TY - JOUR
T1 - It's a jungle out there
T2 - Understanding physician payment and its role in group dynamics
AU - Gifford, Rachel
AU - Molleman, Eric
AU - van der Vaart, Taco
N1 - Funding Information:
We hereby confirm that there are no conflicts of interest to declare. Funding for this project was made possible by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (grant number 022.005.020). Ethical approval was sought and received by the Institutional Review Board at the Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Groningen. Ethical approval number listed under: FEB-20170606-2433.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/6/1
Y1 - 2024/6/1
N2 - Although collaboration between healthcare professionals is essential for the delivery of effective, efficient, and high-quality care, it remains an ongoing and critical challenge across health systems. As a result, many countries are experimenting with innovative payment and employment models. The literature tends to focus on improving collaboration across organizational and sectoral boundaries, and largely ignores potential barriers to collaborative work between members of the same profession within a single organization. Despite intergroup dynamics and professional boundaries having been shown to restrict patient flow and collaboration between specialties, studies have so far tended to overlook the potential effects of differentiated organizational and payment models on physicians' behaviors and intergroup dynamics. In the present study, we seek to unpack the influence of physicians' payment and employment models on their collaborative behaviors and on intergroup dynamics between specialties, adding to the current scholarship on physician payment and employment by considering how physicians’ view and act in response to different structural arrangements. The findings suggest that adopting hybrid models, in which physicians are employed or paid differently within the same organization or practice, creates a bifurcation of the profession whereby physicians across different models are perceived to behave differently and have conflicting professional values. These models are perceived to inhibit collaboration between physicians and complicate hospital governance, restricting the ability to move towards new models of care delivery. These findings can be used as a basis for future work that aims to unpack the reality of physician payment and offer important insights for policies surrounding physician employment.
AB - Although collaboration between healthcare professionals is essential for the delivery of effective, efficient, and high-quality care, it remains an ongoing and critical challenge across health systems. As a result, many countries are experimenting with innovative payment and employment models. The literature tends to focus on improving collaboration across organizational and sectoral boundaries, and largely ignores potential barriers to collaborative work between members of the same profession within a single organization. Despite intergroup dynamics and professional boundaries having been shown to restrict patient flow and collaboration between specialties, studies have so far tended to overlook the potential effects of differentiated organizational and payment models on physicians' behaviors and intergroup dynamics. In the present study, we seek to unpack the influence of physicians' payment and employment models on their collaborative behaviors and on intergroup dynamics between specialties, adding to the current scholarship on physician payment and employment by considering how physicians’ view and act in response to different structural arrangements. The findings suggest that adopting hybrid models, in which physicians are employed or paid differently within the same organization or practice, creates a bifurcation of the profession whereby physicians across different models are perceived to behave differently and have conflicting professional values. These models are perceived to inhibit collaboration between physicians and complicate hospital governance, restricting the ability to move towards new models of care delivery. These findings can be used as a basis for future work that aims to unpack the reality of physician payment and offer important insights for policies surrounding physician employment.
KW - Hospitals
KW - Physician payment
KW - Professional collaboration
KW - Qualitative methods
U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116945
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116945
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 350
JO - Social Science & Medicine
JF - Social Science & Medicine
M1 - 116945
ER -