Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.

The ageing population is a powerful and transformative demographic force. The World Health Organization (WHO) has encouraged the development of an age-friendly hospital (AFH) network. However, no specific implementation strategies or best practices of AFH standards have been produced. This study sou...

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Main Authors: Ying-Ling Kuo, I-Ju Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213496
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spelling doaj-0294842b7bc34d108fe93636254ad3b02021-03-03T20:46:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01144e021349610.1371/journal.pone.0213496Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.Ying-Ling KuoI-Ju ChenThe ageing population is a powerful and transformative demographic force. The World Health Organization (WHO) has encouraged the development of an age-friendly hospital (AFH) network. However, no specific implementation strategies or best practices of AFH standards have been produced. This study sought to apply Kotter's change model to the elements included in a successful AFH certification process and to evaluate the changes in employees' knowledge of ageing and their attitudes toward the elderly. This was an observational study that utilized a pre- and posttest design, before and after an age-friendly hospital certification process was implemented. Participants were 163 hospital employees in Taiwan, who completed both pre- and postquestionnaires. The self-administered online questionnaire consisted of three sections: The Facts on Ageing Quiz, the Geriatric Attitudes Scale, and a demographic questionnaire. Following introduction of the intervention, the change process began, and later Kotter's model was brought in as a descriptive framework. The results showed that Kotter's eight-step framework is a good choice for thinking about how to change practice and make healthcare more age-friendly. Employee knowledge of ageing and their attitudes toward the elderly improved after this certification process. Appointing a chief executive officer, forming a steering committee, obtaining interdepartmental and interdisciplinary cooperation, and "soliciting support" for new policies from all employees, were identified as key factors influencing the success of age-friendly hospital (AFH) certification. This is the first study to apply Kotter's eight-step framework of organizational change to an AFH certification process.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213496
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ying-Ling Kuo
I-Ju Chen
spellingShingle Ying-Ling Kuo
I-Ju Chen
Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ying-Ling Kuo
I-Ju Chen
author_sort Ying-Ling Kuo
title Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.
title_short Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.
title_full Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.
title_fullStr Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.
title_full_unstemmed Facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: Strategies and effects.
title_sort facilitating a change model in age-friendly hospital certification: strategies and effects.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The ageing population is a powerful and transformative demographic force. The World Health Organization (WHO) has encouraged the development of an age-friendly hospital (AFH) network. However, no specific implementation strategies or best practices of AFH standards have been produced. This study sought to apply Kotter's change model to the elements included in a successful AFH certification process and to evaluate the changes in employees' knowledge of ageing and their attitudes toward the elderly. This was an observational study that utilized a pre- and posttest design, before and after an age-friendly hospital certification process was implemented. Participants were 163 hospital employees in Taiwan, who completed both pre- and postquestionnaires. The self-administered online questionnaire consisted of three sections: The Facts on Ageing Quiz, the Geriatric Attitudes Scale, and a demographic questionnaire. Following introduction of the intervention, the change process began, and later Kotter's model was brought in as a descriptive framework. The results showed that Kotter's eight-step framework is a good choice for thinking about how to change practice and make healthcare more age-friendly. Employee knowledge of ageing and their attitudes toward the elderly improved after this certification process. Appointing a chief executive officer, forming a steering committee, obtaining interdepartmental and interdisciplinary cooperation, and "soliciting support" for new policies from all employees, were identified as key factors influencing the success of age-friendly hospital (AFH) certification. This is the first study to apply Kotter's eight-step framework of organizational change to an AFH certification process.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213496
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