Julie Robbins, PhD, MHA, is MHA Program Director and Clinical Assistant Professor, Division of Health Services Management and Policy, College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus. E-mail:
Health Care Manage Rev. 2020 Oct/Dec;45(4):278-289. doi: 10.1097/HMR.0000000000000228.
Employees' reluctance to speak up about problems and/or make suggestions for improvement is a noted barrier to quality and patient safety improvement in health care organizations. High-performance work practices (HPWPs) offer a framework for considering how management practices can encourage speaking up in these organizations.
We aimed to explore how implementation of HPWPs in U.S. health care organizations could facilitate or remove barriers to speaking up. We were interested in improving understanding of how HPWPs could influence manager behavior and organizational policies and practices to encourage, support, and foster speaking up among employees.
METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: We examined case study data from five health care organizations purposely selected for their use of HPWPs. Interview transcripts from 67 key informants were inductively and deductively analyzed to explore how speaking up was characterized.
We found that speaking up was recognized as an important factor impacting quality improvement and/or patient safety initiatives across all five organizations. Management efforts to facilitate speaking up included both direct practices, such as using structured communication processes and reporting systems, and complementary practices that supported speaking up. Both direct and complementary practices were aligned with the HPWP model, with sites showing evidence of supporting the frontline, engaging staff, developing talent, and having effective leaders fostering efforts to encourage employees to speak up.
Both conceptual evidence and qualitative evidence supporting the applicability of HPWPs as a management model for systematically facilitating speaking up in health care organizations were presented in this study. Application of an evidence-based framework enabled consideration of an organizational rather than employee perspective and provided examples of specific management practices that have been successfully implemented to facilitate speaking up. This research furthers the growing body of evidence supporting the applicability of HPWP implementation as a valuable strategy for impacting quality and safety in health care organizations.
员工不愿主动提出问题和/或提出改进建议,这是医疗保健组织在提高质量和患者安全方面的一个显著障碍。高绩效工作实践(HPWPs)为考虑管理实践如何鼓励员工在这些组织中畅所欲言提供了一个框架。
我们旨在探讨美国医疗保健组织实施 HPWPs 如何促进或消除主动提出意见的障碍。我们有兴趣提高对 HPWPs 如何影响经理行为以及组织政策和实践以鼓励、支持和培养员工主动提出意见的理解。
方法/方法:我们检查了五个医疗保健组织的案例研究数据,这些组织是专门选择来使用 HPWPs 的。对 67 名关键信息提供者的访谈记录进行了归纳和演绎分析,以探讨主动提出意见的特点。
我们发现,主动提出意见被认为是影响所有五个组织质量改进和/或患者安全计划的重要因素。促进主动提出意见的管理努力包括直接实践,例如使用结构化的沟通流程和报告系统,以及支持主动提出意见的补充实践。直接和补充实践都与 HPWP 模型一致,各机构都有证据表明支持一线员工、让员工参与、培养人才和拥有有效的领导者,以鼓励员工主动提出意见。
本研究提供了概念证据和定性证据,支持 HPWPs 作为一种管理模式在医疗保健组织中系统地促进主动提出意见的适用性。应用基于证据的框架使我们能够从组织的角度而不是员工的角度考虑问题,并提供了已成功实施以促进主动提出意见的具体管理实践的示例。这项研究进一步证明了 HPWP 实施作为影响医疗保健组织质量和安全的有价值策略的适用性越来越强。