Literature DB >> 26394256

Finding brilliance using positive organizational scholarship in healthcare.

Ann Dadich, Liz Fulop, Mary Ditton, Steven Campbell, Joanne Curry, Kathy Eljiz, Anneke Fitzgerald, Kathryn J Hayes, Carmel Herington1, Godfrey Isouard, Leila Karimi, Anne Smyth.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Positive organizational scholarship in healthcare (POSH) suggests that, to promote widespread improvement within health services, focusing on the good, the excellent, and the brilliant is as important as conventional approaches that focus on the negative, the problems, and the failures. POSH offers different opportunities to learn from and build resilient cultures of safety, innovation, and change. It is not separate from tried and tested approaches to health service improvement--but rather, it approaches this improvement differently. The paper aims to discuss these issues. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: POSH, appreciative inquiry (AI) and reflective practice were used to inform an exploratory investigation of what is good, excellent, or brilliant health service management.
FINDINGS: The researchers identified new characteristics of good healthcare and what it might take to have brilliant health service management, elucidated and refined POSH, and identified research opportunities that hold potential value for consumers, practitioners, and policymakers. RESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS: The secondary data used in this study offered limited contextual information. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS: This approach is a platform from which to: identify, investigate, and learn about brilliant health service management; and inform theory and practice. SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS: POSH can help to reveal what consumers and practitioners value about health services and how they prefer to engage with these services. ORIGINALITY/VALUE: Using POSH, this paper examines what consumers and practitioners value about health services; it also illustrates how brilliance can be theorized into health service management research and practice.

Keywords:  Management; Methodology; Organizational behaviour

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26394256     DOI: 10.1108/JHOM-11-2013-0256

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Organ Manag        ISSN: 1477-7266


  2 in total

Review 1.  Finding Pluto: An Analytics-Based Approach to Safety Data Ecosystems.

Authors:  Thomas T Barker
Journal:  Saf Health Work       Date:  2020-10-01

2.  'Smiles and laughter and all those really great things': Nurses' perceptions of good experiences of care for inpatient children and young people with intellectual disability.

Authors:  Laurel Mimmo; Michael Hodgins; Nora Samir; Joanne Travaglia; Susan Woolfenden; Reema Harrison
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 3.057

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.