协作环境中的团队结构和质量改进

N. Manukyan, M. Eppstein, J. Horbar
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引用次数: 3

摘要

由不同个人组成的团队已被证明可以提高共同解决问题的集体创造力。然而,在协作的目的是在复杂环境中传播知识的情况下,团队多样性是否有助于或阻碍有效的学习尚不清楚。例如,在有组织的质量改进协作(qic)中,卫生保健机构交换关于临床实践和结果的信息,目的是改善本机构的卫生结果。然而,由于各种治疗和实践之间的非线性相互作用,在一家医院有效的方法可能不适用于其他具有不同地方背景的医院。虽然有有限的证据表明一些质量保证中心改善了护理,但尚不清楚哪些因素有助于这些团队合作的有效性。在本研究中,我们使用一个基于主体的模型来研究在模拟协作环境中不同的团队形成策略(包括团队多样性和团队规模)对质量改进的影响。我们的研究表明,在这种情况下,由相似个体组成的团队的表现优于由更多样化的团队组成的团队,而且这种优势随着环境的复杂性和评估适应性时的噪音水平而增加。此外,我们还表明,由相对同质的代理组成的较大团队比较小的团队表现得更好,并且通过团队协作进行的有效学习取决于团队成员绩效水平的知识水平。因此,我们的研究结果表明,类似的医院集团应该作为一个单一的团队合作,并公开分享有关其临床实践和结果的详细信息。为了促进这一点,我们提出了一个虚拟协作框架,该框架将允许医院有效地识别其他类似机构使用的潜在更好的实践,而任何机构都不必牺牲自己的数据隐私。我们的研究结果也可能对其他类型的数据驱动的扩散学习有启示,比如个性化医疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Team structure and quality improvement in collaborative environments
Teams comprising diverse individuals have been shown to increase the collective creativity in jointly solving problems. However, in contexts where the purpose of collaboration is knowledge diffusion in complex environments, it is not clear whether team diversity will help or hinder effective learning. For example, in organized quality improvement collaboratives (QICs), healthcare institutions exchange information on clinical practices and outcomes with the aim of improving health outcomes at their own institutions. However, what works in one hospital may not work in others with different local contexts, due to non-linear interactions among various treatments and practices. While there is limited evidence that some QICs have resulted in improved care, it is not yet clear what factors contribute to the effectiveness of these team collaborations. In this study, we use an agent-based model to study how different strategies of team formation, including team diversity and size, affect quality improvement in simulated collaborative environments. We show that, in this context, teams comprising similar individuals outperform those with more diverse teams, and that this advantage increases with the complexity of the landscape and level of noise in assessing fitness. Furthermore, we show that larger teams of relatively homogeneous agents perform better than smaller teams, and that effective learning through team collaborations is dependent on the level of knowledge of team members' performance levels. Thus, our results suggest that groups of similar hospitals should collaborate as a single team and openly share detailed information regarding their clinical practices and outcomes. To facilitate this, we propose a virtual collaboration framework that would allow hospitals to efficiently identify potentially better practices in use at other institutions similar to theirs, without any institutions having to sacrifice the privacy of their own data. Our results may also have implications for other types of data-driven diffusive learning, such as in personalized medicine.
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