Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Fiery Spirits in the context of institutional entrepreneurship in Swedish healthcare
View through CrossRef
Purpose– Clinical governance and leadership concepts can lead to more or less successful implementations of new clinical practice. The purpose of this paper is to examine how Fiery Spirits, as institutional entrepreneurs can, working in a team, implement sustained change in hospital clinical practice.Design/methodology/approach– This paper describes two case studies, conducted at two Swedish hospitals over a period of two years, in which changes in clinical practice were implemented. In both cases, key-actors, termed Fiery Spirits, played critical roles in these changes. The authors use a qualitative approach and take an intra-organizational perspective with semi-structured in-depth interviews and document analysis.Findings– The new clinical practices were successfully implemented with a considerable influence of the Fiery Spirits who played a pivotal role in the change efforts. The Fiery Spirits persuasively, based on their structural and normative legitimacy and the adoption of learning processes, advocated, and supported change.Practical implications– Fiery Spirits, given flexibility and opportunity, can be powerful forces for change outside the trajectory of management-inspired and management-directed change. Team members, when inspired and encouraged by Fiery Spirits, are less resistant to change and more willing to test new clinical practices.Originality/value– The paper complements literature on how the Fiery Spirit concept aligns with concepts of clinical governance and leadership and how change can be achieved. Additionally, the findings show the effects of legitimacy and learning processes on change in clinical practice.
Title: Fiery Spirits in the context of institutional entrepreneurship in Swedish healthcare
Description:
Purpose– Clinical governance and leadership concepts can lead to more or less successful implementations of new clinical practice.
The purpose of this paper is to examine how Fiery Spirits, as institutional entrepreneurs can, working in a team, implement sustained change in hospital clinical practice.
Design/methodology/approach– This paper describes two case studies, conducted at two Swedish hospitals over a period of two years, in which changes in clinical practice were implemented.
In both cases, key-actors, termed Fiery Spirits, played critical roles in these changes.
The authors use a qualitative approach and take an intra-organizational perspective with semi-structured in-depth interviews and document analysis.
Findings– The new clinical practices were successfully implemented with a considerable influence of the Fiery Spirits who played a pivotal role in the change efforts.
The Fiery Spirits persuasively, based on their structural and normative legitimacy and the adoption of learning processes, advocated, and supported change.
Practical implications– Fiery Spirits, given flexibility and opportunity, can be powerful forces for change outside the trajectory of management-inspired and management-directed change.
Team members, when inspired and encouraged by Fiery Spirits, are less resistant to change and more willing to test new clinical practices.
Originality/value– The paper complements literature on how the Fiery Spirit concept aligns with concepts of clinical governance and leadership and how change can be achieved.
Additionally, the findings show the effects of legitimacy and learning processes on change in clinical practice.
Related Results
Perceptions of Telemedicine and Rural Healthcare Access in a Developing Country: A Case Study of Bayelsa State, Nigeria
Perceptions of Telemedicine and Rural Healthcare Access in a Developing Country: A Case Study of Bayelsa State, Nigeria
Abstract
Introduction
Telemedicine is the remote delivery of healthcare services using information and communication technologies and has gained global recognition as a solution to...
Entrepreneurship Development Process in Korea: Theory and Practice
Entrepreneurship Development Process in Korea: Theory and Practice
This study deals with the characteristics and development process of entrepreneurship in Korea and how the aspects and phenomena of entrepreneurship have changed according to the s...
Institutional varieties and entrepreneurship: an empirical analysis
Institutional varieties and entrepreneurship: an empirical analysis
A growing body of literature on comparative international entrepreneurship has focussed on exploring the factors that explain differences in entrepreneurial activity across countri...
Transforming "Swedish Dads"
Transforming "Swedish Dads"
In a globalized context, modern nation states use nation branding techniques to promote their position in the global social order. This article takes a cultural approach to a speci...
Regional Entrepreneurship
Regional Entrepreneurship
Regional entrepreneurship (RE) is an emerging field within entrepreneurship research. It reflects Maryann Feldman’s frequently quoted notion that “entrepreneurship is primarily a r...
FINANCIAL MECHANISM OF STATE SUPPORT FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN UKRAINE
FINANCIAL MECHANISM OF STATE SUPPORT FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN UKRAINE
Financial support for the development of entrepreneurship is an economic prerequisite for its activity and, as a result, we get market saturation with goods, works and services. Su...
Conceptualising arts entrepreneurship education: bridging the arts and entrepreneurship within higher education settings
Conceptualising arts entrepreneurship education: bridging the arts and entrepreneurship within higher education settings
AbstractDespite the rise of entrepreneurship education within higher education, entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship education remain overlooked in the arts discipline. Existing r...

