Inter-organisational clinical leadership and engagement.

DProf thesis


Woodard, F. 2008. Inter-organisational clinical leadership and engagement. DProf thesis Middlesex University Health and Social Sciences
TypeDProf thesis
TitleInter-organisational clinical leadership and engagement.
AuthorsWoodard, F.
Abstract

Clinical leadership and engagement across organisational boundaries has been gaining significant attention over the last few years. Within the NHS, there has been an increased focus within policy directives and the literature on partnership working, collaborations, cross-organisational and cross-professional working. These innovative ways of working are seen as a means of improving the quality and co-ordination of patient care across the pathway, thus impacting on the patients‟ experience. Despite this focus, the evidence of what constitutes and therefore what can deliver effective inter-organisational clinical leadership and engagement within this context is sparse. This study identifies the characteristics and impact of effective clinical leadership, clinical engagement and team effectiveness when working across organisational boundaries. „Practical Recommendations‟ have been developed as a mechanism to disseminate the findings. This research is based in the real world, which is complex and messy. The study uses an interpretative stance and gains insights from a number of different perspectives. The methodological approach is action research with a single case study design. Both quantitative and qualitative data are used and these are collected through a team effectiveness tool, focus groups and semi-structured interviews.
The study demonstrates there are significant improvements in the delivery of healthcare and patient experience when clinicians work effectively across the whole patient pathway, spanning organisational boundaries. The study findings are: the need for a focus or forum and for clinicians to have the time and space to initiate inter-organisational working; the power of the patient‟s voice, involvement and leadership in delivering impactful change; the need to understand organisational and personal barriers and risks to inter-organisational working; the
requirement to align incentives and accountability; the need for the NHS to value service improvement approaches as well as randomised controlled trials; the necessity for clinicians to have managerial and leadership skills to effectively run inter-organisational projects; and, the necessity for senior management and corporate engagement. These findings are supported by the existing literature, whilst also contributing to knowledge and understanding. The study aligns with the current direction of increased inter-organisational working within the NHS, and illustrates the benefits of working in this way. It demonstrates the fundamental role of clinicians (especially doctors) and patients when using this approach. The „Practical Recommendations‟ offer clinicians and managers an opportunity to consider the key elements that determine the success of improvement initiatives spanning a whole pathway or health system. Additionally, this study raises several new research questions and highlights some key recommendations such as: the need to agree the level at which NHS organisations can support inter-organisational working whilst remaining financially and competitively viable; the requirement urgently to review and revise training for doctors to ensure that in the future it equips them for effective participation in inter-organisational working; and the need to ensure the patient voice is focussed on enhancing quality of life through improvements in healthcare, rather than just simple redesign projects.

Department nameHealth and Social Sciences
Institution nameMiddlesex University
Publication dates
Print14 Sep 2010
Publication process dates
Deposited14 Sep 2010
CompletedMay 2008
Output statusPublished
Additional information

A project submitted to Middlesex University in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Professional Studies.

LanguageEnglish
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