Purpose Organizational innovation relies on the employees' active participation in improving extant processes and practices. In particular, it has been argued that employees' engagement triggers innovation-oriented behaviors at work. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of evidence of the implications of work engagement on the health professionals' innovation propensity. The article intends to push forward what we currently know about this issue, providing some food for thought to scholars and practitioners. Design/methodology/approach A path analysis based on ordinary least square (OLS) regression and 10,000 bootstrap samples was designed to investigate the direct and indirect implications of employees' engagement on innovative behaviors at work in a large sample of health professionals operating in Europe. The quality of employee-manager relationships and the organizational climate were included as mediating variables affecting the relationship between work engagement and propensity to innovation-oriented behaviors. Findings The research findings highlighted that being engaged at work fosters the willingness of health professionals to partake in the improvement of organizational processes and practices. The positive implications of employees' engagement on innovative behaviors at work are catalyzed by good employee-manager relationships and a positive organizational climate. Practical implications Healthcare organizations should uphold the health professional's engagement to enhance their innovation potential. Targeted interventions are needed to merge work engagement with the enhancement of the organizational environment in which health professionals accomplish their activities. A positive organizational climate enacts an empowering work environment, which further incentivizes innovation. Originality/value The article adopts a micro-level perspective to investigate the triggers of innovative behaviors among healthcare professionals, providing evidence which is relevant for theory and practice.

Palumbo, R. (2021). Engaging to innovate: an investigation into the implications of engagement at work on innovative behaviors in healthcare organizations. JOURNAL OF HEALTH ORGANISATION & MANAGEMENT, 35(8), 1025-1045 [10.1108/JHOM-02-2021-0072].

Engaging to innovate: an investigation into the implications of engagement at work on innovative behaviors in healthcare organizations

Palumbo R.
2021-06-25

Abstract

Purpose Organizational innovation relies on the employees' active participation in improving extant processes and practices. In particular, it has been argued that employees' engagement triggers innovation-oriented behaviors at work. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of evidence of the implications of work engagement on the health professionals' innovation propensity. The article intends to push forward what we currently know about this issue, providing some food for thought to scholars and practitioners. Design/methodology/approach A path analysis based on ordinary least square (OLS) regression and 10,000 bootstrap samples was designed to investigate the direct and indirect implications of employees' engagement on innovative behaviors at work in a large sample of health professionals operating in Europe. The quality of employee-manager relationships and the organizational climate were included as mediating variables affecting the relationship between work engagement and propensity to innovation-oriented behaviors. Findings The research findings highlighted that being engaged at work fosters the willingness of health professionals to partake in the improvement of organizational processes and practices. The positive implications of employees' engagement on innovative behaviors at work are catalyzed by good employee-manager relationships and a positive organizational climate. Practical implications Healthcare organizations should uphold the health professional's engagement to enhance their innovation potential. Targeted interventions are needed to merge work engagement with the enhancement of the organizational environment in which health professionals accomplish their activities. A positive organizational climate enacts an empowering work environment, which further incentivizes innovation. Originality/value The article adopts a micro-level perspective to investigate the triggers of innovative behaviors among healthcare professionals, providing evidence which is relevant for theory and practice.
25-giu-2021
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore SECS-P/10 - ORGANIZZAZIONE AZIENDALE
Settore ECON-08/A - Organizzazione aziendale
English
Engagement
Health professionals
Innovation
Organizational climate
Working environment
Delivery of Health Care
Health Personnel
Organizational Innovation
Organizations
Work Engagement
https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JHOM-02-2021-0072/full/html
Palumbo, R. (2021). Engaging to innovate: an investigation into the implications of engagement at work on innovative behaviors in healthcare organizations. JOURNAL OF HEALTH ORGANISATION & MANAGEMENT, 35(8), 1025-1045 [10.1108/JHOM-02-2021-0072].
Palumbo, R
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/289395
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