Strategies and practices for organizational learning in integrated care
Journal article, 2024

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to identify important strategies and practices supporting inter-organizational learning (IOL) in integrated care. The two research questions ask how organizational network architectures can help involved organizations overcome the barriers of IOL in integrated care (RQ1) and what design recommendations can strengthen the processes of IOL in integrated care (RQ2). Design/methodology/approach: This study applies a qualitative design to analyze an improvement initiative in a regional, integrated care service for elderly patients with multiple illnesses in Norway. An inductive thematic analysis for the triangulating of qualitative data from different sources was applied. Patterns within the data were organized into themes, categories and subcategories. No software was applied. Findings: The identified characteristics of the organizational network architectures supporting IOL in integrated care in the case under study were: equality of the involved parties, shared goals, recognition of expertise and the abilities to coordinate, design IOL processes and make joint decisions (RQ1). The categories of practices supporting the process of IOL were: insight into complex realities, contradictions, iteration, motivation and prototypes (RQ2). Originality/value: This study offers much-needed insight into a successful approach for IOL in integrated care. The results offer strategies to be considered when building organizational networks for the improvement of integrated care and relevant practices useful when designing IOL processes in such care services. We believe such knowledge has important implications for policymakers, frontline personnel, education, research and leaders.

Organizational learning

Quality improvement

Organizational network architecture

Integrated care

Inter-organizational learning

Author

Rachel Lörum

Østfold Hospital Trust

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Innovation and R&D Management

Frida Smith

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Service Management and Logistics

Regional Cancer Centre West

Journal of Health, Organisation and Management

1477-7266 (ISSN)

Vol. 38 6 942-960

Subject Categories

Business Administration

Pedagogy

DOI

10.1108/JHOM-11-2023-0342

More information

Latest update

9/14/2024