Park Sunggeun Ethan
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
Am Rev Public Adm. 2020 Nov;50(8):880-897. doi: 10.1177/0275074020930414. Epub 2020 Jun 20.
This study extends the representative bureaucracy literature by theorizing and empirically testing how staff sharing lived experience with service users can serve as user representatives in service provision processes (i.e., the peer coproduction mechanism). Using survey data from a representative sample of substance use disorder treatment clinics in the United States, we explore factors associated with descriptive representation (the presence of staff with firsthand experience of a substance use disorder in both frontline treatment and senior positions) and directors' perceptions of recovering staff's potential to serve as user representatives in individual care and organizational decision-making processes. Recovering staff accounted for a third of the field's workforce, but the majority of the clinics did not employ them in senior staff positions. Regression results suggest that organizational leaders' recognition of recovering staff's unique representation capacities may facilitate greater descriptive representation and grant meaningful organizational decision-making authority to recovering staff. Multiple research and practice implications are discussed.
本研究通过理论化并实证检验与服务使用者有共同生活经历的工作人员如何能够在服务提供过程中充当使用者代表(即同伴共同生产机制),拓展了代表性官僚制文献。利用来自美国物质使用障碍治疗诊所代表性样本的调查数据,我们探究了与描述性代表(在一线治疗和高级职位中存在有物质使用障碍亲身经历的工作人员)相关的因素,以及主任对康复工作人员在个体护理和组织决策过程中充当使用者代表潜力的看法。康复工作人员占该领域劳动力的三分之一,但大多数诊所并未将他们聘为高级职员。回归结果表明,组织领导者对康复工作人员独特代表能力的认可可能有助于增强描述性代表,并赋予康复工作人员有意义的组织决策权。本文还讨论了多项研究和实践意义。