Empirical exploration of brilliance in health care: perceptions of health professionals
Author(s)
Karimi, Leila
Dadich, Ann
Fulop, Liz
Leggat, Sandra G
Rada, Jiri
Hayes, Kathryn J
Kippist, Louise
Eljiz, Kathy
Smyth, Anne
Fitzgerald, Janna Anneke
Year published
2017
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective. The aim of the present study was to develop a positive organisational scholarship in health care approach to
health management, informed by health managers and health professionals’ experiences of brilliance in health care delivery.
Methods. A sample of postgraduate students with professional and/or management experience within a health service
was invited to share their experiences of brilliant health services via online discussions and a survey running on the
SurveyMonkey platform. A lexical analysis of student contributions was conducted using the individual as the unit of
analysis.
Results. Using lexical ...
View more >Objective. The aim of the present study was to develop a positive organisational scholarship in health care approach to health management, informed by health managers and health professionals’ experiences of brilliance in health care delivery. Methods. A sample of postgraduate students with professional and/or management experience within a health service was invited to share their experiences of brilliant health services via online discussions and a survey running on the SurveyMonkey platform. A lexical analysis of student contributions was conducted using the individual as the unit of analysis. Results. Using lexical analysis, the examination of themes in the concept map, the relationships between themes and the relationships between concepts identified ‘care’ as the most important concept in recognising brilliance in health care, followed by the concepts of ‘staff’ and ‘patient’. Conclusions. The research presents empirical material to support the emergence of an evidence-based health professional perspective of brilliance in health management. The findings support other studies that have drawn on both quantitative and qualitative materials to explore brilliance in health care. Pockets of brilliance have been previously identified as catalysts for changing health care systems. Both quality, seen as driven from the outside, and excellence, driven from within individuals, are necessary to produce brilliance.
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View more >Objective. The aim of the present study was to develop a positive organisational scholarship in health care approach to health management, informed by health managers and health professionals’ experiences of brilliance in health care delivery. Methods. A sample of postgraduate students with professional and/or management experience within a health service was invited to share their experiences of brilliant health services via online discussions and a survey running on the SurveyMonkey platform. A lexical analysis of student contributions was conducted using the individual as the unit of analysis. Results. Using lexical analysis, the examination of themes in the concept map, the relationships between themes and the relationships between concepts identified ‘care’ as the most important concept in recognising brilliance in health care, followed by the concepts of ‘staff’ and ‘patient’. Conclusions. The research presents empirical material to support the emergence of an evidence-based health professional perspective of brilliance in health management. The findings support other studies that have drawn on both quantitative and qualitative materials to explore brilliance in health care. Pockets of brilliance have been previously identified as catalysts for changing health care systems. Both quality, seen as driven from the outside, and excellence, driven from within individuals, are necessary to produce brilliance.
View less >
Journal Title
Australian Health Review
Volume
41
Subject
Policy and administration not elsewhere classified