How do hospital goals resonate with leaders, clinicians, managers, and patient and family partners? A critical discourse analysis of institutional logics
Umair Majid, Kerry Kuluski, Pia Kontos, Carolyn Steele Gray, Chen-Wei Yang, Philipos Petros Gile, Philipos Petros Gile

TL;DR
This study examines how hospital goals for patient and family engagement are understood by different hospital staff and partners through the lens of institutional logics.
Contribution
The study applies critical discourse analysis to explore how institutional logics shape the understanding of patient engagement goals in a hospital setting.
Findings
Hospital documents and participants emphasized medical and care professional logics, focusing on patient well-being and care quality.
Executives and directors showed some alignment with public management logic through community engagement and equity initiatives.
Market logic was minimally present, mentioned in one document and by two managers regarding health service sustainability.
Abstract
In pursuit of building person-centered health systems, patient and family engagement (PE) has emerged as a strategy to promote care quality, well-being, and patient experience in hospitals. Institutional logics suggests that institutions are guided by dominant belief systems referred to as logics that represent the fundamental narratives that shape an organization’s ethos, decision-making processes and behaviors. In healthcare, four logics have been identified: public management (i.e., community health and well-being), market (i.e., efficiency and cost containment), medical professional (i.e., care quality), and care professional (i.e., patient well-being). The objective of this research was to explore what hospital documents reveal about the hospital’s goals for PE and how staff and patient and family partners understand and describe such goals. This study employed critical discourse…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsManagement and Organizational Studies · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Healthcare Policy and Management
