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Informating the Clan:
Controlling Physicians’ Costs and Outcomes
Rajiv Kohli and William
J. Kettinger
Special Issue on Action Research
Volume 28, Number 3
Abstract
Past literature recognizes the power of information
technology to establish greater transparency and, in turn, the
potential for greater control .Theoretical perspectives such as informating and agency theory
describe situations whereby legitimized management authority can
control goal divergence by implementing information systems to better
monitor agents’ behavior and outcomes. But what happens when the
principal does not possess legitimacy to impose an agent’s use of
information and/or behavioral conformance? This study
investigates this situation. Through an action research project,
a physicians’ profiling system (PPS) was used to monitor and benchmark
physicians’ clinical practices and outcomes resulting in changed
practice behaviors in closer congruence with management’s goals.
The PPS project represents a successful attempt of a hospital’s
management (principal) to "informate the clan" of physicians (agents)
to reduce clinical procedural costs and adopt practices benchmarked to
produce better outcomes. This research moves beyond directly
controlling informated workers through legitimized managerial authority
to a better understanding of how to informate autonomous
professionals. Emerging insights suggest that a clan can be
informated if the principal can improve the perceived legitimacy of the
information (the message), legitimize the technical messenger
(customized user interface), legitimize the human messenger (boundary
spanners and influential clan members), and facilitate an environment
where clan-based discussion, using the information provided by the
principal, is incorporated into the process of concertive
control.
Keywords: Action research, informating, clan, control and
IT implementation, IT-based performance monitoring, agency theory,
concertive control, health care information systems
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