Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4198693 Health Policy 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo find out which are the emerging views on hospital performance and to analyze how these views vary among hospital stakeholders.MethodsStudy setting: Three hospital stakeholder groups (physicians, caregivers, and administrative staff) in a large Paris teaching hospital.Study design: A case study combining a qualitative (interviews of 80 key hospital stakeholders and a survey of hospital staff), and a quantitative analysis (a questionnaire composed of 4 theoretical dimensions, 13 sub-dimensions, 66 items) with triangulation of the results.ResultsHospital stakeholders assign greatest importance to the human relations dimension, i.e., organizational climate (professional and public service values) and quality of work life. These values attract a high degree of consensus among stakeholders (no statistical difference between physicians, caregivers and administrative staff).ConclusionsOur findings challenge the mainstream view that competing values underlie hospital performance. Currently, views are to some extent shared among different stakeholder groups. A reason for this could be the need to form a more united front in the face of recent reforms. This common emphasis on professional and public service values could be the basis for formulating management priorities in teaching hospitals in order to improve performance.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
, , , , , , , ,