Chapter 2 Organizing for Agile and Sustainable Health Care: The Alegent Health Case

Author(s):  
Christopher G. Worley
2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (22) ◽  
pp. 1230-1237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chloe Griggs ◽  
Ana Fernandez ◽  
Margie Callanan

2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 401-410
Author(s):  
Ghamiet Aysen ◽  
Sanjana Brijball Parumasur

Engulfed by numerous setbacks pronounced by huge manpower crises, work overload and poor working conditions, public sector employees find it increasingly difficult to ensure a more patient-focused, results-driven and sustainable health care system. Whilst extrinsic rewards are almost non-existent, managers in public health care can play a pivotal role in enhancing employee motivation through intrinsic factors. This study aims to assess managerial characteristics for public health care (management of attention, meaning, self, trust, risk, feelings) and employee motivation (achievement, power, affiliation) and, the relationships between these. A sample of 338 employees (stratified random sampling) and 18 managers (consensus sampling) were drawn. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyse the data. Based on the results, the study provides guidance for enhancing employee motivation and consequently, service delivery in public health care.


Author(s):  
Robert Dingwall

This chapter examines the historical shift from the welfarist provision of health care by collective action to a consumerist form of provision that treats health care as a matter of individual judgments. Reductionist medicine is a natural fit for a consumerist approach, given its apparent indifference to the moral causes or collective implications of individual problems. However, since the problems of dependency cannot be eliminated, only relocated, the moral and collective dimensions of medicine are inescapable. While any measure of burden sharing remains, so will the function of adjudicating claims. A socially sustainable health care system must incorporate an understanding of mutual obligation: both our responsibility for the physical and social conditions of the sick, and their commitment to change those things within their power.


2021 ◽  
pp. 405-415
Author(s):  
Viraja Prasanna Bhat ◽  
Jeevan Nagarkar ◽  
Prakash Rao

2019 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-122
Author(s):  
James Randall Patrinely ◽  
Brian Drolet ◽  
Galen Perdikis ◽  
Antonio Jorge Forte

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arianne Teherani ◽  
Arya Nikjoo ◽  
Alanya Boer ◽  
Michelle Sun Tong ◽  
Anya Desai

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