There has been a longstanding interest in understanding how new management practices and organizational structures are diffused through the health care system. This article reviews current literature on innovation and diffusion to provide insight into how new management practices and organizational structures are introduced into the system. Understanding the process may help in accommodating new developments and provide managerial opportunities to take a more active role in encouraging or discouraging their further evolution.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
RogersEM. Diffusion of innovation. 3rd ed.New York: Free Press, 1983.
2.
RogersEM. Diffusion of innovation. 4th ed.New York: Free Press, 1995a.
3.
TornatzkyLGKleinKJ. Innovation characteristics and innovation adoption-implementation: A meta-analysis of findings. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management1982; 29(1): 28–45.
4.
RothmanJ. Planning and organizing for social change: Action principles from social science research. New York: Columbia University Press, 1974.
5.
FliegelECKivlinJESekhonGS. A cross-national comparison of farmers' perceptions of innovations as related to adoption behaviour. Rural Sociology1968; 33: 434–449.
6.
RogersEM. Lessons for guidelines from the diffusion of innovations. Journal of Quality Improvement1995b; 21(7): 324–328.
7.
GreerAL. Advances in the study of diffusion of innovation in health care organizations. Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly: Health and Society1977; 55: 505–532.
8.
KimberlyJREvaniskoMJ. Organizational innovation: The influence of individual, organizational, and contextual factors on hospital adoption of technological and administrative innovations. Academy of Management Journal1981; 24(4): 689–713.
9.
DamanpourF. Organizational innovation: A meta-analysis of effects of determinants and moderators. Academy of Management Journal1991; 34(3): 555–590.
10.
LewisLKSeiboldDR. Innovation modification during intraorganizational adoption. Academy of Management Review1993; 18(2): 322–354.
11.
ArndtMBigelowB. The adoption of corporate restructuring. Hospital and Health Services Administration1995; 40(3): 332–347.
12.
AbrahamsonERosenkopfL. Institutional and competitive bandwagons: Using mathematical modelling as a tool to explore innovation diffusion. Academy of Management Review1993; 18(3): 487–517.
13.
ShapermanJBackerTE. The role of knowledge utilization in adopting innovations from academic medical centers. Hospital and Health Services Administration1995; 40(3): 401–413.
14.
BurnsLRWholeyDR. Adoption and abandonment of matrix management programs: Effects of organizational characteristics and interorganizational networks. Academy of Management Journal1993; 36(1): 106–138.
15.
GlandonGLCounteMA. An analysis of the adoption of managerial innovation: Cost accounting systems in hospitals. Health Services Management Research1995; 8(4): 243–251.
16.
DownsGWMohrLB. Conceptual issues in the study of innovation. Administrative Science Quarterly1976; 21: 700–714.
17.
MeyerADGoesJB. Organizational assimilation of innovations: A multilevel contextual analysis. Academy of Management Journal1988; 31(4): 897–923.
18.
ScottWR. Innovation in medical care organizations: A synthetic review. Medical Care Review1990; 47(2): 165–192.
19.
GreerAL. The state of the art versus the state of the science. International Journal of Technology Assessment1988; 4: 5–26.
20.
AbrahamsonE. Managerial fads and fashions: The diffusion and rejection of innovations. Academy of Management Review1991; 16(3): 586–612.
21.
GreerAL. The shape of resistance … The shapers of change. Journal of Quality Improvement1995; 21(7): 328–332.
22.
FergusonJ. The NIH Consensus Development Program. Journal of Quality Improvement1995; 21(7): 332–336.
23.
LomasJ. Words without action? The production, dissemination, and impact of consensus recommendations. Annual Review of Public Health1989; 12: 41–65.
24.
LomasJ. Do practice guidelines guide practice? The effect of a consensus statement on the practice of physicians. New England Journal of Medicine1991; 321: 1306–1311.
25.
WarnerKE. A “Desperation-reaction” model of medical diffusion. Health Services Research1975; 10: 369–383.