Pathman Donald E, Chuang Emmeline, Weiner Bryan J
Cecil G, Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2008 Dec 18;8:263. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-263.
Foundations and public agencies commonly fund focused initiatives for individual grantees. These discrete, stand-alone initiatives can risk failure by being carried out in isolation. Fostering synergy among grantees' initiatives is one strategy proposed for promoting the success and impact of grant programs. We evaluate an explicit strategy to build synergy within the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Southern Rural Access Program (SRAP), which awarded grants to collaboratives within eight southeastern U.S. states to strengthen basic health care services in targeted rural counties.
We interviewed 39 key participants of the SRAP, including the program director within each state and the principal subcontractors heading the program's funded initiatives that supported heath professionals' recruitment, retention and training, made loans to health care providers, and built networks among providers. Interews were recorded and transcribed. Two investigators independently coded the transcripts and a third investigator distilled the main points.
Participants generally perceived that the SRAP yielded more synergies than other grant programs in which they had participated and that these synergies added to the program's impact. The synergies most often noted were achieved through relationship building among grantees and with outside agencies, sharing information and know-how, sharing resources, combining efforts to yield greater capacity, joining voices to advocate for common goals, and spotting gaps in services offered and then filling these gaps. The SRAP's strategies that participants felt fostered synergy included targeting funding to culturally and geographically similar states, supporting complementary types of initiatives, promoting opportunities to network through semi-annual meetings and regular conference calls, and the advocacy efforts of the program's leadership. Participants noted that synergies were sometimes hindered by turf issues and politics and the conflicting perspectives and cultures of participating organizations and racial groups. Inadequate funding through the SRAP, restricting program involvement to only a few needy counties, and instances of over- and under-involvement by the program's leadership were sometimes felt to inhibit synergies and/or their sustainability.
Participants of the SRAP generally perceived that the SRAP's deliberate strategies yielded synergies that added to the program's impact.
基金会和公共机构通常会为个别受资助者提供专项资金,开展重点项目。这些独立的项目由于各自为政,可能面临失败风险。促进受资助者项目之间的协同效应,是一种提高资助项目成功率和影响力的策略。我们评估了罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会南方农村医疗服务项目(SRAP)中一项旨在建立协同效应的明确策略。该项目向美国东南部八个州的合作机构提供资助,以加强目标农村县的基本医疗服务。
我们采访了39名SRAP的关键参与者,包括每个州的项目主任以及负责该项目资助计划的主要分包商。这些资助计划包括支持医疗卫生专业人员的招聘、留用和培训,为医疗服务提供者提供贷款,以及在提供者之间建立网络。采访进行了录音和转录。两名研究人员独立对转录本进行编码,第三名研究人员提炼要点。
参与者普遍认为,SRAP产生的协同效应比他们参与过的其他资助项目更多,这些协同效应增强了项目的影响力。最常提到的协同效应是通过受资助者之间以及与外部机构建立关系、分享信息和知识、共享资源、联合努力以提高能力、共同发声倡导共同目标,以及发现服务中的差距并加以填补来实现的。参与者认为,SRAP促进协同效应的策略包括将资金投向文化和地理上相似的州,支持互补型项目,通过半年一次的会议和定期电话会议促进建立网络的机会,以及该项目领导层的倡导努力。参与者指出,地盘问题和政治因素,以及参与组织和种族群体相互冲突的观点和文化,有时会阻碍协同效应。SRAP资金不足,将项目参与限制在少数贫困县,以及项目领导层有时过度或参与不足的情况,有时被认为会抑制协同效应及其可持续性。
SRAP的参与者普遍认为,该项目精心设计的策略产生了协同效应,增强了项目的影响力。