dc.contributor.author | Gadolin, Christian | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2017-03-17T08:42:00Z | |
dc.date.available | 2017-03-17T08:42:00Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2017-03-17 | |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-91-628-9953-0 (Print) | |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-91-628-9954-7 (PDF) | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/2077/51448 | |
dc.description.abstract | Quality improvement (QI) has become a cornerstone in contemporary healthcare
organizations with the aim of enabling management that facilitates efficiency and
effectiveness, while providing a consistent correlation between health spending and
indicators of access to and quality of care. However, despite years of reform which have
attempted to change healthcare professionals’ practice, traditional professional modes of
working remain relatively stable and entrenched. Previous research has highlighted the fact
that healthcare professionals’ active involvement in quality improvement work (QIW) is
often lacking. Such a lack is often explained by professionals’ scepticism towards
management, managers, and organizationally related improvement initiatives. Yet, there is
a shortage of studies which focus on analysis at the level of the actor when studying
healthcare professionals’ involvement in QIW.
This dissertation presents a qualitative case study of the QIW undertaken by a
multi-professional diabetes care team. It enables a description and analysis of healthcare
professionals’ involvement in QIW at the actor level of analysis. A theoretical framework,
consisting of the combination of institutional logics and institutional work, is applied in
order to focus on varied and complementary aspects of institutional dynamics while
simultaneously emphasizing the embeddedness of actors’ actions and interactions.
The study shows that healthcare professionals’ identification with and
adherence to the professional logic in general impairs their involvement in QIW.
Adherence entails perceiving professional judgments and discretion as legitimate in guiding
practice and work. However, the study emphasizes that adherence to the professional logic
varies amongst professionals representing different professions. This means that
healthcare professionals’ acceptance of the bureaucratic control of work as legitimate
differs - enabling diverse approaches and practices in QIW. Furthermore, the study
illustrates that the physicians’ relative dominance hinders the utilization of multiple
perspectives in the multi-professional team. This finding elucidates how dominance and
hierarchization of logics enable healthcare professionals’ practice to remain relatively
stable, despite managerial attempts to change and alter it. Finally, the study delineates the
interactions needed in order to bridge institutional logics at the actor level of analysis. Such
interactions are characterized by reciprocal acts of claiming and granting influence that
constitute creative/disruptive institutional work, enabling actors to find new approaches to
each other and further facilitate healthcare professionals’ involvement in QIW. | |
dc.language.iso | eng | sv |
dc.subject | quality improvement | sv |
dc.subject | quality improvement work | sv |
dc.subject | healthcare organizations | sv |
dc.subject | healthcare professionals | sv |
dc.subject | institutional logics | sv |
dc.subject | institutional work | sv |
dc.title | The Logics of Healthcare – In Quality Improvement Work | sv |
dc.type | Text | |
dc.type.svep | Doctoral thesis | eng |
dc.type.degree | Doctor of Philosophy | sv |
dc.gup.origin | Göteborgs universitet. Handelshögskolan | sv |
dc.gup.department | Department of Business Administration ; Företagsekonomiska institutionen | sv |
dc.gup.defenceplace | Fredagen den 7 april 2017, kl. 13.15, CG-salen, Handelshögskolan, Vasagatan 1, Göteborg. | sv |
dc.gup.defencedate | 2017-04-07 | |
dc.gup.dissdb-fakultet | HHF | |