A Nursing Home and Its Organizational Climate: An Ethnography
By (Author) Bonnie C. Farmer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
18th June 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Health systems and services
Geriatric medicine
Anthropology
362.160973
Hardback
176
Nursing home reform, Professor Farmer asserts, calls for increased emphasis upon issues related to life rather than care. Organizational climate, which reflects the nursing home's unique position to impact life issues, provides a conceptual framework for effective interventions, evaluations, and ultimately meaningful reform. The general atmosphere of most nursing homes remains overwhelmingly negative in spite of those few homes that are credited with excellence. Professor Farmer believes that the concept of organizational climate holds promise for better understanding the complexities and impact of atmosphere in any one nursing home. At the same time, organizational climate as a concept is poorly understood. There is a need to rethink the concept and return to the original notion of weather as its metaphor. Farmer attempts this in her case study by describing organizational climate where it can best be captured. Practitioners of long-term care, from the fields of administration, geronotology, nursing, nutrition, policy makers, occupational and physical therapy, social work, and therapeutic recreation will find the insights of this study of great value, as will graduate students, scholars, and others concerned with organizational studies and issues in gerontology.
BONNIE CASHIN FARMER is an Assistant Professor of Nursing at Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, CT. Her previous appointments include university teaching positions and practice at the municipal, county, and state levels of health care.