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Can that work for us? Analysing Organisational, Group and Individual Factors for Successful, Health Services Innovation

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 10:37 authored by Kathy Eljiz, Hayes, K, Dadich, A, Fitzgerald, J, Sloan, T, Kobilski, S
Objective: Process innovations can increase efficiency and quality in service organisations. [1,2] Health services organisations have been criticised for being slow to exploit process-management innovations. [3,4] To address perceived deficiencies, this article combines knowledge of factors that improve the Diffusion of Innovation (DoI) in health services organisations [5] with organisational behaviour theory [6] to produce a practical tool to assist health managers and clinicians assess the likelihood of an innovation succeeding in their organisation. Design: Semi-structured interviews were used to identify and analyse organisational, group and individual factors supporting or impeding the implementation of process changes in a public hospital sonography department. Setting: Emergency and imaging departments within a public hospital in New South Wales. Results: Using extant research literature and data collected from the hospital, a checklist was developed to identify factors that aid the implementation of Introduction This article examines and illustrates factors which can influence the Diffusion of Innovation (DoI) within health services settings. First, current knowledge of DoI in health services [5] is used to develop tables of organisational, group innovations within health services settings. The checklist prompts people responsible for innovation implementation to consider key factors that influence the DoI, identify gaps between the current and desired states and develop action plans to address these gaps. Conclusions: The checklist developed in this article helps health personnel predict the likelihood of innovation adoption, and identify gaps to the ideal state at organisational, group and individual levels. The necessity of conscious change management when implementing innovations is also addressed. Given impending national healthcare reforms, this article is both important and timely. Abbreviations: DoI – Diffusion of Innovation; OECD – Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. Key words: diffusion of innovation; innovation; implementation; public hospital; animated computer simulation.

History

Publication title

Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management

Volume

6

Pagination

280-292

ISSN

1833-3818

Department/School

College Office - College of Business and Economics

Publisher

Australian College of Health Service Management

Place of publication

Australia

Rights statement

Copyright unknown

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Evaluation of health and support services not elsewhere classified

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