Healthcare Quarterly, 25(2) July 2022: 54-62.10.12927/hcq.2022.26888
Effective Teamwork
Strategic Clinical Network Teams Improve Effectiveness, Team and Leadership Processes and Inputs: Theory-Based Longitudinal Survey
Deborah E. White, Jill M. Norris, Danielle A. Southern, Tracy Wasylak and William A. Ghali
Abstract
Strategic Clinical Networks (SCNs) in Alberta include multidisciplinary teams that work toward health system innovation and improvement; however, what contributes to team effectiveness is unclear. This theory-informed longitudinal survey (n = 826) evaluated team effectiveness within SCNs and predictors of effectiveness. Satisfaction, inter-team relationships and seven predictors including team inputs and team and leadership processes improved over two years. Attitudinal outputs were predicted by the same factors over time, whereas performance outputs were predicted by different factors. This innovative study emphasizes that SCN teams and their effectiveness evolve over time and that team-based research can refine network evaluations.
This article is for subscribers only.
To view the entire article, sign in if you are a subscriber. Or select one of the options below.
Personal Subscriber? Sign In
Please note: To register for an event you must sign-in as an individual or create a personal Longwood's account. Thank you.
Comments
Be the first to comment on this!
You must sign in to comment Sign In or Create an Account to add comments
Related Content
HealthcarePapers
Health System Transformation through a Scalable, Actionable Innovation Strategy
HealthcarePapers
Strategic Clinical Networks: Alberta’s Response to Triple Aim
Nursing Leadership





