Stryker Performance Solutions, Colorado Technical University, USA.
J Healthc Manag. 2012 Mar-Apr;57(2):133-47; discussion 147-8.
As noted by the Institute of Medicine (2004), a lack of critical upward feedback in the hospital setting has adverse effects on direct patient care and health outcomes. Employees are oftentimes reluctant to share information, as those above them might interpret the information to be negative or threatening. Leaders then may make important decisions based on assumptions or inaccurate feedback. The situation is especially significant in the healthcare setting, where hierarchical structures (Nembhard and Edmondson 2006), divisions between administrators and clinicians, and lack of collaboration across teams reinforce employee silence and undermine organizational learning (Ramanujam and Rousseau 2006). Chief executive officers play a key role in developing a culture that fosters employee voice and upward communication (Ashford, Sutcliffe, and Christianson 2009). Hospitals winning performance excellence awards, such as those utilizing the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award Criteria for Performance Excellence, present a model of high performance with demonstrated results. The purpose of this study was to understand specific CEO behaviors and actions promoting employee voice and upward communication in performance excellence award-winning healthcare organizations. Results suggested the award-winning CEOs facilitated employee voice by being approachable, mainly achieved through their regular presence throughout the organization. By being consistently visible and available to employees these CEOs fostered relationships, built trust, and promoted open communication. Leaders in the study created a cultural focus on continuous improvement largely built around transparency of information, particularly looking for the bad news from their employees. Voice invitation and positive voice response from leaders reinforced that critical upward feedback is not only welcome, but expected.
正如美国医学研究所(Institute of Medicine,2004)所指出的,医院环境中缺乏关键的上行反馈会对直接的患者护理和健康结果产生不利影响。员工往往不愿意分享信息,因为上级可能会将信息解读为负面或威胁性的。领导者可能会根据假设或不准确的反馈做出重要决策。这种情况在医疗保健环境中尤为显著,其中等级结构(Nembhard 和 Edmondson,2006)、管理人员和临床医生之间的分工以及团队之间缺乏协作,加剧了员工的沉默,破坏了组织学习(Ramanujam 和 Rousseau,2006)。首席执行官在培养促进员工声音和上行沟通的文化方面发挥着关键作用(Ashford、Sutcliffe 和 Christianson,2009)。获得绩效卓越奖的医院,例如那些利用 Malcolm Baldrige 国家质量奖卓越绩效标准的医院,展示了一种具有卓越绩效和显著成果的模式。本研究的目的是了解具体的首席执行官行为和行动,以促进绩效卓越奖获奖医疗保健组织中的员工声音和上行沟通。研究结果表明,获奖的首席执行官通过平易近人来促进员工声音,主要通过他们在整个组织中的定期存在来实现。通过持续可见并与员工保持联系,这些首席执行官建立了关系、建立了信任并促进了开放的沟通。研究中的领导者围绕着信息透明度建立了持续改进的文化重点,特别是从员工那里寻找坏消息。领导者的声音邀请和积极的声音回应强化了一个观点,即关键的上行反馈不仅受到欢迎,而且是预期的。