Lost in motivation? The case of a Norwegian community healthcare project on ethical reflection
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15978Dato
2019-06-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Innovations are needed to meet increasing challenges in public
healthcare, and type of motivation has been identified as a pivotal factor for the
success of an innovation. New public management crowd out the intrinsic
motivation of employees which has resulted in a quest for more self-reliant
service providers. This paper takes the opposite point of departure asking if
intrinsic motivation can be at the cost of the public purpose of innovations. This
paper is a case study of 180 municipalities whom chose to participate in the
largest healthcare project on ethical reflection in Norway. Thousands of community health-care workers performed innovative activities by establishing ethical reflection on a regular basis. We have investigated if the municipalities’ type
of motivation is of importance for the type of results of the project, and how the
results correspond with the policy signals on the very purpose of establishing
ethical reflection in health care. We find that intrinsic motivation of enhanced
competence crowds out the extrinsic motivation and public value of patient
satisfaction. The link in the program theory between objective and purpose is too
weak to induce a better fulfilment of the purpose.
Beskrivelse
Source at https://doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2019.1632045. © 2019 The Author(s).