Abstract

Many health care organizations struggle and often do not succeed to be high-performance organizations that are not only efficient and effective but also enjoyable places to work. This review focuses on the physician and organizational roles in limiting achievement of a high-performance team in health care organizations. Ten dimensions were constructed and a number of competencies and metrics were highlighted to overcome the failures to: (i) Ensure that the goals, purpose, mission and vision are clearly defined; (ii) establish a supportive organizational structure that encourages high performance of teams; (iii) ensure outstanding physician leadership, performance, goal attainment; and (iv) recognize that medical team leaders are vulnerable to the abuses of personal power or may create a culture of intimidation/fear and a toxic work culture; (v) select a good team and team members—team members who like to work in teams or are willing and able to learn how to work in a team and ensure a well-balanced team composition; (vi) establish optimal team composition, individual roles and dynamics, and clear roles for members of the team; (vii) establish psychological safe environment for team members; (viii) address and resolve interpersonal conflicts in teams; (xi) ensure good health and well-being of the medical staff; (x) ensure physician engagement with the organization. Addressing each of these dimensions with the specific solutions outlined should overcome the constraints to achieving high-performance teams for physicians in health care organizations.

Highlights

  • There is considerable ongoing interest in the creation of high-performance teams, involving physicians in the health care workplace and in health care organizations [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8].Heath care organizations are different from other types of organizations and these differences need to be taken into account in the evaluation of any framework for performance [9].Health care organizations consist of a number of complex professional bureaucracies that deal with an even more complex set of political, legal, financial, customer, and community challenges [9]

  • The objective of this review is to examine and validate, if justified, the obstacles for the creation of high-performance teams with physicians in health care and the methods to overcome these obstacles in order to create a high-performance health care organization

  • Some physician groups have advocated for hospitals and health authorities to invest in developing the feedback skills of administrative leaders as a way to promote psychological safety in health care teams [65]

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Summary

Introduction

There is considerable ongoing interest in the creation of high-performance teams, involving physicians in the health care workplace and in health care organizations [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Nurses have loyalty to a professional agenda that influences hospital activities and this adherence can be of more importance to them than a health care organization’s philosophy [9] These and other differences between health care and other organizations justify the need to examine high-performance teams focusing only on health care organizations and the physician’s role in them. The objective of this review is to exam health care organizations from the physician’s perspective, in order to synthesize data on why some health care organizations do not meet the metric of a high-performance work place and what is needed to create highperformance teams inclusive of physicians. The objective of this review is to examine and validate, if justified, the obstacles for the creation of high-performance teams with physicians in health care and the methods to overcome these obstacles in order to create a high-performance health care organization

Obstacles to Develop High-Performance Teams Involving Physicians
Failure to Establish a Supportive Organizational Structure That Encourages
Failure to Ensure Outstanding Physician Leadership
Failure to Establish Psychological Safe Environment for Team Members
Failure to Address and Resolve Interpersonal Conflicts in Teams
Failure to Ensure Good Health and Well-Being of Physician Staff
2.10. Failure to Ensure Physician Engagement with the Organization
Overcoming Obstacles to Develop High-Performance Teams—Solutions
Graphical
Overcoming the Failure to Ensure Outstanding Physician Leadership
3.10. Overcoming the Failure to Ensure Physician Engagement with the Organization
Conclusions
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