Improving client-centred care and services: the role of front/back-office configurations.

AIM This paper is a report of a study conducted to explore the application of designing front- and back-office work resulting in efficient client-centred care in healthcare organizations that supply home care, welfare and domestic services. BACKGROUND Front/back-office configurations reflect a neglected domain of design decisions in the development of more client-centred processes and structures without incurring major cost increases. METHOD Based on a literature search, a framework of four front/back-office configurations was constructed. To illustrate the usefulness of this framework, a single, longitudinal case study was performed in a large organization, which provides home care, welfare and domestic services for a sustained period (2005-2006). FINDINGS The case study illustrates how front/back-office design decisions are related to the complexity of the clients' demands and the strategic objectives of an organization. The constructed framework guides the practical development of front/back-office designs, and shows how each design contributes differently to such performance objectives as quality, speed and efficiency. CONCLUSIONS The front/back-office configurations presented comprise an important first step in elaborating client-centred care and service provision to the operational level. It helps healthcare organizations to become more responsive and to provide efficient client-centred care and services when approaching demand in a well-tuned manner. In addition to its applicability in home care, we believe that a deliberate front/back-office configuration also has potential in other fields of health care.

[1]  C. Medlin,et al.  Case Study Research , 2012 .

[2]  E. Molleman,et al.  How Health Care Complexity Leads to Cooperation and Affects the Autonomy of Health Care Professionals , 2008, Health Care Analysis.

[3]  R. Grol,et al.  Quality of integrated care for patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer , 2007, Cancer.

[4]  J. Schols,et al.  Fragiele ouderen: De identificatie van een risicovolle populatie , 2007 .

[5]  Jan Willem de Vries,et al.  Structuring front office and back office work in service delivery systems: An empirical study of three design decisions , 2007 .

[6]  Johannes T. Voordijk,et al.  The concept of modularity in supply chains : A multiple case-study in the construction industry , 2006 .

[7]  Richard M J Bohmer,et al.  Medicine's Service Challenge: Blending Custom and Standard Care , 2005, Health care management review.

[8]  Graham Clark,et al.  Service Operations Management: Improving Service Delivery , 2005 .

[9]  Sebastian K. Fixson,et al.  Product architecture assessment: a tool to link product, process, and supply chain design decisions , 2005 .

[10]  M. Hossein Safizadeh,et al.  An empirical analysis of financial services processes with a front‐office or back‐office orientation , 2003 .

[11]  L. Casalino,et al.  Focused factories? Physician-owned specialty facilities. , 2003, Health affairs.

[12]  I. Woittiez,et al.  Client demands and the allocation of home care in the Netherlands. A multinomial logit model of client types, care needs and referrals. , 2003, Health policy.

[13]  Richard D. Metters,et al.  A typology of de-coupling strategies in mixed services , 2000 .

[14]  William L. Berry,et al.  Approaches to mass customization: configurations and empirical validation , 2000 .

[15]  P. Bower,et al.  Patient-centredness: a conceptual framework and review of the empirical literature. , 2000, Social science & medicine.

[16]  J. Morse Qualitative data analysis (2nd ed): Mathew B. Miles and A. Michael Huberman. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1994. Price: $65.00 hardback, $32.00 paperback. 238 pp , 1996 .

[17]  R B Chase,et al.  Beefing up operations in service firms. , 1991, Sloan management review.

[18]  Rikard Larsson,et al.  Organization and Customer: Managing Design and Coordination of Services , 1989 .

[19]  Richard B. Chase,et al.  DESIGNING HIGH‐CONTACT SERVICE SYSTEMS: APPLICATION TO BRANCHES OF A SAVINGS AND LOAN* , 1984 .

[20]  David A. Tansik,et al.  The Customer Contact Model for Organization Design , 1983 .

[21]  Richard B. Chase,et al.  The Customer Contact Approach to Services: Theoretical Bases and Practical Extensions , 1981, Oper. Res..

[22]  R B Chase,et al.  Where does the customer fit in a service operation? , 1978, Harvard business review.

[23]  A. V. D. Ven,et al.  Determinants of Coordination Modes within Organizations , 1976 .

[24]  Graham Clark,et al.  Service Operations Management , 2001 .

[25]  Stuart Chambers,et al.  Operations management , 1994 .