Staff acting resiliently at two hospital wards.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_D960C95016C5
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Staff acting resiliently at two hospital wards.
Journal
Leadership in health services
ISSN
1751-1887 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1751-1879
Publication state
Published
Issued date
28/06/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
32
Number
3
Pages
445-457
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to understand how the hospital staff (nurses and physicians) at two hospital wards have coped with everyday work having leaders in conflict or longer periods without one or the other leader and whether the way the staff handled the challenges was resilient.
Through semi-structured interviews with the staff at the two wards, the authors analysed how the staff were working, if they had cooperation and interdisciplinary cooperation, how they would handle uncertainties and how they coped with the absence of their leaders.
The staff at both wards were handling the everyday work in a resilient way. The authors argue that to increase the resilience in an organisation, leaders should acknowledge the need to establish strong emotional ties among staff and at the same time ensure role structures that make sense in the everyday work.
This study reports on original work and shows what decision makers could do to increase resilience in an organisation. This paper shows that the organisational context is important for the staff to act resiliently. As leaders come and go, it can be important for the stability of the organisation to promote the staff in acting resiliently independent of the leader situation.
Through semi-structured interviews with the staff at the two wards, the authors analysed how the staff were working, if they had cooperation and interdisciplinary cooperation, how they would handle uncertainties and how they coped with the absence of their leaders.
The staff at both wards were handling the everyday work in a resilient way. The authors argue that to increase the resilience in an organisation, leaders should acknowledge the need to establish strong emotional ties among staff and at the same time ensure role structures that make sense in the everyday work.
This study reports on original work and shows what decision makers could do to increase resilience in an organisation. This paper shows that the organisational context is important for the staff to act resiliently. As leaders come and go, it can be important for the stability of the organisation to promote the staff in acting resiliently independent of the leader situation.
Keywords
Denmark, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Leadership, Medical Staff, Hospital/psychology, Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology, Organizational Case Studies, Resilience, Psychological, Health care, Hospitals, Management, Organizational performance
Pubmed
Web of science
Publisher's website
Create date
10/03/2023 13:42
Last modification date
27/04/2023 9:08