4.6 Article

A First-line management team's strategies for sustaining resilience in a specialised intensive care unit-a qualitative observational study

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040358

Keywords

qualitative research; health services administration & management; health policy; organisation of health services; risk management

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The study focuses on how system resilience is enhanced by coordination performed in situ by a management team under variable circumstances in a neonatal intensive care unit. The results show a functional relationship between operational stress and a progression of adjustments in the actual situation, expressed through recurring patterns of adaptation. Coordinated efforts by managers in maintaining coherence in escalating problematic situations through teamwork are highlighted, with an emphasis on goal-setting, problem-solving, and circumventing technical systems' limitations.
Objectives Acute care units manage high risk patients at the edge of scientifically established treatments and organisational constraints while aiming to balance reliability to standards with the needs of situational adaptation (resilience). First-line managers are central in coordinating clinical care. Any systemic brittleness will be evident only in retrospect through, for example, care quality measures and accident statistics. This challenges us to understand what successful managerial strategies for adaptation are and how they could be improved. The managerial work of balancing reliability and adaptation is only partially understood. This study aims to explore and describe how system resilience is enhanced by naturally occurring coordination performed in situ by a management team under variable circumstances. Design An explorative observational study of a tertiary neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) in Sweden. One year of broad preparatory work followed by focused shadowing observations of coordination analysed through inductive-deductive content analysis from a perspective of resilience engineering. Participants A team of managers (ie, clinical coordinators, head nurses, senior medical doctors). Results The results describe a functional relationship between operational stress and a progression of adjustments in the actual situation, expressed through recurring patterns of adaptation. Managers focused on maintaining coherence in escalating problematic situations by facilitating teamwork through goalsetting, problem-solving and circumventing the technical systems' limitations. Conclusions Coordination supports a coherent goal setting by increased team collaboration and is supported by team members' abilities to predict the behaviour of each other. Our findings suggest that in design of future research or training for coordination, the focus of assessment and reflection on adaptive managerial responses may lie on situations where the system was 'stretched' or 'needed reorganisation' and that learning should be about whether the actions were able to achieve short-term goals while preserving the long-term goals.

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