N. Bochatay is a postdoctoral scholar, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6098-4262 .
Á. Kuna is assistant professor, Department of Applied Linguistics and Phonetics, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary.
Acad Med. 2021 Jan 1;96(1):134-141. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003604.
The combination of power and conflict is frequently reported to have a detrimental impact on communication and on patient care, and it is avoided and perceived negatively by health care professionals. In view of recent recommendations to explicitly address power and conflict in health professions education, adopting more constructive approaches toward power and conflict may be helpful. This study examined the role of power in conflicts between health care professionals in different cultural contexts to make recommendations for promoting more constructive approaches.
The authors used social bases of power (positional, expert, informational, reward, coercive, referent) identified in the literature to examine the role of power in conflicts between health care professionals in different cultural settings. They drew upon semistructured interviews conducted from 2013 to 2016 with 249 health care professionals working at health centers in the United States, Switzerland, and Hungary, in which participants shared stories of conflict they had experienced with coworkers. The authors used a directed approach to content analysis to analyze the data.
The social bases of power tended to be comparable across sites and included positional, expert, and coercive power. The rigid hierarchies that divide health care professionals, their professions, and their specialties contributed to negative experiences in conflicts. In addition, the presence of an audience, such as supervisors, coworkers, patients, and patients' families, prevented health care professionals from addressing conflicts when they occurred, resulting in conflict escalation.
These findings suggest that fostering more positive approaches toward power and conflict could be achieved by using social bases of power such as referent power and by addressing conflicts in a more private, backstage, manner.
权力和冲突的结合经常被报道对沟通和患者护理有不利影响,并且被医疗保健专业人员回避和负面看待。鉴于最近建议在健康专业教育中明确解决权力和冲突问题,采用更具建设性的方法处理权力和冲突可能会有所帮助。本研究考察了权力在不同文化背景下的医疗保健专业人员之间冲突中的作用,以便为促进更具建设性的方法提出建议。
作者使用文献中确定的权力的社会基础(职位、专家、信息、奖励、强制、参照)来考察不同文化背景下医疗保健专业人员之间冲突中权力的作用。他们借鉴了 2013 年至 2016 年间对美国、瑞士和匈牙利的卫生中心工作的 249 名医疗保健专业人员进行的半结构化访谈,参与者分享了他们与同事经历的冲突故事。作者使用定向内容分析方法对数据进行分析。
权力的社会基础在各地点之间往往具有可比性,包括职位、专家和强制权力。将医疗保健专业人员、他们的专业和他们的专业划分开来的僵化等级制度导致了冲突中的负面经历。此外,当冲突发生时,观众的存在,如主管、同事、患者和患者家属,阻止了医疗保健专业人员解决冲突,导致冲突升级。
这些发现表明,通过使用参照权力等权力的社会基础,并以更私密、后台的方式处理冲突,可以实现对权力和冲突的更积极的方法。