Implementing lean management/Six Sigma in hospitals: beyond empowerment or work intensification?
In: International journal of human resource management, Band 25, Heft 21, S. 2926-2940
ISSN: 1466-4399
38 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: International journal of human resource management, Band 25, Heft 21, S. 2926-2940
ISSN: 1466-4399
In: British Journal of Management, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 42-55
SSRN
In: Bartram , T , Stanton , P , Bamber , G J , Leggat , S G , Ballardie , R & Gough , R 2020 , ' Engaging professionals in sustainable workplace innovation : medical doctors and institutional work ' , British Journal of Management , vol. 31 , no. 1 , pp. 42-55 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8551.12335
This paper investigates the role of medical professionals in the success and longevity of the implementation of workplace innovation and organizational change in the Accident and Emergency (A&E) Departments of two large public hospitals, in Australia and Canada, during the introduction of process improvement using Lean Management (LM) methodologies. We ask why and how doctors resist, influence or enable LM initiatives in healthcare. Using a qualitative methodology, we contribute to institutional work theory by unpacking the complex forms of boundary and practice work undertaken by key actors who effectively use their professional status and power to enable practice changes to be embedded. Our findings lend support to the importance of the involvement and ownership of senior doctors in the design, introduction and implementation of successful workplace innovation and organizational change. Senior doctors use their professional expertise, positional and political power at the industry, organization and workplace levels to influence strategically the use of resources designated for workplace innovation to improve efficiencies, quality of patient care and maintain their dominance. The significant organizational change achieved reflected the ownership and leadership of the workplace innovation by senior doctors in 'hybrid roles' who captured the rhetoric and minimized adversarialism among key stakeholders.
BASE
This paper investigates the role of medical professionals in the success and longevity of the implementation of workplace innovation and organizational change in the Accident and Emergency (A&E) Departments of two large public hospitals, in Australia and Canada, during the introduction of process improvement using Lean Management (LM) methodologies. We ask why and how doctors resist, influence or enable LM initiatives in healthcare. Using a qualitative methodology, we contribute to institutional work theory by unpacking the complex forms of boundary and practice work undertaken by key actors who effectively use their professional status and power to enable practice changes to be embedded. Our findings lend support to the importance of the involvement and ownership of senior doctors in the design, introduction and implementation of successful workplace innovation and organizational change. Senior doctors use their professional expertise, positional and political power at the industry, organization and workplace levels to influence strategically the use of resources designated for workplace innovation to improve efficiencies, quality of patient care and maintain their dominance. The significant organizational change achieved reflected the ownership and leadership of the workplace innovation by senior doctors in 'hybrid roles' who captured the rhetoric and minimized adversarialism among key stakeholders.
BASE
In: Labour & industry: a journal of the social and economic relations of work, Band 24, Heft 3, S. 167-172
ISSN: 2325-5676
Can a union be both democratic and administratively efficient, or are these goals always at odds? Building on the Webbs' focus on this critical question, this article analyses and compares the changing administrative policies and practices of US, UK and Australian trade unions over a 25-year period. We conducted surveys of unions in all three countries to gather information on union policies and practices involving the unions' human resources, hiring, budgeting and strategic planning. Using these novel longitudinal data, we contribute to industrial relations scholarship by showing that unions have increasingly adopted formal, systematic practices in these areas. The article is grounded in theory and also has practical relevance given the important implications that our findings may have for the revitalization of unions in the three countries and beyond.
BASE
In: Public money & management: integrating theory and practice in public management, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 45-50
ISSN: 1467-9302
In: The Oxford Handbook of Conflict Management in Organizations