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Frontline meetings as support for cross-boundary coordination in hospitals

Thim Prætorius (Steno Diabetes Center Aarhus, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus N, Denmark)
Peter Hasle (Department of Technology and Innovation, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark)

Journal of Health Organization and Management

ISSN: 1477-7266

Article publication date: 28 November 2019

Issue publication date: 3 December 2019

261

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate frontline meetings in hospitals and how they are used for coordination of daily operations across organizational and occupational boundaries.

Design/methodology/approach

An in-depth multiple-case study of four purposefully selected departments from four different hospitals is conducted. The selected cases had actively developed and embedded scheduled meetings as structural means to achieve coordination of daily operations.

Findings

Health care professionals and managers, next to their traditional mono-professional meetings (e.g. doctors or nurses), develop additional operational, daily meetings such as work-shift meetings, huddles and hand-off meetings to solve concrete care tasks. These new types of meetings are typically short, task focussed, led by a chair and often inter-disciplinary. The meetings secure a personal proximity which the increased dependency on hospital-wide IT solutions cannot. During meetings, objects and representations (e.g. monitors, whiteboards or paper cards) create a needed gathering point to span across boundaries. As regards embedding meetings, local engagement helps contextualizing meetings and solving concrete care tasks, thereby making health care professionals more likely to value these daily meeting spaces.

Practical implications

Health care professionals and managers can use formal meeting spaces aided by objects and representations to support solving daily and interdependent health care tasks in ways that IT solutions in hospitals do not offer today. Implementation requires local engagement and contextualization.

Originality/value

This research paper shows the importance of daily, operational hospital meetings for frontline coordination. Organizational meetings are a prevalent collaborative activity, yet scarcely researched organizational phenomenon.

Keywords

Citation

Prætorius, T. and Hasle, P. (2019), "Frontline meetings as support for cross-boundary coordination in hospitals", Journal of Health Organization and Management, Vol. 33 No. 7/8, pp. 884-901. https://doi.org/10.1108/JHOM-10-2018-0312

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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