Iedema Rick, Verma Raj, Wutzke Sonia, Lyons Nigel, McCaughan Brian
Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, Monash University , Melbourne, Australia.
New South Wales Agency for Clinical Innovation, Chatswood, Australia.
J Health Organ Manag. 2017 Apr 10;31(2):223-236. doi: 10.1108/JHOM-07-2016-0146.
Purpose To further our insight into the role of networks in health system reform, the purpose of this paper is to investigate how one agency, the NSW Agency for Clinical Innovation (ACI), and the multiple networks and enabling resources that it encompasses, govern, manage and extend the potential of networks for healthcare practice improvement. Design/methodology/approach This is a case study investigation which took place over ten months through the first author's participation in network activities and discussions with the agency's staff about their main objectives, challenges and achievements, and with selected services around the state of New South Wales to understand the agency's implementation and large system transformation activities. Findings The paper demonstrates that ACI accommodates multiple networks whose oversight structures, self-organisation and systems change approaches combined in dynamic ways, effectively yield a diversity of network governances. Further, ACI bears out a paradox of "centralised decentralisation", co-locating agents of innovation with networks of implementation and evaluation expertise. This arrangement strengthens and legitimates the role of the strategic hybrid - the healthcare professional in pursuit of change and improvement, and enhances their influence and impact on the wider system. Research limitations/implications While focussing the case study on one agency only, this study is unique as it highlights inter-network connections. Contributing to the literature on network governance, this paper identifies ACI as a "network of networks" through which resources, expectations and stakeholder dynamics are dynamically and flexibly mediated and enhanced. Practical implications The co-location of and dynamic interaction among clinical networks may create synergies among networks, nurture "strategic hybrids", and enhance the impact of network activities on health system reform. Social implications Network governance requires more from network members than participation in a single network, as it involves health service professionals and consumers in a multi-network dynamic. This dynamic requires deliberations and collaborations to be flexible, and it increasingly positions members as "strategic hybrids" - people who have moved on from singular taken-as-given stances and identities, towards hybrid positionings and flexible perspectives. Originality/value This paper is novel in that it identifies a critical feature of health service reform and large system transformation: network governance is empowered through the dynamic co-location of and collaboration among healthcare networks, particularly when complemented with "enabler" teams of people specialising in programme implementation and evaluation.
目的 为了进一步深入了解网络在卫生系统改革中的作用,本文旨在研究新南威尔士州临床创新局(ACI)这一机构,以及它所涵盖的多个网络和支持资源,是如何治理、管理并拓展网络在改善医疗实践方面的潜力的。
设计/方法/途径 这是一项案例研究,通过第一作者参与网络活动,并与该机构工作人员就其主要目标、挑战和成就进行讨论,以及与新南威尔士州各地的选定服务机构交流,以了解该机构的实施情况和大规模系统转型活动,历时十个月。
研究结果 本文表明,ACI容纳了多个网络,其监督结构、自我组织和系统变革方法以动态方式结合,有效地产生了多种网络治理模式。此外,ACI体现了“集中式分权”的悖论,将创新主体与实施和评估专业网络置于同一地点。这种安排强化并使战略混合型人才(即追求变革与改进的医疗专业人员)的角色合法化,并增强了他们对更广泛系统的影响力。
研究局限/影响 虽然本案例研究仅聚焦于一个机构,但它很独特,因为突出了网络间的联系。本文通过将ACI识别为一个“网络之网络”,为网络治理文献做出了贡献,通过它,资源、期望和利益相关者动态得以动态灵活地调节和增强。
实际意义 临床网络在同一地点的设置以及它们之间的动态互动,可能会在网络间产生协同效应,培育“战略混合型人才”,并增强网络活动对卫生系统改革的影响。
社会影响 网络治理对网络成员的要求不仅仅是参与单个网络,因为它使卫生服务专业人员和消费者置身于多网络动态之中。这种动态要求审议和协作具有灵活性,并且越来越多地将成员定位为“战略混合型人才”——即那些已从单一既定立场和身份转变为混合定位和灵活视角的人。
原创性/价值 本文的新颖之处在于,它识别出了卫生服务改革和大规模系统转型的一个关键特征:通过医疗网络在同一地点的动态设置和协作来增强网络治理,特别是当辅以专门从事项目实施和评估的“推动者”团队时。