R. Pattani is staff physician, Division of General Internal Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and assistant professor, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. S. Ginsburg is staff physician, Division of Respirology, Mount Sinai Hospital and University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; professor, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and scientist, Wilson Centre for Research in Education, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. A. Mascarenhas Johnson is research coordinator, Knowledge Translation (KT) Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. J.E. Moore is program manager, Team for Implementation, Evaluation, and Sustainability (TIES), KT Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. S. Jassemi is research assistant, KT Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. S.E. Straus is staff physician, Division of Geriatrics, St. Michael's Hospital; physician-in-chief, Department of Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital; division director of geriatrics, University of Toronto; professor, Department of Medicine and Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation, University of Toronto; and director, KT Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Acad Med. 2018 Oct;93(10):1569-1575. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002310.
A rise in incivility has been documented in medicine, with implications for patient care, organizational effectiveness, and costs. This study explored organizational factors that may contribute to incivility at one academic medical center and potential systems-level solutions to combat it.
The authors completed semistructured individual interviews with full-time faculty members of the Department of Medicine (DOM) at the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, with clinical appointments at six affiliated hospitals, between June and September 2016. They asked about participants' experiences with incivility, potential contributing factors, and possible solutions. Two analysts independently coded a portion of the transcripts until a framework was developed with excellent agreement within the research team, as signified by the Kappa coefficient. A single coder completed analysis of the remaining transcripts.
Forty-nine interviews with physicians from all university ranks and academic position descriptions were completed. All participants had collegial relationships with colleagues but had observed, heard of, or been personally affected by uncivil behavior. Incivility occurred furtively, face-to-face, or online. The participants identified several organizational factors that bred incivility including physician nonemployee status in hospitals, silos within the DOM, poor leadership, a culture of silence, and the existence of power cliques. They offered many systems-level solutions to combat incivility through prevention, improved reporting, and clearer consequences.
Existing strategies to combat incivility have focused on modifying individual behavior, but opportunities may exist to reduce incivility through a greater understanding of the role of health care organizations in shaping workplace culture.
医学领域的不文明行为有所增加,这对患者护理、组织效能和成本都有影响。本研究探讨了导致一个学术医疗中心不文明行为的组织因素,以及可能的系统层面解决方案。
作者于 2016 年 6 月至 9 月在加拿大安大略省多伦多大学医学院内科部门对具有临床职务的全职教员进行了半结构式个人访谈,这些教员在六家附属医院任职。他们询问了参与者的不文明行为经历、潜在的促成因素和可能的解决方案。两名分析人员分别对部分转录本进行了编码,直到研究团队达成了极好的一致性框架,这由 Kappa 系数表示。一名编码员完成了其余转录本的分析。
共完成了 49 名来自不同大学级别和学术职位描述的医生的访谈。所有参与者都与同事保持着良好的关系,但都曾观察到、听说过或亲身经历过不文明行为。不文明行为是偷偷摸摸地、面对面地或在网上发生的。参与者确定了几个滋生不文明行为的组织因素,包括医生在医院中的非雇员身份、内科部门内部的隔离、不良领导、沉默文化以及权力小团体的存在。他们提出了许多系统层面的解决方案来对抗不文明行为,包括预防、改进报告和更明确的后果。
现有的对抗不文明行为的策略主要集中在改变个人行为上,但通过更好地了解医疗保健组织在塑造工作场所文化方面的作用,可能有机会减少不文明行为。