Abstract
In this paper, we consider the role of conversations in
contributing to healthcare quality improvement. More
specifically, we suggest that conversations can be
important in responding to what we call ’normative
complexity’. As well as reflecting on the value of
conversations, the aim is to introduce the dimension
of normative complexity as something that requires
theoretical and practical attention alongside the more
recognised challenges of complex systems, which we
label, for short, as ’explanatory complexity’. In brief,
normative complexity relates to the inherent difficulty of
deciding what kinds of changes are ’improvements’ or,
more broadly, what is valuable in healthcare. We suggest
that explanatory and normative complexity intersect and
that anyone interested in healthcare improvement needs
to be sensitive to both. After briefly introducing the idea
of normative complexity, we consider some contrasting
examples of conversations, reflecting on how they do
and might contribute to healthcare quality. We discuss
both conversations that are deliberately organised and
facilitated (’orchestrated conversations’) and more
informally occurring and routine conversations. In the
first half of the paper, we draw on some examples of
orchestrated and routine conversations to open up these
issues. In the second half of the paper, we bring some
more theoretical lenses to bear on both conversations
and normative complexity, summarise what we take to
be the value of conversations and draw together some of
the implications of our discussion. In summary, we argue
that conversations can play a crucial role in negotiating
the normative complexity of healthcare quality
improvement because of their capacity to hold together
a plurality of perspectives, to contribute and respond to
emergence and to help underpin institutional conditions
for empathy and imagination.