and governing board decision making, and to improve education for health services managers in the area of governance. Members of the consortium include the Hospital Research and Educational Trust, the American Hospital Association, the American College of Healthcare Executives, and the Association for University Programs in Health Administration. Among the activities being undertaken by this consortium is the development of a self-assessment tool/methodology for boards, a bibliography and reference guide on effective governance for practicing trustees, research workshops for faculty in health administration programs, and a teaching guide on governance and trustee leadership. Despite this interest, the question with which we began this article persists. Do governing boards make a difference? In the course of our review of previous work on governance we found that, more often than not, that question has been transformed into: how do boards influence hospital performance? And very often that question has been further narrowed into: which board structure leads to better hospital performance? We have argued for a respecification of the initial question. Rather than pursuing a definition of the maximally performing governing board, we should perhaps shift our focus back to a fuller understanding of board structure and function, and its influence on hospital change. The model developed here combines four essential, and very basic, questions: 1. What are the basic dimensions that underlie structural variation in different types of governing boards? 2. How do these board types influence structural change in hospitals? 3. How is the effect of board influence on change itself likely to change over time as a function of the hospital's general pattern of growth, decline, stability, or instability?(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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