AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

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Chinese physicians showed four responses to clinical pathways

A physician in a white coat with a stethoscope reviews medical documentation with a patient in a blue hospital gown in a clinical office setting, with a framed medical illustration visible on the wall behind them.
Research area:Business, Management and AccountingOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementHealthcare Systems and Reforms

What the study found

Physicians in China's public hospitals did not respond to clinical pathways in just one way. The study identified four response types: ignoring, coerced, decoupling, and embracing, each linked to different levels of clinical autonomy and job satisfaction.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors conclude that these findings broaden how professionals' reactions to rationalizing tools are understood. They also suggest the study shows multiple pathways to clinical autonomy and helps explain how professionals navigate institutional complexity.

What the researchers tested

The researchers used survey data from 1,116 physicians in China's public hospitals. They examined physicians' reactions to clinical pathway implementation and analyzed the results with cluster analysis, a method for grouping similar response patterns.

What worked and what didn't

Ignoring was associated with avoiding pathways while maintaining autonomy. Coerced responses were linked to imposed pathways that reduced autonomy and satisfaction, while decoupling involved superficial adoption that preserved autonomy.

Embracing was associated with active participation in pathway implementation and enforcement, and these physicians experienced high satisfaction and autonomy. The abstract does not report additional quantitative comparisons beyond these four clusters.

What to keep in mind

The summary provided here is limited to the abstract, so details about the survey measures, the clinical pathway content, and the cluster analysis outputs are not described. The abstract also does not state further limitations.

Key points

  • The study identified four physician response types to clinical pathways: ignoring, coerced, decoupling, and embracing.
  • Ignoring and decoupling were both associated with maintaining clinical autonomy, though in different ways.
  • Coerced responses were linked to reduced autonomy and job satisfaction.
  • Embracing was associated with active participation in pathway implementation and enforcement, along with high autonomy and satisfaction.
  • The researchers analyzed survey data from 1,116 physicians in China's public hospitals using cluster analysis.

Disclosure

Research title:
Chinese physicians showed four responses to clinical pathways
Authors:
Lei JIN, Lin Tao
Institutions:
Chinese University of Hong Kong, Peking University
Publication date:
2026-02-26
OpenAlex record:
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AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.