1 / 12

A new role for the doctor-manager? About the changing role of the medical hospital director in a more competitive and po

A new role for the doctor-manager? About the changing role of the medical hospital director in a more competitive and politicized environment. Wilma van der Scheer, Kim Putters Erasmus University Rotterdam The Netherlands. Outline. The Dutch case Theories used Methods Quantitative outcomes

miroslav
Download Presentation

A new role for the doctor-manager? About the changing role of the medical hospital director in a more competitive and po

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A new role for the doctor-manager?About the changing role of the medical hospital director in a more competitive and politicized environment Wilma van der Scheer, Kim Putters • Erasmus University Rotterdam • The Netherlands

  2. Outline The Dutch case Theories used Methods Quantitative outcomes Qualitative outcomes Conclusions and discussion

  3. Hospital governance • Integration Act (2000): executive board has final responsibility • In practice (since mid 1990s): continuous negotiation between Staff Executive and Executive Board • Health Insurance Act (2006): new governance-structures

  4. Changes in governance • More competition • Separation between policy and implementation • Negotiations over means and ends are left to field parties • → displacement of politics, politicization of management (Beck 1994, Bovens 1995)

  5. Theoretical point of departure Hospital as a negotiated order (Abbott 1988) With different interests (public, private, professional and patient) Negotiating between different worlds (cure, care, community and control) (Glouberman and Mintzberg 2001)

  6. Methods Survey (n = 200, response = 35%) Interviews in 10 organizationswith: 5 hospital directors, 4 staff executives, 3 chairpersons of the supervisory boardof: organizations with a med.dir. from ‘inside’, organizations with a med.dir. from ‘outside’, organizations without a med.dir. and: 2 executive searchers

  7. Conclusions quantitative study Very experienced managers, broad educated, but with little experience ‘outside’ health-care Act on the boarder of internal affairs and external affairs, but with more attention for internal affairs Feel very responsible for matters of care/quality than for finances Little attention for entrepreneurial activities Take less part in the public debate about health care

  8. Conclusions qualitative study Natural distribution of roles Medical background alone is not enough Different argumentations (cultural, relational, knowledge-based, principle) Different perspectives, different expectations

  9. Different perspectives, different expectations (1) Executives: med. dir. is a connector, he/she is likely to realize more support from medical staff for hospital policy Medical director: we are not different form other directors, only we understand doctors better

  10. Different perspectives, different expectations (2) Staff executive: med. dir. is a representative, who understands our interests Sup. board: med. dir. is a risk manager, who can prevent problems between executive board and medical staff

  11. Different perspectives, different expectations (3) Exec. searcher: med. dir. can build bridges between managerial and medical world (but communication skills are more important)

  12. Conclusions More attention for educating/training doctors in management Different perspectives, different expectations Dominance of complicated relationship doctors-managers Towards a different role? (e.g. from managing professionals to managing patient experiences?) Requires: expectation management!

More Related