May 3, 2012
“Background: Middle managers have received little attention in extant health services research, yet they may have a key role in healthcare innovation implementation. The gap between evidence of effective care and practice may be attributed in part to poor healthcare innovation implementation. Investigating middle managers’ role in healthcare innovation implementation may reveal an opportunity for improvement. In this paper, we present a theory of middle managers’ role in healthcare innovation implementation to fill the gap in the literature and to stimulate research that empirically examines middle managers’ influence on innovation implementation in healthcare organizations.
Discussion: Extant healthcare innovation implementation research has primarily focused on the roles of physicians and top managers. Largely overlooked is the role of middle managers. We suggest that middle managers influence healthcare innovation implementation by diffusing information, synthesizing information, mediating between strategy and day-to-day activities, and selling innovation implementation.
Summary: Teamwork designs have become popular in healthcare organizations. Because middle managers oversee these team initiatives, their potential to influence innovation implementation has grown. Future research should investigate middle managers’ role in healthcare innovation implementation. Findings may aid top managers in leveraging middle managers’ influence to improve the effectiveness of healthcare innovation implementation.”
Posted in Journal Articles, READ Portal | Tagged with Implementation process, Management | No Comments
June 20, 2011
“This position paper analyzes the challenge of health services fragmentation, proposes a conceptual and operational framework for understanding IHSDNs, presents public policy instruments and institutional mechanisms to develop integrated networks, and proposes a “road map” for implementing IHSDNs in the Americas. The document focuses on the integration of the health services delivery function, and as a result it does not address mechanisms to integrate the health systems functions of financing and/or insurance. Furthermore, it does not address in detail the mechanisms to integrate programs targeting specific diseases, risks and populations (vertical programs) into health systems.”
Posted in READ Portal, Reports & Papers | Tagged with Health care reform, Implementation process, Integrated care, Policy | No Comments
April 4, 2011
Today’s resource, The IHI Improvement Map, is an online tool from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. It is designed to helps healthcare planners and administrators achieve the following goals:
- Make care safer
- Make patient care transitions smoother
- Lead improvement efforts effectively
- Reduce costs and increase quality
“The Improvement Map is an interactive, web-based tool designed to bring together the best knowledge available on the key process improvements that lead to exceptional patient care. It offers clear guidance through an often confusing health care landscape, helping hospitals set change agendas, establish priorities, organize work, and optimize resources.”
Posted in Multimedia, READ Portal | Tagged with Benchmarking, Efficiency, Implementation process, Quality control, Quality improvement | No Comments
November 4, 2010
The Metropolitan Chicago Healthcare Council has released a new white paper, Sustainable Operations in Healthcare; an Energy Management Program. Implementing a green team in a hospital can produce marked cost-savings. Hospitals consume more than twice as much energy per square-foot as an office building, resulting in very high utility costs.
Posted in READ Portal, Reports & Papers | Tagged with Economics, Efficiency, Hospital administration, Implementation process, Statistics & numerical data | 1 Comment
September 7, 2010
Evaluation of an implementation process and its fidelity can give insight into the ‘black box’ of interventions. However, a lack of standardized methods for studying fidelity and implementation process have been reported, which might be one reason for the fact that few prior studies in the field of health service research have systematically evaluated interventions’ implementation processes.
Posted in Journal Articles, READ Portal | Tagged with Implementation process | No Comments