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Networks, Culture & Safety: How to Build Effective Healthcare Organizations | Prof. Ingrid Nembhard (Wharton School)

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Manage episode 484098077 series 3485842
Content provided by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

"We need to pay more attention to the networks that operate between people and the networks that operate between organisations.”

Professor Ingrid Nembhard is an Organisational Behaviour expert in healthcare systems, based at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Her research focuses on how characteristics of health care organisations, their leaders, and staff contribute to their ability to implement new practices, engage in continuous organisational learning, and ultimately improve quality of care.

Key Takeaways

Relationships and networks drive outcomes: The connections between people and organisations significantly impact healthcare delivery. Traditional structural changes often fail because they ignore these relational dimensions.

Psychological safety is essential: Creating environments where people can take interpersonal risks—raising concerns, offering suggestions, sharing half-formed ideas—enables both innovation and problem-solving. This requires relationships built on trust and respect.

Standardisation and creativity complement each other: Rather than being opposed, standardisation helps identify where creativity is needed, and creative solutions can become new standards. Healthcare requires both standardised processes and customised approaches.

COVID revealed organisational potential: The pandemic demonstrated healthcare's capacity for creative problem-solving and adaptability. Organisations should maintain the communication channels and cross-functional collaboration that emerged during this crisis.

Where to Find Professor Ingrid Nembhard

* LinkedIn

In This Episode

00:01 - Introduction

00:34 - Is healthcare truly different from other industries?

03:16 - The growing recognition of organisational factors in healthcare

05:31 - How organisational skills should be incorporated into clinical education

10:20 - Learning the broader healthcare context vs. operational skills

14:25 - Understanding networks in healthcare organisations

18:47 - How to map and leverage relationships within organisations

22:48 - Building networks prospectively rather than retrospectively

26:26 - Creating psychological safety in healthcare teams

31:24 - Practical steps for leaders to implement psychological safety

36:40 - How standardisation and creativity can complement each other

42:51 - Lessons from COVID-19 for healthcare management

Referenced

* Integrating network theory into the study of integrated healthcare (Paper)

* NEJM: Responding to Covid-19: Lessons from Management Research (Paper)

* COVID-19 Inspired Creativity In Health Care: Lessons For Management And Policy (Article)

Contact

Contact Information: If you have any feedback, questions or if you'd like to get in touch, reach out at [email protected]

👋 Hey there - Jono here. If you enjoy this episode, please share it with a friend. Thanks for the support!


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.clinicalchangemakers.com
  continue reading

23 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 484098077 series 3485842
Content provided by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

"We need to pay more attention to the networks that operate between people and the networks that operate between organisations.”

Professor Ingrid Nembhard is an Organisational Behaviour expert in healthcare systems, based at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Her research focuses on how characteristics of health care organisations, their leaders, and staff contribute to their ability to implement new practices, engage in continuous organisational learning, and ultimately improve quality of care.

Key Takeaways

Relationships and networks drive outcomes: The connections between people and organisations significantly impact healthcare delivery. Traditional structural changes often fail because they ignore these relational dimensions.

Psychological safety is essential: Creating environments where people can take interpersonal risks—raising concerns, offering suggestions, sharing half-formed ideas—enables both innovation and problem-solving. This requires relationships built on trust and respect.

Standardisation and creativity complement each other: Rather than being opposed, standardisation helps identify where creativity is needed, and creative solutions can become new standards. Healthcare requires both standardised processes and customised approaches.

COVID revealed organisational potential: The pandemic demonstrated healthcare's capacity for creative problem-solving and adaptability. Organisations should maintain the communication channels and cross-functional collaboration that emerged during this crisis.

Where to Find Professor Ingrid Nembhard

* LinkedIn

In This Episode

00:01 - Introduction

00:34 - Is healthcare truly different from other industries?

03:16 - The growing recognition of organisational factors in healthcare

05:31 - How organisational skills should be incorporated into clinical education

10:20 - Learning the broader healthcare context vs. operational skills

14:25 - Understanding networks in healthcare organisations

18:47 - How to map and leverage relationships within organisations

22:48 - Building networks prospectively rather than retrospectively

26:26 - Creating psychological safety in healthcare teams

31:24 - Practical steps for leaders to implement psychological safety

36:40 - How standardisation and creativity can complement each other

42:51 - Lessons from COVID-19 for healthcare management

Referenced

* Integrating network theory into the study of integrated healthcare (Paper)

* NEJM: Responding to Covid-19: Lessons from Management Research (Paper)

* COVID-19 Inspired Creativity In Health Care: Lessons For Management And Policy (Article)

Contact

Contact Information: If you have any feedback, questions or if you'd like to get in touch, reach out at [email protected]

👋 Hey there - Jono here. If you enjoy this episode, please share it with a friend. Thanks for the support!


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.clinicalchangemakers.com
  continue reading

23 episodes

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