Title: Diversity in Team Composition and Performance and Creativity
1Diversity in Team Composition and Performance and
Creativity
- Jill A. Marsteller, PhD MPP
- Assistant Professor,
- Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
- 2007 Health Workforce Interest Group Meeting,
Orlando, FL Saturday, June 2, 2007
2Background
- Interdisciplinary teams are used often in
healthcare - Team members vary in occupation, training,
experience, and demographic background - Too many cooks in the kitchen vs. Two heads
are better than one
3Definitions
- Diversitytwo types
- Visible age, gender, (race/ ethnicity)
- Invisible occupation, tenure, education
- Chronic care QI team--three or more nurses, PCPs,
specialists, administrators, etc. who work to
improve management of asthma, diabetes,
depression, or congestive heart failure
4Performance Vs. Creativity
- Performancereaching a set target
- Creativityproduction of new ideas, testing and
modifying procedures
5How diversity works
- Diversity--gtSocial Categorization,
Identification, Impersonal Attraction--gtBias,
Negative Conflict, Low Cohesion--gtNegative
Outcomes - Diversity--gtAiring Multiple Perspectives--gt
Positive Conflict--gtImproved Decision-making--gtPos
itive Outcomes - Literature--Jury is out on diversity
6Research Questions
- Does occupational diversity have different
associations with performance as compared to
creativity? - Are there mediators of the effects of
occupational diversity?
7Fig. 1--Proposed Conceptual Model for the
Relation of Nonracial Diversity to Performance
(unmeasured process)
(-)
Diversity
Team Performance
-Visible diversity -Invisible diversity
-Interaction variables
()
(-)
Unifying Phenomena
Social categorization, identification, group
attraction conflict coordination
problems
-Goal attainment -Patient outcomes -Met
expectations
(Mediator)
Based on Milliken, Bartel and Kurtzberg (2001),
Tsui and Gutek (1999) and Jackson, May and
Whitney (1995)
8Fig. 2--Proposed Conceptual Model for the
Relation of Nonracial Diversity to Creativity and
Productivity
(unmeasured process)
(-)
Diversity
Team Productivity and Creativity
-Visible diversity -Invisible diversity
-Interaction variables
Phenomena Stressing the Individual
()
Social categorization, identification, group
attraction conflict coordination
problems
(-)
-Number of actions taken -Novelty of actions
(Mediator)
Based on Milliken, Bartel and Kurtzberg (2001),
Tsui and Gutek (1999) and Jackson, May and
Whitney (1995)
9Study Design and Population
- Secondary data analysis
- OLS and Logistic regression analysis
- 40 teams from hospitals, physician groups,
clinics, health plans, or health systems
participating in 3 Improving Chronic Illness Care
Collaboratives (evaluation-ICICE) - Surveyed members of multi-disciplinary teams
- Size 1 to 14 members
- As many as 12 occupational categories
10Data
- Level of analysis--the team
- Some measures constructed for the team from
individual-level data - means
- CVs (Allison 1978)
- Heterogeneity index, H 1-S pi2 (Blau 1977)
- Some measures collected at team level
11Variables
12Analytic Methods
- Mediated regression analysis using repeated OLS
(Baron and Kenny 1986) - Examines, in additive steps
- controls
- main effects of variables of interest
- moderating effects
- mediators (to see if relationships change)
- Conditions for pure mediation
- Independent variables affect the mediator
- Independent variables affect the DV
- Mediator affects the DV when included with
independents, effect of independent variables is
reduced - An exploratory analysis
13Results--Simple Statistics
14Results--T1 Self-Assessed Team Performance
15Results--Number of Changes in Care Practices
16Results--Innovativeness
17Results--T2 Self-Assessed Team Performance
18What have we learned?
- Occupational diversity had a positive effect on
T1 self-assessed performance - But no effect on T2 self-assessment
- And no effect on the 2 creative outcomes
- So its good for starters and makes no difference
after a while, when the positive start-up effect
is accounted for
19Limitations
- Small N means that sophisticated analysis of all
effects is impossible. Models are stretched to
their limits. - Multicollinearity likely mutes some potentially
significant effects of diversity measures.
20Conclusions
- Diversity can be one possible barrier to team
quality improvement - But sometimes is a boon
- Insight into how to maximize benefits of teamwork
- Keep teams together longer (change in diversitys
effects over time) - Seek to manage negative effects of diversity with
cohesion-building efforts - Encourage individual participation and grant
autonomy