Laboratory Organisation, Management and Safety

Author(s):  
Anne E. Bradshaw ◽  
Christopher McNamara
Author(s):  
Gerrit Van Der Waldt

Public institutions, such as the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) increasingly function in multi-project environments to translate strategies successfully into service-delivery initiatives. However, this ‘projectification’ often causes projects to be designed and executed haphazardly. This can lead to budget and schedule overruns, and the general wastage of an organisation’s resources. Project failures often occur where organisations do not ensure that specific projects are aligned with their core strategies. The purpose of this article is to combine the theories and principles of organisation, management, strategic management, and project management in an effort to pinpoint core determinants that can help establish the extent to which an organisation manages the alignment of its strategic projects. In the present study, the author applied the principles of interdisciplinarity, systems thinking, and organisational integration. The combined core determinants that were uncovered were then used in an empirical investigation of SASSA. The purpose of this investigation is to identify particular challenges the organisation faces in aligning their strategies and projects successfully. Thereafter, a number of recommendations follow to address these challenges.


Author(s):  
IZABELLE BÄCKSTRÖM ◽  
WAFA SAID MOSLEH

The purpose of this study is to explore the inclusive involvement of non-R&D and non-managerial employees’ in processes of innovation. It answers a contemporary call for research to investigate a wider scope of organisations in the quest for understanding the interaction between employees and managers in employee-driven innovation (EDI). Based on a qualitative research study of two global corporations, this paper poses the following research question: How does the EDI approach manifest as a new management practice and thereby influence the interaction between employees and managers? By applying a critical discourse analysis, findings reveal that the production, distribution, and consumption of the EDI discourse are pervaded by a dynamic tension in the power relation between the top-level management and employees. While management enforces the impression that the EDI process is inclusive and engaging, employees remain critical to the contrasting way it is communicated.


Author(s):  
Miftachul Huda ◽  
Mifedwil Jandra Mohd Janan ◽  
Nik Mohd Zaim Abd Rahim ◽  
Siti Suhaila Ihwani ◽  
Norhafizah Musa ◽  
...  

This chapter attempts to examine spiritual leadership in the digital age. The elaboration of featured characteristics from the hikmah (wise-based performance) will be conducted referring to the several literatures critically in line with the main subject of related topic, such as from journals, chapters, proceedings, and also monograph works. The finding reveals that expanding the pathway of spiritual leadership together with hikmah distinctive feature is drawn into the particular attention through divine governance, responsible integrity, and caring consistent awareness in a properly good organisation management. The implication is that spiritual leadership with hikmah offered the continued consistency of emphasising the service mutually in line with the wide-ranging standpoint in the workplace atmosphere. This chapter is expected to contribute to disseminating the knowledge understanding of spiritual leadership in line with hikmah-based performance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. e000948
Author(s):  
Catherine Montgomery ◽  
Stephen Parkin ◽  
Alison Chisholm ◽  
Louise Locock

BackgroundTeamwork is important in the design and delivery of initiatives in complex healthcare systems but the specifics of quality improvement (QI) teams are not well studied.ObjectiveTo explain the functioning of front-line healthcare teams working on patient-centred QI using Bourdieu’s sociological construct of capital.MethodsOne medical ward from each of six NHS Trusts in England participated in the study, purposively selected for a range of performance levels on patient experience metrics. Three ethnographers conducted focused ethnography for 1 year, using interviews and observations to explore the organisation, management and delivery of patient-centred QI projects by the six front-line teams. Data were analysed using Bourdieu’s typology of the four forms of capital: economic, social, symbolic and cultural.ResultsWhile all teams implemented some QI activities to improve patient experience, progress was greater where teams included staff from a broad range of disciplines and levels of seniority. Teams containing both clinical and non-clinical staff, including staff on lower grades such as healthcare assistants and clerks, engaged more confidently with patient experience data than unidisciplinary teams, and implemented a more ambitious set of projects. We explain these findings in terms of ‘team capital’.ConclusionTeams that chose to restrict membership to particular disciplines appeared to limit their capital, whereas more varied teams were able to draw on multiple resources, skills, networks and alliances to overcome challenges. Staff of varying levels of seniority also shared and valued a broader range of insights into patient experience, including informal knowledge from daily practice. The construct of ‘team capital’ has the potential to enrich understanding of the mechanism of teamwork in QI work.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-338
Author(s):  
Manuel Espitia‐Escuer ◽  
Lucia Isabel Garcia‐Cebrian

1995 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 92-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Allison ◽  
F. Balzola ◽  
D. Boggio-Bertinet ◽  
P. Bouletreau ◽  
G. Guarnieri ◽  
...  

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