The influence of organisational climate on care of patients with schizophrenia: a qualitative analysis of health care professionals' views.

Jane Sutton, Hannah E Family, Jennifer A Scott, Heather Gage, Denise A Taylor
Author Information
  1. Jane Sutton: University of Bath, Bath, UK. j.sutton@bath.ac.uk. ORCID
  2. Hannah E Family: University of Bath, Bath, UK.
  3. Jennifer A Scott: University of Bath, Bath, UK.
  4. Heather Gage: University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.
  5. Denise A Taylor: University of Bath, Bath, UK.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Organizational climate relates to how employees perceive and describe the characteristics of their employing organization. It has been found to have an impact on healthcare professionals' and patients' experiences of healthcare (e.g. job satisfaction, patient satisfaction), as well as organizational outcomes (e.g. employee productivity). This research used organizational theory to explore dynamics between health care professionals (pharmacists, doctors and nurses) in mental health outpatients' services for patients taking clozapine, and the perceived influence on patient care.
SETTING: Seven clozapine clinics (from one NHS mental health Trust in the UK) which provided care for people with treatment resistant schizophrenia.
METHODS: This study used qualitative methods to identify organizational climate factors such as deep structures, micro-climates and climates of conflict that might inhibit change and affect patient care. Using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis, semistructured interviews were conducted with 10 healthcare professionals working in the clinics to explore their experiences of working in these clinics and the NHS mental health Trust the clinics were part of.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Health Care Professionals' perceptions of the care of patients with treatment resistant schizophrenia.
RESULTS: Three superordinate themes emerged from the data: philosophy of care, need for change and role ambiguity. Participants found it difficult to articulate what a philosophy of care was and in spite of expressing the need for change in the way the clinics were run, could not see how 'changing things would work'. There was considerable role ambiguity with some 'blurring of the boundaries between roles'. Factors associated with organizational climate (role conflict; job satisfaction) were inhibiting team working and preventing staff from identifying the patients' health requirements and care delivery through innovation in skill mix. There were mixed attitudes towards the pharmacist's inclusion as a team member.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest deficiencies within the clinics that may be manifestations of the wider culture of the NHS. The implications for mental health outpatient clinics are that local initiatives are crucial to the implementation of recovery models; clear guidance should be provided on the skill mix required in clozapine clinics and interprofessional learning should be encouraged to reduce role conflict.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Antipsychotic Agents
Attitude of Health Personnel
Clozapine
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Health Personnel
Humans
Mental Health Services
Patient Satisfaction
Schizophrenia
State Medicine
Surveys and Questionnaires
United Kingdom

Chemicals

Antipsychotic Agents
Clozapine

Word Cloud

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