Members’ Perceptions of Community Care Network Partnerships’ Effectiveness
Article 2003 en
Authors
RH
Romana Hasnain‐Wynia
SS
Shoshanna Sofaer
GB
Gloria J. Bazzoli
Abstract
1 min read
Investment in voluntary partnerships raises important questions: Should we invest in collaboration in moving toward the goals of health system redesign? What makes collaborative groups effective? Given the voluntary nature of these partnerships, membership perceptions of their experiences and the partnership’s effectiveness should be important predictors of success. This article provides a preliminary analyses of perceived effectiveness of participants’ perceptions of their own partnership, particularly focusingon leadership, conflict management, decision-making dynamics, and the breadth and depth of partnership membership. Members’ perceptions that the partnership membership was “sufficiently broad to accomplish objectives” had a negative and highly significant relationship to perceived effectiveness. Members’ perceptions about leadership beingethical was positively related to perceived effectiveness while perceptions that the leadership was not effective a keeping the group focused was negatively related to perceived effectiveness.
Stephen M Shortell, Ann P. Zukoski, Jeffrey A. Alexander, Gloria J. Bazzoli, Douglas A. Conrad, Romana Hasnain‐Wynia, Shoshanna Sofaer, Benjamin Chan Yin-Fah, Elizabeth Casey, Frances S. Margolin
Jeffrey A. Alexander, Bryan J. Weiner, Maureen E. Metzger, Stephen M Shortell, Gloria J. Bazzoli, Romana Hasnain‐Wynia, Shoshanna Sofaer, Douglas A. Conrad
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.