Culture: The Unexpected Key to Exemplary Primary Care

Authors

  • Erin E. Sullivan Harvard Medical School
  • Sophia D. Arabadjis Harvard Medical School
  • Jessica L. Alpert Harvard Medical School
  • Andrew L. Ellner Harvard Medical School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v18i5.277

Keywords:

Organizational Psychology, Healthcare

Abstract

Health care organizations achieve better outcomes at lower cost where known advances in primary care have been implemented. With few exceptions, primary care in the US has been unsuccessful in
implementing these advances. We conducted eight case studies of exemplar primary care organizations to theorize best systems design in adverse conditions; we offer a cross-case analysis. Every study site had culture characterized by 1) trusting, long-term relationships; and 2) power, responsibility, and authority redistribution. Organizational culture may drive exemplary primary care; building cultures with identified traits may improve primary care outcomes and is actionable.

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Published

2018-12-01

How to Cite

Sullivan, E. E., Arabadjis, S. D., Alpert, J. L., & Ellner, A. L. (2018). Culture: The Unexpected Key to Exemplary Primary Care. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 18(5). https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v18i5.277

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Section

Articles