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Australian Health Review Australian Health Review Society
Journal of the Australian Healthcare & Hospitals Association
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Responses by hospital complaints managers to recommendations for systemic reforms by health complaints commissions

Jennifer Smith-Merry A D , Merrilyn Walton B , Judith Healy C and Coletta Hobbs B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, PO Box 170, Lidcombe, NSW 1825, Australia.

B School of Public Health, Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Edward Ford Building, NSW 2006, Australia. Email: merrilyn.walton@sydney.edu.au; coletta.hobbs@sydney.edu.au

C School of Regulation and Global Governance, College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University, ACT 0200, Australia. Email: judith.healy@anu.edu.au

D Corresponding author. Email: jennifer.smith-merry@sydney.edu.au

Australian Health Review 41(5) 527-532 https://doi.org/10.1071/AH16138
Submitted: 29 July 2016  Accepted: 30 August 2016   Published: 21 October 2016

Abstract

Objective This paper explores how hospital complaints managers react to recommendations for systemic quality reforms by health complaints commissions in response to complaints by patients in Queensland and New South Wales.

Methods Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with complaints managers in 17 hospitals. Interview transcripts were then thematically analysed and data on responses to health complaint commissions was organised in relation to Valerie Braithwaite’s typology of motivational postures.

Results Respondents supported involvement by an independent authority where patients had serious complaints about the services they received in hospital, but wanted more negotiation with commissions on service improvement recommendations.

Conclusions Hospital complaints managers mostly responded as virtuous or rational actors to the symbolic power of complaints commissions. This may be context dependent because Australian health commissions operate within a pro-reform context as a result of recent publicity around health system failures.

What is known about the topic? Little is known about regulatory relationships between complaints commissions and hospitals. There has been no Australian research considering how complaints managers respond to commission recommendations for quality improvements and reforms to hospital services.

What does the paper add? The paper uses a novel theoretical framework based on regulatory theory to understand and describe the reactions of complaints managers to commission recommendations.

What are the implications for practitioners? Commissions should seek commentary from complaints managers through open dialogue before making final recommendations. This will ease the progress of reforms and make recommendations more acceptable and ‘genuine’ in the specific context of the hospital.

Additional keywords: health ombudsman, patient grievances, quality regulation.


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