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Concealing paradoxes in decision-making during hospital hybridization – a systems theoretical analysis

Kaisu Jansson (Department of Marketing, Management and International Business, University of Oulu Business School, Oulu, Finland)
Juha Tuunainen (Department of Marketing, Management and International Business, University of Oulu Business School, Oulu, Finland)
Tuija Mainela (Department of Marketing, Management and International Business, University of Oulu Business School, Oulu, Finland)

Journal of Health Organization and Management

ISSN: 1477-7266

Article publication date: 11 February 2021

Issue publication date: 27 April 2021

282

Abstract

Purpose

While previous health-care-related hybridity research has focused on macro- and micro-level investigations, this paper aims to study hybridization at the organizational level, with a specific focus on decision-making. The authors investigate how new politico-economic expectations toward a university hospital as a hybrid organization become internalized via organizational decision-making, resulting in the establishment of a new business collaboration and innovation-oriented unit.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors employed a social systems theoretical framework to explore organizational decision-making processes involved in the establishment of the new hybrid hospital unit. Drawing on 15 interviews and nine organizational documents, the authors describe and analyze three decision-making cycles using the concepts of complexity, decision and justification.

Findings

The findings reveal the challenging nature of decision-making during hybridization, as decisions regarding unprecedented organizational structures and activities cannot be justified by traditional decision premises. The authors show that decision-makers use a combination of novel justification strategies, namely, justification by problems, by examples and by obligations, to legitimize decisions oriented at non-traditional activities. Further, the analysis reveals how expectations of several societal systems, i.e. health care, education, science, law, economy and politics, are considered in decision-making taking place in hybrid organizations.

Originality/value

The study draws attention to the complexity of decision-making in a hybrid context and highlights the role of justification strategies in partially reducing complexity by concealing the paradoxical nature of decision-making and ensuring the credibility of resulting decisions. Also, the study presents a move beyond the dualism inherent in many previous hybridity studies by illustrating the involvement of several societal systems in hybridization.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Roman Kislov, the two anonymous reviewers, Kari Kantasalmi and the SHERLOC research community of Oulu Business School for their great help in developing the manuscript.

Citation

Jansson, K., Tuunainen, J. and Mainela, T. (2021), "Concealing paradoxes in decision-making during hospital hybridization – a systems theoretical analysis", Journal of Health Organization and Management, Vol. 35 No. 2, pp. 195-211. https://doi.org/10.1108/JHOM-08-2020-0334

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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