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The relationship between social capital and quality management systems in European hospitals: a quantitative study

Strategic leadership is an important organizational capability and is essential for quality improvement in hospital settings. Furthermore, the quality of leadership depends crucially on a common set of shared values and mutual trust between hospital management board members. According to the concept...

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Published in:PloS one 2013-12, Vol.8 (12), p.e85662-e85662
Main Authors: Hammer, Antje, Arah, Onyebuchi A, Dersarkissian, Maral, Thompson, Caroline A, Mannion, Russell, Wagner, Cordula, Ommen, Oliver, Sunol, Rosa, Pfaff, Holger
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c692t-b5093170fb35760e1685f016a612d34f2380d4323841dc19d91cf53697a5a4b83
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container_issue 12
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container_title PloS one
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creator Hammer, Antje
Arah, Onyebuchi A
Dersarkissian, Maral
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description Strategic leadership is an important organizational capability and is essential for quality improvement in hospital settings. Furthermore, the quality of leadership depends crucially on a common set of shared values and mutual trust between hospital management board members. According to the concept of social capital, these are essential requirements for successful cooperation and coordination within groups. We assume that social capital within hospital management boards is an important factor in the development of effective organizational systems for overseeing health care quality. We hypothesized that the degree of social capital within the hospital management board is associated with the effectiveness and maturity of the quality management system in European hospitals. We used a mixed-method approach to data collection and measurement in 188 hospitals in 7 European countries. For this analysis, we used responses from hospital managers. To test our hypothesis, we conducted a multilevel linear regression analysis of the association between social capital and the quality management system score at the hospital level, controlling for hospital ownership, teaching status, number of beds, number of board members, organizational culture, and country clustering. The average social capital score within a hospital management board was 3.3 (standard deviation: 0.5; range: 1-4) and the average hospital score for the quality management index was 19.2 (standard deviation: 4.5; range: 0-27). Higher social capital was associated with higher quality management system scores (regression coefficient: 1.41; standard error: 0.64, p=0.029). The results suggest that a higher degree of social capital exists in hospitals that exhibit higher maturity in their quality management systems. Although uncontrolled confounding and reverse causation cannot be completely ruled out, our new findings, along with the results of previous research, could have important implications for the work of hospital managers and the design and evaluation of hospital quality management systems.
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Furthermore, the quality of leadership depends crucially on a common set of shared values and mutual trust between hospital management board members. According to the concept of social capital, these are essential requirements for successful cooperation and coordination within groups. We assume that social capital within hospital management boards is an important factor in the development of effective organizational systems for overseeing health care quality. We hypothesized that the degree of social capital within the hospital management board is associated with the effectiveness and maturity of the quality management system in European hospitals. We used a mixed-method approach to data collection and measurement in 188 hospitals in 7 European countries. For this analysis, we used responses from hospital managers. To test our hypothesis, we conducted a multilevel linear regression analysis of the association between social capital and the quality management system score at the hospital level, controlling for hospital ownership, teaching status, number of beds, number of board members, organizational culture, and country clustering. The average social capital score within a hospital management board was 3.3 (standard deviation: 0.5; range: 1-4) and the average hospital score for the quality management index was 19.2 (standard deviation: 4.5; range: 0-27). Higher social capital was associated with higher quality management system scores (regression coefficient: 1.41; standard error: 0.64, p=0.029). The results suggest that a higher degree of social capital exists in hospitals that exhibit higher maturity in their quality management systems. 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source Open Access: PubMed Central; ProQuest - Publicly Available Content Database; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Analysis
Causation
Clustering
Consortia
Cooperation
Corporate culture
Data collection
Epidemiology
Europe
Health care
Health care policy
Health services
Hospital Administration
Hospitals
Hospitals - manpower
Leadership
Management
Management systems
Medical care quality
Multilevel
Organizational aspects
Organizational change
Organizational Culture
Organizational effectiveness
Ownership
Public health
Quality control
Quality Improvement
Quality management
Regression Analysis
Regression coefficients
Rehabilitation
Science
Social capital
Sociology
Standard deviation
Standard error
Studies
System effectiveness
Systematic review
Teaching
Trust
title The relationship between social capital and quality management systems in European hospitals: a quantitative study
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