Marshall Martin N, Mannion Russell, Nelson Elizabeth, Davies Huw T O
National Primary Care Research and Development Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL.
BMJ. 2003 Sep 13;327(7415):599-602. doi: 10.1136/bmj.327.7415.599.
To explore the potential tension between the need for managers to produce measurable change and the skills required to produce cultural change, and to investigate how managers of primary care trusts are attempting to deal with this tension.
Qualitative case studies using data derived from semistructured interviews and a review of published documents. An established cultural framework was to used to help interpret the findings.
Six primary care trusts in England purposefully sampled to represent a range of cultural, structural, geographical, and demographic characteristics.
42 interviews with 39 different senior and middle primary care trust managers conducted over an 18 month period.
We found two distinct and polarised styles of management. One group of managers adopts a directive style and challenges the prevailing norms and values of clinicians, an approach characteristically seen in organisations with hierarchical cultures. This group is made up mostly of senior managers who are driven principally by the imperative to deliver a political agenda. Managers in the second group are more inclined to work with the prevailing cultures found in general practice, attempting to facilitate change from within rather than forcing change from outside. This management style is characteristically seen in organisations with a clan-type culture. The approach was manifest mostly by middle managers, who seem to act as buffers between the demands of senior managers and their own perception of the ability and willingness of health professionals to cope with change. The different management approaches can lead to tension and dysfunction between tiers of management.
The development of primary care depends on high quality managers who are able to draw on a range of different management skills and styles. Managers are most likely to be effective if they appreciate the merits and drawbacks of their different styles and are willing to work in partnership.
探讨管理者实现可衡量变革的需求与实现文化变革所需技能之间的潜在矛盾,并调查初级保健信托基金的管理者如何试图应对这种矛盾。
采用定性案例研究,数据来源于半结构化访谈和已发表文献的综述。使用既定的文化框架来帮助解释研究结果。
有目的地选取了英格兰的六个初级保健信托基金,以代表一系列文化、结构、地理和人口特征。
在18个月的时间里,对39位不同的初级保健信托基金高中层管理者进行了42次访谈。
我们发现了两种截然不同且两极分化的管理风格。一组管理者采用指令性风格,挑战临床医生的主流规范和价值观,这种方法在具有等级制度文化的组织中较为常见。这组管理者主要由高级管理者组成,他们主要受实现政治议程的驱使。第二组管理者更倾向于与全科医疗中的主流文化合作,试图从内部推动变革,而不是从外部强制变革。这种管理风格在具有家族式文化的组织中较为常见。这种方法主要由中层管理者体现,他们似乎在高级管理者的要求与他们自己对卫生专业人员应对变革的能力和意愿的认知之间起到缓冲作用。不同的管理方法可能导致管理层级之间的紧张和功能失调。
初级保健的发展依赖于能够运用一系列不同管理技能和风格的高素质管理者。如果管理者认识到不同风格的优缺点并愿意合作,他们最有可能取得成效。