Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town

Background Emergency centres (ECs) serve as a main entry point for patients into hospitals, and patients that present here are undifferentiated with varying levels of acuity. Uncertainty, interruptions, multiple – often conflicting – priorities, and gaps in information flow are inherent to EC work...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cunningham, Charmaine
Other Authors: Wallis, Lee A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Emergency Medicine 2020
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613227105386496
access_status_str Open Access
author Cunningham, Charmaine
author2 Wallis, Lee A
author_browse Cunningham, Charmaine
Wallis, Lee A
author_facet Wallis, Lee A
Cunningham, Charmaine
author_sort Cunningham, Charmaine
collection Thesis
description Background Emergency centres (ECs) serve as a main entry point for patients into hospitals, and patients that present here are undifferentiated with varying levels of acuity. Uncertainty, interruptions, multiple – often conflicting – priorities, and gaps in information flow are inherent to EC work practices, making it a high-risk environment for operational failure. The EC team, the core of which is formed by doctors and nurses, needs the ability to collaboratively and reliably sense and respond to the constant change and flux of information. This depends on the interactions and sense-making of the EC team. Objectives People give meaning to situations through the process of sense-making; they then subjectively construct their reality and share it via plausible stories regarding their situation and environment. The main objective of this study was to explore the collective team-based sense-making of the operational challenges and decisions within the EC. This interprofessionalstudy focused on the dynamics and negotiations within the EC as a complex adaptive system. Methods This exploratory study used narrative-based inquiry with abductive reasoning to meet the objectives. It was divided into two sections. The first was a thick description of the EC context, daily operations and processes. Then, using the SenseMaker® tool, we captured stories about a situation that stood out to participants, and thus mattered to them. Using this novel method, once they told their story, the storytellers self-analysed their stories within a specially designed framework. The results were then explored to find patterns based on the perspectives of sense-making. Results There is no proof of interprofessional sense-making in the EC, and if it occurs it is due to the informal networks between doctors and nurses, and despite formal structure. There is an operational disconnect between doctors, nurses and management, which is caused by information asymmetry, poor feedback loops and disparate communication channels. Because there is no collective sense-making, the EC team is vulnerable to operational failure and crises. Currently, they respond to operational challenges via quick fixes that result in constant firefighting, the impact of which could be seen by the extensive use of war-related metaphors in their stories.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32215
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:47.627Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Division of Emergency Medicine
publisherStr Division of Emergency Medicine
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32215 The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town Cunningham, Charmaine Wallis, Lee A Vosloo, Marietjie Emergency Medicine Background Emergency centres (ECs) serve as a main entry point for patients into hospitals, and patients that present here are undifferentiated with varying levels of acuity. Uncertainty, interruptions, multiple – often conflicting – priorities, and gaps in information flow are inherent to EC work practices, making it a high-risk environment for operational failure. The EC team, the core of which is formed by doctors and nurses, needs the ability to collaboratively and reliably sense and respond to the constant change and flux of information. This depends on the interactions and sense-making of the EC team. Objectives People give meaning to situations through the process of sense-making; they then subjectively construct their reality and share it via plausible stories regarding their situation and environment. The main objective of this study was to explore the collective team-based sense-making of the operational challenges and decisions within the EC. This interprofessionalstudy focused on the dynamics and negotiations within the EC as a complex adaptive system. Methods This exploratory study used narrative-based inquiry with abductive reasoning to meet the objectives. It was divided into two sections. The first was a thick description of the EC context, daily operations and processes. Then, using the SenseMaker® tool, we captured stories about a situation that stood out to participants, and thus mattered to them. Using this novel method, once they told their story, the storytellers self-analysed their stories within a specially designed framework. The results were then explored to find patterns based on the perspectives of sense-making. Results There is no proof of interprofessional sense-making in the EC, and if it occurs it is due to the informal networks between doctors and nurses, and despite formal structure. There is an operational disconnect between doctors, nurses and management, which is caused by information asymmetry, poor feedback loops and disparate communication channels. Because there is no collective sense-making, the EC team is vulnerable to operational failure and crises. Currently, they respond to operational challenges via quick fixes that result in constant firefighting, the impact of which could be seen by the extensive use of war-related metaphors in their stories. 2020-09-10T09:35:41Z 2020-09-10T09:35:41Z 2020 2020-09-10T09:17:14Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32215 eng application/pdf Division of Emergency Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Cunningham, Charmaine
The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town
title_full The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town
title_fullStr The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town
title_short The adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the Emergency Centre. A SenseMaker® study in Emergency Centres within Cape Town
title_sort adaptive capability of the operational team to respond to challenges in the emergency centre a sensemaker r study in emergency centres within cape town
topic Emergency Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32215
work_keys_str_mv AT cunninghamcharmaine theadaptivecapabilityoftheoperationalteamtorespondtochallengesintheemergencycentreasensemakerstudyinemergencycentreswithincapetown
AT cunninghamcharmaine adaptivecapabilityoftheoperationalteamtorespondtochallengesintheemergencycentreasensemakerstudyinemergencycentreswithincapetown