Abstract

BackgroundResistance to change and organizational culture are essential factors to consider in change management in health care settings. Implementation of structural change remains a challenge. There is a lack of studies providing information on the impact of implementation processes on the organization. The aim of this study was to describe the impact of implementing a systematic change process concerning postoperative person-centred pain management on resistance to change and organizational culture in an orthopaedic spine surgery unit.MethodsThe study was set in an orthopaedic spine surgery unit at a university hospital. Person-centred bundles of care for postoperative pain management of spine surgery patients were developed in co-creation by a multi-professional expert group and implemented throughout the care pathway. The intervention was underpinned by theories on organizational culture and inspired by principles of person-centred care. Quantitative data were collected using the Resistance to Change Scale and the Organizational Culture Assessment Instrument and analysed using descriptive statistics.ResultsThe findings showed a low resistance to change decreasing during the study. The organizational culture shifted from a result-oriented to a formalized and structured culture after the implementation. The culture preferred by the staff was team-oriented and participation-focused throughout the study. The discrepancy between the current and preferred cultures remained extensive over time.ConclusionIt is challenging to describe the influence of the development and implementation of a postoperative pain management program on organizational culture as well as in terms of resistance to change, in a complex health care setting. In the current study the unit was under organizational strain during the implementation. Albeit, the important discrepancy between the current and preferred organizational culture could imply that structural changes aren’t enough when implementing person-centred pain management structures and needs to be combined with relational aspects of change.

Highlights

  • Resistance to change and organizational culture are essential factors to consider in change management in health care settings

  • In the present study, resistance to change and organizational culture were measured over time parallel to the implementation of structural change

  • Of the 198 surveys were all used for the Resistance to Change Scale (RTCS) but only 143 were valid for the Organizational Culture Assessment Instrument (OCAI)

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Summary

Introduction

Resistance to change and organizational culture are essential factors to consider in change management in health care settings. The aim of this study was to describe the impact of implementing a systematic change process concerning postoperative personcentred pain management on resistance to change and organizational culture in an orthopaedic spine surgery unit. The task of introducing change into overburdened and complex organizations such as in health care is challenging as these settings are large in scale and divided into specialized fields. According to Lewin, the individual’s behaviour is a product of a complex system, an organization, forming a force field around the individual [4] This is of relevance in a study like the present where the survey is completed by individuals in a HCO and aggregated and analysed as one

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