articleCalifornia Management ReviewJan 1, 2003Closed access

Why Hospitals Don't Learn from Failures: Organizational and Psychological Dynamics That Inhibit System Change

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Abstract

The importance of hospitals learning from their failures hardly needs to be stated. Not only are matters of life and death at stake on a daily basis, but also an increasing number of U.S. hospitals are operating in the red. This article reports on in-depth qualitative field research of nurses' responses to process failures in nine hospitals. It identifies two types of process failures—errors and problems—and discusses implications of each for process improvement. A dynamic model of the system in which front-line workers operate reveals an illusory equilibrium in which small process failures actually erode organizational effectiveness rather than driving learning and change in hospitals. Three managerial levers…

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914
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26.05
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100%
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Process (computing)
  • Front line
  • Service (business)
  • Organizational change
  • Field (mathematics)
  • Business
  • Operations management
  • Psychology
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