Measuring Organizational Attributes of Primary Care Practices: Development of a New Instrument
- 25 September 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Health Services Research
- Vol. 42 (3p1), 1257-1273
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2006.00644.x
Abstract
To develop an instrument to measure organizational attributes relevant for family practices using the perspectives of clinicians, nurses, and staff. Clinicians, nurses, and office staff (n=640) from 51 community family medicine practices. A survey, designed to measure a practices' internal resources for change, for use in family medicine practices was created by a multidisciplinary panel of experts in primary care research and health care organizational performance. This survey was administered in a cross-sectional study to a sample of diverse practices participating in an intervention trial. A factor analysis identified groups of questions relating to latent constructs of practices' internal resources for capacity to change. ANOVA methods were used to confirm that the factors differentiated practices. The survey was administered to all staff from 51 practices. The factor analysis resulted in four stable and internally consistent factors. Three of these factors, "communication,""decision-making," and "stress/chaos," describe resources for change in primary care practices. One factor, labeled "history of change," may be useful in assessing the success of interventions. A 21-item questionnaire can reliably measure four important organizational attributes relevant to family practices. These attributes can be used both as outcome measures as well as important features for targeting system interventions.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assessing Nursing Homesʼ Capacity to Create and Sustain ImprovementJournal of Nursing Care Quality, 2005
- An empirical test of the causal relationships in the Baldrige Health Care Pilot CriteriaJournal of Operations Management, 2001
- Improving the Quality of Health Care in the United Kingdom and the United States: A Framework for ChangeThe Milbank Quarterly, 2001
- The EFQM excellence model: European and Dutch experiences with the EFQM approach in health careInternational Journal for Quality in Health Care, 2000
- Developing learning organisations in the new NHSBMJ, 2000
- Primary Care in the United States — The Best of Times, the Worst of TimesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Contrasting the Original Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award and the Health Care Pilot AwardQuality Management in Health Care, 1998
- Diversity as a Management Strategy for OrganizationsJournal of Management Inquiry, 1997
- The Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award conceptQuality Management in Health Care, 1994
- Organizational Assessment in Intensive Care Units (ICUs): Construct Development, Reliability, and Validity of the ICU Nurse-Physician QuestionnaireMedical Care, 1991