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Review
. 2022 Jul;27(3):242-252.
doi: 10.1177/13558196221076699. Epub 2022 May 5.

The social networks of hospital staff: A realist synthesis

Affiliations
Review

The social networks of hospital staff: A realist synthesis

Claire Blacklock et al. J Health Serv Res Policy. 2022 Jul.

Abstract

Objectives: The social ties people have with one another are known to influence behaviour, and how information is accessed and interpreted. It is unclear, however, how the social networks that exist in multi-professional health care workplaces might be used to improve quality in hospitals. This paper develops explanatory theory using realist synthesis to illuminate the details and significance of the social ties between health care workers. Specifically we ask: How, why, for whom, to what extent and in what context, do the social ties of staff within a hospital influence quality of service delivery, including quality improvement?

Methods: From a total of 75 included documents identified through an extensive systematic literature search, data were extracted and analysed to identify emergent explanatory statements.

Results: The synthesis found that within the hospital workforce, an individual's place in the social whole can be understood across four identified domains: (1) social group, (2) hierarchy, (3) bridging distance and (4) discourse. Thirty-five context-mechanism-outcome configurations were developed across these domains.

Conclusions: The relative position of individual health care workers within the overall social network in hospitals is associated with influence and agency. As such, power to bring about change is inequitably and socially situated, and subject to specific contexts. The findings of this realist synthesis offer a lens through which to understand social ties in hospitals. The findings can help identify possible strategies for intervention to improve communication and distribution of power, for individual, team and wider multi-professional behavioural change in hospitals.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of conflicting interests: GW is Deputy Chair of the United Kingdom’s National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment Prioritisation Committee: Integrated Community Health and Social Care (A) and; a member of the United Kingdom’s National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment Prioritisation Committee: Integrated Community Health and Social Care (A) methods group.

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