August, 2016 - SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review | print this article | download PDF
‘Organizational culture’ refers to characteristics shared by people who work within the same organization. These characteristics may include beliefs, values, norms of behaviour, routines, and traditions. The management of organizational culture is viewed increasingly as a necessary part of health system reform. It is therefore important for policymakers to be aware how strategies to improve organizational culture affect healthcare performance.
Key messages
Increasing emphasis has been placed on how changes to organizational culture and organizational structure impact upon healthcare performance. Organizational change is difficult to manage and its precise impacts on healthcare and healthcare policy are often poorly understood or unclear. The desirability and feasibility of adopted strategies to improve organizational change have therefore been called into question.
Review objectives: To determine the effectiveness of strategies to change organizational culture in order to improve healthcare performance and considering – when possible – different patterns of organizational culture. |
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Type of | What the review authors searched for | What the review authors found |
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Study designs & interventions |
Any strategy intended to change organizational culture in order to improve healthcare performance. The comparator could be normal care or any other active in-tervention. The following study designs were consid-ered: randomized trials, non-randomized trials, controlled before-after studies and in-terrupted time series studies. |
No eligible studies were found for in-clusion in this review. |
Participants |
Healthcare organizations in which strategies to change organizational culture were applied. |
No eligible studies were found for in-clusion in this review. |
Settings |
Any type of healthcare organization in any country. |
No eligible studies were found for inclusion in this review. |
Outcomes |
Professional performance such as prescrip-tion rates, evidence-based practice, quality of care, and efficiency. Patient outcomes such as mortality, condition-specific measures of outcomes, quality of life, func-tional health status, and patient satisfaction. Organizational performance indicators such as wait times, inpatient hospital stay times, and staff turnover rates. |
No eligible studies were found for inclusion in this review. |
Date of most recent search: October 2009. |
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Limitations: This is a well-conducted systematic review with only minor limitations. However, no studies that met the inclusion criteria were identified. |
Parmelli E, FlodgrenG, SchaafsmaME, et al. The effectiveness of strategies to change organizational culture to improve healthcare performance. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2011, Issue 1. Art. No.: CD008315.
It is not possible to draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of strategies to change organizational culture since no studies met the inclusion criteria for this review. An example of an excluded evaluation is a controlled before-after study that assessed the impact of an intervention to change organizational culture on the frequency of staff handwashing to decrease nosocomial infection rate. It was excluded because there was only one intervention and one control site and therefore any intervention effect is confounded with the effect of other differences between the two sites. Another example is a study that assessed the effectiveness of a program to improve spirit at work and staff wellness at a long term care site. This study did measure a change in culture.
These studies illustrate examples of strategies to change organizational culture, but do not provide reliable evidence of the effects of these strategies. The first study aimed to improve handwashing compliance through active support from hospital managers and medical and nursing leaders. Efforts to effect changes in organizational culture through leadership action focused on five key mechanisms:
-The communication of values and concerns underlying their choices.
- Reinforcement of the desired behaviours during times of crisis.
- Role modeling.
- The allocation of rewards.
- Clear criteria for the selection and dismissal of employees.
In the second study, a ‘spirit at work program’ was implemented to improve job satisfaction, organizational commitment, teamwork and morale. This intervention would be difficult, if not impossible to replicate, since details about the intervention were not provided.
1 Schein E. Organizational culture and leadership. San Francisco: Jossey Bass; 1985.
2 Kinjerski V, Skrypnek BJ. The promise of spirit at work: increasing job satisfaction and organizational commitment and reducing turnover and absenteeism in long-term care. J Gerontol Nurs. 2008 Oct;34(10):17-25; quiz 26-7.
Findings | Interpretation* |
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APPLICABILITY | |
No studies were included. |
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EQUITY | |
No studies were included. |
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ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS | |
No studies were included. |
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MONITORING & EVALUATION | |
No reliable evidence of the effects of strategies to improve organisational culture is available. |
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*Judgements made by the authors of this summary, not necessarily those of the review authors, based on the findings of the review and consultation with researchers and policymakers in low-income countries. For additional details about how these judgements were made see: www.supportsummaries.org/methods |
Related literature
Elena Parmelli, Gerd Flodgren, Fiona Beyer, et al. The effectiveness of strategies to change organizational culture to improve healthcare performance: a systematic review. Implementation Science 2011, 6:33.
Tim Scott, Rusell Manion, Huw Davies and Martin Marshall. Healthcare performance and organizational culture. Radcliffe Publishing, 2003.
Scott T, Mannion R, Davies H, and Marshall M. The quantitative measurement of organizational culture in health care: A review of the available instruments. Health Serv Res. 2003 June; 38(3): 923–945.
Davis H. Understanding organizational culture in reforming the National Health Service. J R Soc Med. 2002 March; 95(3): 140–142.
Boan D and Funderburk F. Healthcare Quality Improvement and Organizational Culture. Insights, Delmarva Foun-dation. November, 2003.
This summary was prepared by
Cristian Herrera, Unit for Health Policy and Systems Research, School of Medicine, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile.
Conflict of interest
None declared. For details, see: www.supportsummaries.org/coi
Acknowledgements
This summary has been peer reviewed by: Martin Eccles, Robert Basaza, Ekwaro A Obuku, and Hanna Bergman
This review should be cited as
Parmelli E, FlodgrenG, SchaafsmaME, et al. The effectiveness of strategies to change organizational culture to improve healthcare performance. Cochrane Da-tabase of Systematic Reviews 2011, Issue 1. Art. No.: CD008315.
The summary should be cited as
Herrera C. How do strategies to change organizational culture affect healthcare performance? A SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review. August 2016. www.supportsummaries.org
Keywords
evidence-informed health policy, evidence-based, systematic review, health sys-tems research, health care, low and middle-income countries, developing coun-tries, primary health care, organizational culture