Literature DB >> 31984819

Uncovering, creating or constructing problems? Enacting a new role to support staff who raise concerns about quality and safety in the English National Health Service.

Graham P Martin1, Sarah Chew2, Mary Dixon-Woods3.   

Abstract

Employee voice is an important source of organizational intelligence about possible problems in quality and patient safety, but effective systems for encouraging and supporting those who seek to speak up have remained elusive. In the English National Health Service, a novel role known as the 'Freedom to Speak Up Guardian' has been introduced to address this problem. We critically examine the role and its realization in practice, drawing on semi-structured interviews with 51 key individuals, including Guardians, clinicians, managers, policymakers, regulators and others. Operationalizing the new role in organizations was not straightforward, since it had to sit in a complex set of existing systems and processes. One response was to seek to bound the scope of Guardians, casting them in a signposting or coordinating role in relation to quality and safety concerns. However, the role proved hard to delimit, not least because the concerns most frequently voiced in practice differed in character from those anticipated in the role's development. Guardians were tasked with making sense of and dealing with issues that could not always straightforwardly be classified, deflected to the right system or escalated to the appropriate authority. Our analysis suggests that the role's potential contribution might be understood less as supporting whistleblowers who bear witness to clear-cut wrongdoing, and more as helping those with lower-level worries to construct their concerns and what to do with them. These findings have implications for how voice is understood, imagined and addressed in healthcare organizations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  England; National Health Service; candour; employee voice; freedom to speak up; healthcare quality; openness; patient safety; speaking out; speaking up; whistleblowing

Year:  2020        PMID: 31984819     DOI: 10.1177/1363459319901296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health (London)        ISSN: 1363-4593


  1 in total

1.  What counts as a voiceable concern in decisions about speaking out in hospitals: A qualitative study.

Authors:  Mary Dixon-Woods; Emma L Aveling; Anne Campbell; Akbar Ansari; Carolyn Tarrant; Janet Willars; Peter Pronovost; Imogen Mitchell; David W Bates; Christian Dankers; James McGowan; Graham Martin
Journal:  J Health Serv Res Policy       Date:  2022-01-03
  1 in total

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