Hung Dorothy Y, Leidig Robynn, Shelley Donna R
Dorothy Y. Hung, PhD, MA, MPH, is Assistant Investigator, Department of Health Policy Research, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute, Mountain View, California, and Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco. E-mail:
Health Care Manage Rev. 2014 Apr-Jun;39(2):154-63. doi: 10.1097/HMR.0b013e3182914d11.
Organizational culture is an important but underinvestigated feature of the work environment that can impact provider behavior, including adherence to clinical practice guidelines. There is substantial evidence that physician assistance to smokers can produce significant reductions in tobacco use. However, this evidence has not been well translated into practice, as only a small proportion of smokers receive recommended treatment during medical visits.
This study examines organizational culture as a contextual feature of primary care clinics and its impact on adherence to evidence-based guidelines for treating tobacco use.
Cross-sectional survey data were collected from 500 primary care providers in 60 community clinics located in New York City. Relationships between provider adherence to "5A" clinical guidelines, as recommended by the U.S. Public Health Service, and both provider and organizational covariates were described. We used hierarchical linear modeling to examine the associations between clinic culture and provider treatment patterns.
Providers in clinics with stronger "group/clan," "hierarchical," and "rational" culture types, as compared with a "developmental" culture, reported greater adherence to 5A guidelines (p < .05). System-level structures and care processes were positively associated (p < .01), whereas number of ongoing quality initiatives was negatively associated with 5A delivery (p < .05). Provider familiarity with guidelines (p < .01), confidence with cessation counseling (p < .05), and perceived effectiveness in helping smokers quit were associated with more frequent 5A intervention (p < .01).
Findings suggest that organizational culture can influence provider adherence to cessation treatment guidelines, even when controlling for other factors known to affect practice patterns. Specifically, cultures that emphasize human resources and performance standards are conducive to integrating 5A guidelines into routine practice. Understanding the role of organizational culture enables healthcare managers and practitioners to be strategic when implementing, and also sustaining, use of evidence-based guidelines.
组织文化是工作环境的一个重要但未得到充分研究的特征,它会影响医疗服务提供者的行为,包括对临床实践指南的遵循。有大量证据表明,医生对吸烟者的帮助可以显著减少烟草使用。然而,这一证据尚未很好地转化为实践,因为只有一小部分吸烟者在就诊时接受了推荐的治疗。
本研究将组织文化作为基层医疗诊所的一个背景特征进行考察,并探讨其对遵循循证烟草使用治疗指南的影响。
收集了纽约市60家社区诊所500名基层医疗服务提供者的横断面调查数据。描述了医疗服务提供者对美国公共卫生服务推荐的“5A”临床指南的遵循情况与医疗服务提供者及组织协变量之间的关系。我们使用分层线性模型来检验诊所文化与医疗服务提供者治疗模式之间的关联。
与“发展型”文化相比,具有更强“群体/家族型”“层级型”和“理性型”文化类型的诊所中的医疗服务提供者报告对5A指南的遵循程度更高(p < 0.05)。系统层面的结构与护理流程呈正相关(p < 0.01),而正在进行的质量改进措施的数量与5A服务呈负相关(p < 0.05)。医疗服务提供者对指南的熟悉程度(p < 0.01)、戒烟咨询的信心(p < 0.05)以及在帮助吸烟者戒烟方面的感知效果与更频繁的5A干预相关(p < 0.01)。
研究结果表明,即使在控制了其他已知会影响实践模式的因素后,组织文化仍可影响医疗服务提供者对戒烟治疗指南的遵循。具体而言,强调人力资源和绩效标准的文化有利于将5A指南纳入常规实践。了解组织文化的作用使医疗保健管理人员和从业者在实施并持续使用循证指南时能够具有策略性。