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Volume 29, Issue 6: December, 2002
Abstract
Management and Governance Processes in Community Health
Coalitions: A Procedural Justice Perspective
Bryan J. Weiner, PhD, Jeffrey A. Alexander, PhD and Stephen
M. Shortell, PhD
Community-based coalitions are a popular strategy for promoting
community health despite the fact that coalitions often fail
to achieve measurable results. Using a procedural justice
framework, this study seeks to advance knowledge about the
relationship between coalition governance and management processes
and indicators of coalition functioning. Member survey data
from 25 coalitions participating in the Community Care Network
Demonstration Program were analyzed using two-stage least
squares regression. Results show that personal influence in
decision making, decision process clarity, and collaborative
conflict resolution were significantly associated with procedural
fairness perceptions. Procedural fairness perceptions, in
turn, were positively associated with member satisfaction
with coalition decisions, but not personal engagement in the
coalition or organizational integration of coalition goals
and activities. Personal influence in decision making and
collaborative conflict resolution also exhibited direct relationships
with all three indicators of coalition functioning examined
in the study.
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