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Exploring links between resilience and the macro-level development of healthcare regulation- a Norwegian case study.

Sina Furnes ØyriGeir Sverre BrautCarl MacraeSiri Wiig
Published in: BMC health services research (2020)
Based on the rationale of making the Quality Improvement Regulation flexible to hospital context, encouraging the ability to anticipate local risks, along with expectations about the generic design as challenging for managers and clinicians, we found that the regulators did consider work as done as important when designing the Quality Improvement Regulation. These perspectives are in line with ideas of resilience. However, the Quality Improvement Regulation might be open for adaptation by the regulatees, but this may not necessarily mean that it promotes or encourages adaptive behavior in actual practice. Limited involvement of clinicians in the regulatory development process and a lack of reflexive spaces might hamper quality improvement efforts.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • patient safety
  • healthcare
  • climate change
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • emergency department
  • minimally invasive
  • social support
  • social media
  • human health
  • drug induced