Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway : a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers. / Heltveit-Olsen, Silje Rebekka; Lunde, Lene; Brænd, Anja Maria; Spehar, Ivan; Høye, Sigurd; Skoglund, Ingmarie; Sundvall, Pär-Daniel; Fossum, Guro Haugen; Straand, Jørund; Risør, Mette Bech.

I: Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, Bind 42, Nr. 1, 2024, s. 214-224 .

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Heltveit-Olsen, SR, Lunde, L, Brænd, AM, Spehar, I, Høye, S, Skoglund, I, Sundvall, P-D, Fossum, GH, Straand, J & Risør, MB 2024, 'Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers', Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, bind 42, nr. 1, s. 214-224 . https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2023.2301562

APA

Heltveit-Olsen, S. R., Lunde, L., Brænd, A. M., Spehar, I., Høye, S., Skoglund, I., Sundvall, P-D., Fossum, G. H., Straand, J., & Risør, M. B. (2024). Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 42(1), 214-224 . https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2023.2301562

Vancouver

Heltveit-Olsen SR, Lunde L, Brænd AM, Spehar I, Høye S, Skoglund I o.a. Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care. 2024;42(1):214-224 . https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2023.2301562

Author

Heltveit-Olsen, Silje Rebekka ; Lunde, Lene ; Brænd, Anja Maria ; Spehar, Ivan ; Høye, Sigurd ; Skoglund, Ingmarie ; Sundvall, Pär-Daniel ; Fossum, Guro Haugen ; Straand, Jørund ; Risør, Mette Bech. / Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway : a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers. I: Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care. 2024 ; Bind 42, Nr. 1. s. 214-224 .

Bibtex

@article{893bdfb6b76b45aa967e5634cb8c6dea,
title = "Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences and views of Norwegian Municipality Chief Medical Officers (MCMOs) on preparedness, collaboration, and organization during the COVID-19 pandemic to gain insight into local crisis management of value for future pandemic responses.DESIGN: Longitudinal qualitative interview study. We conducted semi-structured digital interviews with nine MCMOs working in different municipalities in Norway from September to December 2020. Five MCMOs were re-interviewed from January to April 2021. We used thematic analysis to analyze the data.RESULTS: Through the analysis, three major themes were identified in the material; 1) The view of preparedness changed from being low-priority and dormant to the desire to strengthen preparedness as a permanent measure; 2) The nature of the pandemic forced a change in internal and external communication and collaboration for the MCMOs towards direct dialogue, teamwork and digital networking; 3) The pandemic changed the role and position of the MCMO within the municipal organization. Although most MCMOs were given a leading role in the municipal pandemic response, some MCMOs experienced that they were not positioned to fully exercise their intended role. In our material, de-authorization of the MCMO role seemed to coincide with the increasing size and organizational complexity of the municipality.CONCLUSIONS: The Norwegian pandemic response and outcome have been regarded as successful internationally. Although the MCMOs managed to implement flexible and quick responses facilitated by teamwork, dialogue, and joint sensemaking, they also identified several challenges and shortcomings of the Norwegian pandemic preparedness requiring organizational and financial changes to sustain future health system resilience.",
author = "Heltveit-Olsen, {Silje Rebekka} and Lene Lunde and Br{\ae}nd, {Anja Maria} and Ivan Spehar and Sigurd H{\o}ye and Ingmarie Skoglund and P{\"a}r-Daniel Sundvall and Fossum, {Guro Haugen} and J{\o}rund Straand and Ris{\o}r, {Mette Bech}",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1080/02813432.2023.2301562",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
pages = "214--224 ",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care",
issn = "0281-3432",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Local management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway

T2 - a longitudinal interview study of municipality chief medical officers

AU - Heltveit-Olsen, Silje Rebekka

AU - Lunde, Lene

AU - Brænd, Anja Maria

AU - Spehar, Ivan

AU - Høye, Sigurd

AU - Skoglund, Ingmarie

AU - Sundvall, Pär-Daniel

AU - Fossum, Guro Haugen

AU - Straand, Jørund

AU - Risør, Mette Bech

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences and views of Norwegian Municipality Chief Medical Officers (MCMOs) on preparedness, collaboration, and organization during the COVID-19 pandemic to gain insight into local crisis management of value for future pandemic responses.DESIGN: Longitudinal qualitative interview study. We conducted semi-structured digital interviews with nine MCMOs working in different municipalities in Norway from September to December 2020. Five MCMOs were re-interviewed from January to April 2021. We used thematic analysis to analyze the data.RESULTS: Through the analysis, three major themes were identified in the material; 1) The view of preparedness changed from being low-priority and dormant to the desire to strengthen preparedness as a permanent measure; 2) The nature of the pandemic forced a change in internal and external communication and collaboration for the MCMOs towards direct dialogue, teamwork and digital networking; 3) The pandemic changed the role and position of the MCMO within the municipal organization. Although most MCMOs were given a leading role in the municipal pandemic response, some MCMOs experienced that they were not positioned to fully exercise their intended role. In our material, de-authorization of the MCMO role seemed to coincide with the increasing size and organizational complexity of the municipality.CONCLUSIONS: The Norwegian pandemic response and outcome have been regarded as successful internationally. Although the MCMOs managed to implement flexible and quick responses facilitated by teamwork, dialogue, and joint sensemaking, they also identified several challenges and shortcomings of the Norwegian pandemic preparedness requiring organizational and financial changes to sustain future health system resilience.

AB - OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences and views of Norwegian Municipality Chief Medical Officers (MCMOs) on preparedness, collaboration, and organization during the COVID-19 pandemic to gain insight into local crisis management of value for future pandemic responses.DESIGN: Longitudinal qualitative interview study. We conducted semi-structured digital interviews with nine MCMOs working in different municipalities in Norway from September to December 2020. Five MCMOs were re-interviewed from January to April 2021. We used thematic analysis to analyze the data.RESULTS: Through the analysis, three major themes were identified in the material; 1) The view of preparedness changed from being low-priority and dormant to the desire to strengthen preparedness as a permanent measure; 2) The nature of the pandemic forced a change in internal and external communication and collaboration for the MCMOs towards direct dialogue, teamwork and digital networking; 3) The pandemic changed the role and position of the MCMO within the municipal organization. Although most MCMOs were given a leading role in the municipal pandemic response, some MCMOs experienced that they were not positioned to fully exercise their intended role. In our material, de-authorization of the MCMO role seemed to coincide with the increasing size and organizational complexity of the municipality.CONCLUSIONS: The Norwegian pandemic response and outcome have been regarded as successful internationally. Although the MCMOs managed to implement flexible and quick responses facilitated by teamwork, dialogue, and joint sensemaking, they also identified several challenges and shortcomings of the Norwegian pandemic preparedness requiring organizational and financial changes to sustain future health system resilience.

U2 - 10.1080/02813432.2023.2301562

DO - 10.1080/02813432.2023.2301562

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38214890

VL - 42

SP - 214

EP - 224

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care

SN - 0281-3432

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 379795374