Impact of microgeography on communication dynamics in a healthcare environment.

IF 1.7 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Jillian Chown, Katrina Rey-McIntyre, John Kim, Thomas G Purdie, Colleen Dickie, Richard Tsang, Yat Tsang, Jan Seuntjens, Fei-Fei Liu, Christopher C Liu
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Abstract

Background: For growing healthcare organisations, anchored resources-assets that are not easily movable-may complicate expansion and distort workflow patterns. We examine work patterns at a radiation oncology department of a major Canadian hospital. As this department doubled its size, healthcare providers remained bound to treatment planning rooms and radiation machines at the original site. This study examines workplace communication and interactions before and after the expansion.

Methods: We conducted regression analyses using a unique dataset merging email communications, badge swipes, office locations and organisation charts for individuals that routinely use the treatment planning room (n=232). We use a difference-in-differences framework to compare individuals' behaviours before and after the expansion. Our dependent variables were how often individuals accessed the treatment planning room and email volumes between two individuals.

Findings: We find an overall decrease in the use of the treatment planning room, though the effect was larger for those that moved away from it. Further, we find an increase in email communication for dyads of individuals separated in the move, but only if they belonged to different departments.

Practical implications: Our research points to complex interdependencies among healthcare providers, shedding light on how hospital expansion may have unintended consequences. Healthcare leaders should acknowledge that interaction patterns will be affected when healthcare providers are separated from each other or from anchored resources. Shifting to remote interactions may be adequate in some instances; in others, it may negatively affect work outcomes as well as the engagement and satisfaction of providers and patients.

微地理对医疗保健环境中交流动态的影响。
背景:对于成长中的医疗保健组织,固定资源(不易移动的资产)可能会使扩展复杂化并扭曲工作流程模式。我们研究了加拿大一家大医院放射肿瘤科的工作模式。由于该部门的规模扩大了一倍,医疗保健提供者仍然被限制在原地点的治疗计划室和放射设备上。本研究考察了扩张前后的职场沟通与互动。方法:我们使用一个独特的数据集(n=232)进行回归分析,该数据集合并了经常使用治疗计划室的个人的电子邮件通信、刷卡、办公地点和组织结构图。我们使用差异中的差异框架来比较个体在扩张前后的行为。我们的因变量是个体访问治疗计划室的频率和两个人之间的电子邮件量。研究结果:我们发现治疗计划室的使用总体上减少了,尽管对那些离开它的人的影响更大。此外,我们还发现,在搬家过程中分开的两个人之间的电子邮件交流有所增加,但前提是他们属于不同的部门。实际意义:我们的研究指出了医疗服务提供者之间复杂的相互依赖关系,揭示了医院扩张如何可能产生意想不到的后果。医疗保健领导者应该认识到,当医疗保健提供者彼此分离或与固定资源分离时,交互模式将受到影响。在某些情况下,转向远程交互可能就足够了;在其他情况下,它可能会对工作成果以及提供者和患者的参与度和满意度产生负面影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Leader
BMJ Leader Nursing-Leadership and Management
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
7.40%
发文量
57
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