Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation

Within the last decade there has been considerable national attention focused upon hospital quality and patient safety performance. Improvements in performance have been realized, but the rate of improvement has been slow. There is an increasing consensus that new ideas and national strategies are n...

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Main Author: Roberts, Lance L.
Other Authors: Ward, Marcia M., 1950-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/879
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2064&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-20642019-11-13T09:14:14Z Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation Roberts, Lance L. Within the last decade there has been considerable national attention focused upon hospital quality and patient safety performance. Improvements in performance have been realized, but the rate of improvement has been slow. There is an increasing consensus that new ideas and national strategies are needed to accelerate improvement efforts in addressing quality/safety issues. Currently, within the hospital setting more attention is being paid to the role of leadership starting with the board of trustees in addressing gaps in performance. Organization-wide awareness of critical gaps in performance, accountability structures, and organizational ability are considered critical facilitators of improvement efforts. The characteristics of awareness, accountability, ability, and action are components of a "4A" conceptual framework that is used most prominently by the National Quality Forum (NQF) in their Safe Practices for Better Healthcare toolkit to frame governance and leaderships' responsibilities in establishing leadership structures and systems to ensure the safety of patients and staff. This study utilizes the National Quality Forum's version of the 4A model to frame an empirical examination of the relationship between leadership structure and system characteristics and hospitals' implementation of the medication reconciliation innovation. A Patient Safety, Culture, and Leadership survey was used to capture Iowa hospital CEO/Quality Leaders' perceptions of board and leadership awareness and accountability characteristics. And, on a quarterly basis since mid-2006 a separate web-based survey has captured Iowa hospital Quality Leaders' perceptions of medication reconciliation implementation. Both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses were conducted to examine the relationship between leadership structures and systems and hospital-wide deployment of the medication reconciliation initiative. This study finds evidence that board-level awareness characteristics - the time the board spent in meetings on quality and safety issues, and the frequency of board receipt of a formal quality/safety report - were positively related to hospitals' early efforts to deploy the medication reconciliation initiative. Over time hospitals' financial ability was positively related to deployment of this initiative. Further research should focus on how healthcare governance and leadership teams can use the elements of leadership structures and systems safe practices to effectively create and sustain a culture of safety. 2010-01-01T08:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/879 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2064&context=etd Copyright 2010 Lance L. Roberts Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaWard, Marcia M., 1950- Governance Leadership Medication Reconciliation Safe Practice Health Services Administration
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Governance
Leadership
Medication Reconciliation
Safe Practice
Health Services Administration
spellingShingle Governance
Leadership
Medication Reconciliation
Safe Practice
Health Services Administration
Roberts, Lance L.
Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
description Within the last decade there has been considerable national attention focused upon hospital quality and patient safety performance. Improvements in performance have been realized, but the rate of improvement has been slow. There is an increasing consensus that new ideas and national strategies are needed to accelerate improvement efforts in addressing quality/safety issues. Currently, within the hospital setting more attention is being paid to the role of leadership starting with the board of trustees in addressing gaps in performance. Organization-wide awareness of critical gaps in performance, accountability structures, and organizational ability are considered critical facilitators of improvement efforts. The characteristics of awareness, accountability, ability, and action are components of a "4A" conceptual framework that is used most prominently by the National Quality Forum (NQF) in their Safe Practices for Better Healthcare toolkit to frame governance and leaderships' responsibilities in establishing leadership structures and systems to ensure the safety of patients and staff. This study utilizes the National Quality Forum's version of the 4A model to frame an empirical examination of the relationship between leadership structure and system characteristics and hospitals' implementation of the medication reconciliation innovation. A Patient Safety, Culture, and Leadership survey was used to capture Iowa hospital CEO/Quality Leaders' perceptions of board and leadership awareness and accountability characteristics. And, on a quarterly basis since mid-2006 a separate web-based survey has captured Iowa hospital Quality Leaders' perceptions of medication reconciliation implementation. Both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses were conducted to examine the relationship between leadership structures and systems and hospital-wide deployment of the medication reconciliation initiative. This study finds evidence that board-level awareness characteristics - the time the board spent in meetings on quality and safety issues, and the frequency of board receipt of a formal quality/safety report - were positively related to hospitals' early efforts to deploy the medication reconciliation initiative. Over time hospitals' financial ability was positively related to deployment of this initiative. Further research should focus on how healthcare governance and leadership teams can use the elements of leadership structures and systems safe practices to effectively create and sustain a culture of safety.
author2 Ward, Marcia M., 1950-
author_facet Ward, Marcia M., 1950-
Roberts, Lance L.
author Roberts, Lance L.
author_sort Roberts, Lance L.
title Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
title_short Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
title_full Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
title_fullStr Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
title_full_unstemmed Leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
title_sort leadership safe practices snd their relationship with hospital deployment of the medication reconciliation innovation
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2010
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/879
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2064&context=etd
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