Author:
Montgomery Anthony,Panagopoulou Efharis,Kehoe Ian,Valkanos Efthymios
Abstract
PurposeTo date, relatively little evidence has been published as to what represents an effective and efficient way to improve quality of care and safety in hospitals. In addition, the initiatives that do exist are rarely designed or developed with regard to the individual and organisational factors that determine the success or failure of such initiatives. One of the challenges in linking organisational culture to quality of care is to identify the focal point at which a deficient hospital culture and inadequate organisational resources are most evident. The accumulated evidence suggests that such a point is physician burnout. This paper sets out to examine this issue.Design/methodology/approachThe paper reviews the existing literature on organisational culture, burnout and quality of care in the healthcare sector. A new conceptual approach as to how organisational culture and quality of care can be more effectively linked through the physician experience of burnout is proposed.FindingsRecommendations are provided with regard to how future research can approach quality of care from a bottom‐up organisational change perspective. In addition, the need to widen the debate beyond US and North European experiences is discussed.Originality/valueThe present paper represents an attempt to link organisational culture, job burnout and quality of care in a more meaningful way. A conceptual model has been provided as a way to frame and evaluate future research.
Subject
Health Policy,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference81 articles.
1. Alexander, C. and Fraser, J. (2004), “Occupational violence in an Australian healthcare setting: implications for managers”, Journal of Healthcare Management, Vol. 49, pp. 377‐90.
2. Bakker, A., Schaufeli, W., Sixma, H., Bosveld, W. and Dierendonck, D. (2000), “Patient demands, lack of reciprocity, and burnout: a five‐year longitudinal study among general practitioners”, Journal of Organizational Behavior, Vol. 21, pp. 425‐41.
3. BMA (2006), “Ethical responsibilities in treating doctors who are patients”, available at: www.bma.org.uk/health_promotion_ethics/doctor_relationships/doctorspatients.jsp (accessed 13 February 2009).
4. Brief, A.P., Buttram, R.T., Elliot, J.D., Reizenstein, R.M. and McCline, R.L. (1995), “Releasing the beast: a study of compliance with order to use race as a selection criterion”, Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 51, pp. 177‐93.
5. Cabana, M.D. and Kim, C. (2003), “Physician adherence to preventive cardiology guidelines for women”, Women's Health Issues, Vol. 13, pp. 142‐9.
Cited by
70 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献