Formal and informal hospital emergency management practices: Managing for safety and performance amid crisis.

Formal and informal hospital emergency management practices: Managing for safety and performance amid crisis.

Publication date: Jul 11, 2024

Although formal preparedness for unexpected crises has long been a concern of health care policy and delivery, many hospitals struggled to manage staff and equipment shortages, precarious finances, and supply chain disruptions among other difficulties during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our purpose was to analyze how hospitals used formal and informal emergency management practices to maintain safe and high-quality care while responding to crisis. We conducted a qualitative study based on 26 interviews with hospital leaders and emergency managers from 12 U. S. hospitals purposively sampled to vary along geographic location, urban/rural delineation, size, resource availability, system membership, teaching status, and performance levels among other characteristics. In order to manage staff, space, supplies, and systems related challenges, hospitals engaged formal and informal practices around planning, teaming, and exchanging resources and information. Relying solely only on formal or informal practices proved inadequate, especially when prespecified plans, the incident command structure, and existing contracts and communication platforms failed to support resilient response. We identified emergent capabilities – imaginative planning, recombinant teaming, and transformational exchange – through which hospitals achieved harmonious interplay between the formal and informal practices of emergency management that supported safe care and resilience amid crisis. Managing emergent challenges for and amid crisis calls for health care delivery organizations to engage creative planning processes, enable motivated workers with diverse skill sets to team up, and establish rich inter- and intra-organizational partnerships that support vital exchange.

Concepts Keywords
Hospitals crisis response
Interviews Emergency management
Rich leadership
Rural resilience
Shortages

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH emergency
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO quality

Original Article

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