| Literature DB >> 29262822 |
Joana Cunha-Cruz1, Peter Milgrom2, Colleen E Huebner3, JoAnna Scott4, Sharity Ludwig5, Jeanne Dysert5, Melissa Mitchell5, Gary Allen5, R Mike Shirtcliff5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dental care delivery systems in the United States are consolidating and large practice organizations are becoming more common. At the same time, greater accountability for addressing disparities in access to care is being demanded when public funds are used to pay for care. As change occurs within these new practice structures, attempts to implement change in the delivery system may be hampered by failure to understand the organizational climate or fail to prepare employees to accommodate new goals or processes. Studies of organizational behavior within oral health care are sparse and have not addressed consolidation of current delivery systems. The objective of this case study was to assess organizational readiness for implementing change in a large dental care organization consisting of staff model clinics and affiliated dental practices and test associations of readiness with workforce characteristics and work environment.Entities:
Keywords: Dental care/manpower; patient care team; Organizational innovation; Quality improvement; healthcare reform; United States
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29262822 PMCID: PMC5738825 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-017-0448-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Fig. 1Organizational Climate (median IQR) from a dental care organization in 2015: Percentage of agreement with each statement of the scales on quality emphasis, cohesiveness, organizational trust and belonging, information and communication and leadership and governance alignment. (N = 181)
Fig. 2Percentage of agreement with each statement on the questions specifically related to the PREDICT dental care model from a dental care organization in 2015 (median IQR) (N = 181)
Fig. 3Organizational Readiness to Implement Change related to the PREDICT dental care model from a dental care organization in 2015 (median and IQR): Percentage of agreement with each statement of the scales on change commitment and change efficacy (N = 181)
Association between implementation scales and employees’ characteristics and opinions from a dental care organization in 2015: Linear regression coefficients and 95% confidence intervals (n = 141)
| Change Commitment Scale | Change Efficacy Scale | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crude b [95% CI] | Adjusted b$ [95%CI] | Crude b [95% CI] | Adjusted b$ [95%CI] | |||||
| Support for dental care model | 0.43*** | [0.20,0.65] | 0.09 | [−0.16,0.33] | 0.37** | [0.13,0.61] | −0.03 | [−0.22,0.17] |
| Support for company’s mission | 0.47*** | [0.27,0.67] | 0.15 | [−0.09,0.38] | 0.61*** | [0.41,0.81] | 0.20* | [0.02,0.39] |
| Support for caries arrest treatments | 0.31*** | [0.19,0.44] | 0.16* | [0.02,0.30] | 0.37*** | [0.24,0.50] | 0.06 | [−0.05,0.17] |
| Organizational climate | 0.79*** | [0.57,1.01] | 0.45** | [0.16,0.75] | 1.20*** | [1.02,1.39] | 0.80*** | [0.57,1.04] |
| Job satisfaction scale | 0.39*** | [0.24,0.55] | 0.09 | [−0.13,0.32] | 0.63*** | [0.49,0.78] | 0.08 | [−0.10,0.26] |
| Job stress scale | −0.08 | [−0.24,0.08] | 0.18 | [−0.02,0.38] | −0.32*** | [−0.48,-0.16] | 0.08 | [−0.08,0.24] |
| Burn out | −0.14* | [−0.27,-0.01] | 0.06 | [−0.12,0.25] | −0.42*** | [−0.54,-0.29] | −0.19* | [−0.33,-0.04] |
| Office chaos | −0.22* | [−0.40,-0.05] | −0.19* | [−0.38,-0.01] | −0.30** | [−0.48,-0.11] | 0.01 | [−0.14,0.15] |
| Likelihood to leave practice | −0.19*** | [−0.29,-0.08] | −0.06 | [−0.18,0.06] | −0.33*** | [−0.43,-0.23] | −0.08 | [−0.17,0.02] |
| Central staff | 0.33* | [0.06,0.61] | 0.09 | [−0.17,0.34] | 0.39** | [0.10,0.68] | 0.04 | [−0.17,0.24] |
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001
$The adjusted models contain all variables listed in the table and age, gender, race/ethnicity