Using Loose Coupling Theory to Understand Interprofessional Collaborative Practice on a Transplantation Team

Authors

  • Lorelei Lingard Center for Education Research & Innovation and Department of Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University
  • Allan McDougall Health & Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University
  • Mark Levstik Division of Gastrenterology, Department of Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University
  • Natasha Chandok Division of Gastrenterology, Department of Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University
  • Marlee M Spafford University of Waterloo School of Optometry
  • Catherine Schryer School of Professional Communication, Ryerson University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22230/jripe.2014v3n3a112

Keywords:

Team communication, Interprofessional collaboration, distributed teams, Ethnography, Organizational theory

Abstract

Background: A central paradox dwells at the heart of interprofessional care: the tension between autonomy and interdependence. This report uses an ethnographic study to understand how this tension shapes collaborative practice on a distributed, interprofessional transplant team in a Canadian teaching hospital.

Methods & Findings: Over four months, two trained observers conducted an ethnography through 162 observation hours, 30 field interviews and 17 formal interviews with 39 consented participants. Data collection and inductive analysis proceeded iteratively. Loose coupling theory was used as a resource to make sense of key themes. We describe the transplant team as a constellation made up of core, inter-service, and outside hospital dimensions. Next, we trace the nature of coupling activities within and across these dimensions of the team constellation, focusing on recurring communication challenges which can signal the relationship between autonomy and interdependence in collaborative acts.

Conclusions: We conclude that coupling is fluid and subject to human agency, and that the tension between autonomy and interdependence can be highly productive. Team members, including patients, may negotiate and construct their relations on an autonomy/interdependence axis for strategic purposes. Far from being trapped in a paradox, team members use autonomy and interdependence as resources to achieve complex goals in collaborative settings.

 

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Published

2014-02-06

Issue

Section

Articles: Empirical Research