TY - JOUR
T1 - Reorganizing medical care for older persons in times of scarcity
T2 - A cybernetics analysis of work pressure and organizational change
AU - Schuurmans, Jitse
AU - Felder, Martijn
AU - Wallenburg, Iris
N1 - © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2025/2
Y1 - 2025/2
N2 - Capacity problems in healthcare lead organizations to seek new and fluid ways of organizing care to safeguard access to services. Task reallocation, triage and stepped care models are increasingly foregrounded as promising interventions that enhance the capacity, efficiency, and resilience of medical services and through which access can be maintained for a growing client base. In this paper, we argue that interventions meant to enhance capacity and increase efficiency have their limits in a system that is already under strain. We draw on the cybernetics of Gregory Bateson and his concept of ‘budgets of flexibility’ to understand how stress accrues in systems and depletes their capacity for adaptive change. We analyze a case in which regional evening, weekend and night shifts (EWNs) were organized for nursing homes, which included the implementation of a new triage system and task reallocation between various professionals. We show how this initiative rerouted and reprocessed information pathways between professionals, and how this rewiring resulted in a buildup of stress and concomitant emotions of frustration, anxiety, fear and disempowerment through four different mechanisms: (1) fragmentation of information flows; (2) accumulation of information; (3) a loss of richness of information, and (4) slow-moving information flows. The accrual of stress depleted the overall capacity for adaptive change in the system and eventually culminated in a partial breakdown of the new medical service.
AB - Capacity problems in healthcare lead organizations to seek new and fluid ways of organizing care to safeguard access to services. Task reallocation, triage and stepped care models are increasingly foregrounded as promising interventions that enhance the capacity, efficiency, and resilience of medical services and through which access can be maintained for a growing client base. In this paper, we argue that interventions meant to enhance capacity and increase efficiency have their limits in a system that is already under strain. We draw on the cybernetics of Gregory Bateson and his concept of ‘budgets of flexibility’ to understand how stress accrues in systems and depletes their capacity for adaptive change. We analyze a case in which regional evening, weekend and night shifts (EWNs) were organized for nursing homes, which included the implementation of a new triage system and task reallocation between various professionals. We show how this initiative rerouted and reprocessed information pathways between professionals, and how this rewiring resulted in a buildup of stress and concomitant emotions of frustration, anxiety, fear and disempowerment through four different mechanisms: (1) fragmentation of information flows; (2) accumulation of information; (3) a loss of richness of information, and (4) slow-moving information flows. The accrual of stress depleted the overall capacity for adaptive change in the system and eventually culminated in a partial breakdown of the new medical service.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85213287270&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117634
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117634
M3 - Article
C2 - 39740632
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 366
JO - Social Science & Medicine
JF - Social Science & Medicine
M1 - 117634
ER -