2018
DOI: 10.5465/ambpp.2018.11906abstract
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Innovation Implementation in the Context of Hospital QI-Lessons Learned and Strategies for Success

Abstract: In 1999, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) reported that 98,000 people die each year due to medical errors. In the following years, the focus on hospital quality was intensified nationally, with policymakers providing evidence-based practice guidelines for improving health care quality. However, these innovations (evidence-based guidelines) that were being produced at policy levels were not translating to clinical practice at the hospital organizational level easily, and stark variations continued to persist, in… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Innovation through care process redesign and improvement in health care delivery is occurring at an unacceptably slow pace and with variable impact (Rangachari, 2018). The complex nature of health care and fragmentation of care delivery has contributed substantially to the inadequacy of innovation efforts (Nembhard et al, 2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Innovation through care process redesign and improvement in health care delivery is occurring at an unacceptably slow pace and with variable impact (Rangachari, 2018). The complex nature of health care and fragmentation of care delivery has contributed substantially to the inadequacy of innovation efforts (Nembhard et al, 2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature pointed to three leadership approaches that generated improvement in patient safety and medical errors. First, transformational leadership, which helps promote values-focus, productive communication and focus on mission, is a strong patient safety and medical error intervention (Boamah et al , 2018; Hu et al , 2016; McFadden et al , 2015; Merrill, 2015; Murray et al , 2018; Polonsky, 2019; Rangachari, 2018; Sfantou et al , 2017; Fischer et al , 2018; Taylor et al , 2015). Authentic leadership, centering on transparency and openness, can also be a factor in patient safety and medical error improvement (Boamah et al , 2018; Kaplan et al , 2017; Murray et al , 2018; Polonsky, 2019; Sfantou et al , 2017; Wong and Walsh, 2020).…”
Section: Theme: Leadership Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Transformational leaders’ followers respond positively to inspirational motivation, inspiring followers to commit to a shared vision (Northouse, 2019). In health care, transformational leaders can establish a clear idea, creating a safety culture to improve outcomes (Kaplan et al , 2017; Rangachari, 2018). The literature strongly connected strategic leadership to improved outcomes, especially the CEO’s leadership.…”
Section: Theme: Leadership Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In one academic health center, a leader-moderated knowledge sharing system related to EHR MedRec was developed to enable practitioners to engage in tacit knowledge exchange on issues related to EHR MedRec and benefit from collective learning of best practices. The latter in turn, helped to develop shared understanding of the link between EHR MedRec practices and patient outcomes, which in turn paved the way for more meaningful use of the EHR MedRec functionality (21)(22)(23)(24). For example, the knowledge sharing system developed at this institution, helped to facilitate tacit knowledge exchange and collective inter-professional learning with respect to the EHR MedRec best-practice of "consistent importation of the external Rx history into the EHR system at the start of patient encounters".…”
Section: Transitioning From "Limited Use" To "Meaningful Use" Of Ehr Medrecmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The body of research discussed earlier, has helped to identify evidence-based management strategies for inter-professional learning and change in the context of meaningful use of EHR MedRec. These strategies are summarized in Figure 1 (15,(21)(22)(23)(24). An article featured in this issue by Petry et al entitled "Medication reconciliation and pharmacogenetic reviews: the importance of an accurate medication list" helps to reinforce the value of these evidence-based management strategies by describing how institutional efforts to 1.…”
Section: Evidence-based Management Strategies For Meaningful Use Of Ehr Medrecmentioning
confidence: 99%