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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2019

Open Access 01-12-2019 | Research article

Managing creativity and compliance in the pursuit of patient safety

Authors: Sharon H. Kim, Sallie J. Weaver, Ting Yang, Michael A. Rosen

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2019

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Abstract

Background

Are creativity and compliance mutually exclusive? In clinical settings, this question is increasingly relevant. Hospitals and clinics seek the creative input of their employees to help solve persistent patient safety issues, such as the prevention of bloodstream infections, while simultaneously striving for greater adherence to evidence-based guidelines and protocols. Extant research provides few answers about how creativity works in such contexts.

Methods

Cross-sectional survey data were collected from employees in 24 different U.S.-based outpatient hemodialysis clinics. Linear mixed-effects models were utilized to test study hypotheses. Professional status, clinic climate variables, and interaction terms were modeled as fixed effects, with a random effect for clinic included in all models.

Results

Our results show that high status employees contributed more creative patient safety improvement ideas compared to low status employees. However, when high status employees were part of clinics with a stronger safety climate of compliance, they contributed fewer creative ideas compared to their counterparts working in clinics with a reduced compliance orientation. We also predicted low status employees working in less punitive clinics would contribute more creative ideas, but this hypothesis was not fully supported.

Conclusions

This study suggests that in hospitals and clinics that rely on strict protocols and formal hierarchies to meet their goals, the factors that promote creativity may be distinctively context-dependent. Implications for theory, practice, as well as future directions for research examining creativity in healthcare and safety critical contexts are discussed.
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Footnotes
1
In terms of organizational safety performance, this sample of clinics was comparable to national indices of patient safety outcomes including BSI (mean catheter-related infection rate in our sample = 3.1 per 100 patient months) versus most recently available national average catheter-related BSI rate for outpatient hemodialysis clinics = 4.2 per 100 patient months [39].
 
2
We conducted a supplementary analysis to examine the extent to which supervisory expectations was related to clinic-level BSI rates. A median split was utilized to categorize clinics into low and high compliance-focused groups. Results of a two-sample t-test did not detect any significant differences in patient infection rates between these groups (p = 0.57).
 
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Metadata
Title
Managing creativity and compliance in the pursuit of patient safety
Authors
Sharon H. Kim
Sallie J. Weaver
Ting Yang
Michael A. Rosen
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2019
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-3935-2

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