Effective organizational change in healthcare: Exploring the contribution of empowered users and workers
Publication date
2014-06Keyword
Patient-centered healthcareUser-driven organizational change
Change management
Patient empowerment
Patient advice service
Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS)
National Health Service (NHS)
Peer-Reviewed
Yes
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Worldwide healthcare systems are facing immense changes in the demand of care with vast cost explosions caused by aging populations and the increase in chronic and mental diseases. The move towards patient-centered healthcare seems to be an ideal approach to meet future challenges but still clashes with reality. Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) in the UK is one of the unique examples of patient empowerment to influence changes in healthcare systems like the National Health Service (NHS). The purpose of this paper is to look at user-driven organizational change management in PALS in retrospect to learn from its ‘best’ and ‘worst’ practices. In conclusion, patient-centered healthcare becomes more realistic if healthcare users and workers are empowered at the same time. The vision of patient, public, and staff involvement in the move towards patient-centered health needs to be backed up by adequate and secure resources as well as consistent organizational leadership and change management. Organizational change processes in general should be seen as biological continuous cycles with unpredictable evolutionary turning points rather than linear progressions. This helps to stay optimistic and embrace change as challenging, exciting, and difficult all the way through the change process.Version
No full-text in the repositoryCitation
Anders C and Cassidy AM (2014) Effective organizational change in healthcare: Exploring the contribution of empowered users and workers. International Journal of Healthcare Management, 7 (2): 132–151.Link to Version of Record
https://doi.org/10.1179/2047971913Y.0000000061Type
Articleae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1179/2047971913Y.0000000061