| Literature DB >> 31440112 |
Tyrone A Perreira1,2, Laure Perrier3, Melissa Prokopy2, Lina Neves-Mera2, D David Persaud4.
Abstract
The term "physician engagement" is used quite frequently, yet it remains poorly defined and measured. The aim of this study is to clarify the term "physician engagement." This study used an eight step-method for conducting concept analyses created by Walker and Avant. MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched on February 14, 2019. No limitations were put on the searches with regard to year or language. Results identify that the term "physician engagement" is regular participation of physicians in (1) deciding how their work is done, (2) making suggestions for improvement, (3) goal setting, (4) planning, and (5) monitoring of their performance in activities targeted at the micro (patient), meso (organization), and/or macro (health system) levels. The antecedents of "physician engagement" include accountability, communication, incentives, interpersonal relations, and opportunity. The results include improved outcomes such as data quality, efficiency, innovation, job satisfaction, patient satisfaction, and performance. Defining physician engagement enables physicians and health care administrators to better appreciate and more accurately measure engagement and understand how to better engage physicians.Entities:
Keywords: concept analysis; engagement; medical; physician
Year: 2019 PMID: 31440112 PMCID: PMC6666374 DOI: 10.2147/JHL.S214765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Leadersh ISSN: 1179-3201
Walker and Avant’s steps for conducting a concept analysis
| Steps | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Select a concept |
| 2 | Determine purpose of analysis |
| 3 | Identify all uses of the concept |
| 4 | Determine defining attributes |
| 5 | Construct a model case |
| 6 | Construct a borderline and contrary case |
| 7 | Identify antecedents and consequences |
| 8 | Define empirical referents |
Examples of varying definitions of physician engagement
| Description | Reference |
|---|---|
| Appropriate and effective use of hospital services | |
| Active support for a project | |
| The association and partnership physicians feel toward a health care organization | |
| Doctors displaying active interest or a positive role of involvement within the program | |
| The extent to which the physician actively participates in and facilitates the work of the team | |
| Degree to which an employee is satisfied in their work, motivated to perform well, able to suggest and implement ideas for improvement, and their willingness to act as an advocate for their organization by recommending it as a place to work | |
| Physicians who reflect on the importance of reducing health disparities in their practices and have developed specific strategies to achieve this | |
| Doctors act within their normal roles to maintain and enhance the performance of the organization which itself recognizes this commitment in supporting and encouraging high-quality care | |
| The experience physicians have as being actively interested in the quality of their workplace, and motivation to take an active leadership role in helping to improve that workplace | |
| Elements of engagement include alignment, action and accountability | |
| An energetic state of involvement with activities that are personally fulfilling and enhance one’s sense of professional efficacy | |
| It is more than just an intellectual property, but is about establishing relationships that nurture a sense of meaning and purpose | |
| Two-way involvement at a level which influences decision making - involvement at the beginning and as an integral part of the decision-making process, rather than as an add-on or afterthought once the decisions are in place |
Examples of pre existing well-established constructs
| Construct | Definition |
|---|---|
| Perceived organizational support | The degree to which an organization values employee contributions and cares about their well-being |
| Organizational commitment | The positive affect and affiliation that workers develop for their organizations |
| Job satisfaction | A worker’s positive feelings toward their job |
| Work engagement | Positive, fulfilling work-related state of mind that is characterized by vigor, dedication, and absorption |
| Psychological empowerment | Feeling capable of shaping one’s work context and work role; comprised of meaning associated with work tasks, feelings of competence and belief in one’s abilities to perform work activities, self-determination concerning control and choice over work behaviors, and observable positive impacts of one’s work behaviors |
| Individual work performance | Individual work performance includes effectiveness and productivity |
| Organizational citizenship behaviors | Extra-role behaviors that can be directed toward individuals or the organization; can include organizational praise, helping colleagues, or making suggestions to improve performance that may disrupt social relationships by challenging the status quo |
Figure 1Attributes of physician engagement.
Figure 2Relationships between work environment, behaviors, and outcomes.
Figure 3“Physician engagement” conceptual model.