DeGroote School of Business, McMaster University, 4350 South Service Road, Suite 421, Burlington, ON, L7L 5R8, Canada.
Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery and Palliative Care, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2024 Apr 2;22(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s12961-024-01130-w.
Innovations in coproduction are shaping public service reform in diverse contexts around the world. Although many innovations are local, others have expanded and evolved over time. We know very little, however, about the process of implementation and evolution of coproduction. The purpose of this study was to explore the adoption, implementation and assimilation of three approaches to the coproduction of public services with structurally vulnerable groups.
We conducted a 4 year longitudinal multiple case study (2019-2023) of three coproduced public service innovations involving vulnerable populations: ESTHER in Jönköping Region, Sweden involving people with multiple complex needs (Case 1); Making Recovery Real in Dundee, Scotland with people who have serious mental illness (Case 2); and Learning Centres in Manitoba, Canada (Case 3), also involving people with serious mental illness. Data sources included 14 interviews with strategic decision-makers and a document analysis to understand the history and contextual factors relating to each case. Three frameworks informed the case study protocol, semi-structured interview guides, data extraction, deductive coding and analysis: the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, the Diffusion of Innovation model and Lozeau's Compatibility Gaps to understand assimilation.
The adoption of coproduction involving structurally vulnerable populations was a notable evolution of existing improvement efforts in Cases 1 and 3, while impetus by an external change agency, existing collaborative efforts among community organizations, and the opportunity to inform a new municipal mental health policy sparked adoption in Case 2. In all cases, coproduced innovation centred around a central philosophy that valued lived experience on an equal basis with professional knowledge in coproduction processes. This philosophical orientation offered flexibility and adaptability to local contexts, thereby facilitating implementation when compared with more defined programming. According to the informants, efforts to avoid co-optation risks were successful, resulting in the assimilation of new mindsets and coproduction processes, with examples of how this had led to transformative change.
In exploring innovations in coproduction with structurally vulnerable groups, our findings suggest several additional considerations when applying existing theoretical frameworks. These include the philosophical nature of the innovation, the need to study the evolution of the innovation itself as it emerges over time, greater attention to partnered processes as disruptors to existing power structures and an emphasis on driving transformational change in organizational cultures.
创新的共同生产正在世界各地多样化的背景下塑造公共服务改革。尽管许多创新是地方性的,但其他创新随着时间的推移而不断扩展和发展。然而,我们对共同生产的实施和演变过程知之甚少。本研究的目的是探讨采用、实施和吸收三种与结构弱势群体共同生产公共服务的方法。
我们对涉及弱势群体的三种共同生产公共服务创新进行了为期 4 年的纵向多案例研究(2019-2023 年):瑞典延雪平地区的 ESTHER 项目,涉及有多种复杂需求的人群(案例 1);苏格兰邓迪的“让康复成为现实”项目,涉及有严重精神疾病的人群(案例 2);以及加拿大马尼托巴省的学习中心(案例 3),同样涉及有严重精神疾病的人群。数据来源包括对 14 位战略决策者的访谈和文件分析,以了解与每个案例相关的历史和背景因素。三个框架为案例研究方案、半结构化访谈指南、数据提取、演绎编码和分析提供了信息:实施研究的综合框架、创新扩散模型和 Lozeau 的兼容性差距,以了解同化。
在案例 1 和 3 中,参与结构弱势群体的共同生产是对现有改进工作的显著演变,而案例 2 则是由外部变革机构的推动、社区组织之间现有的合作努力以及为新的市级心理健康政策提供信息的机会所促成的。在所有案例中,共同生产的创新都以一种核心哲学为中心,该哲学在共同生产过程中平等地重视生活经验和专业知识。这种哲学取向为适应本地环境提供了灵活性和适应性,从而促进了实施,与更明确的编程相比。根据信息提供者的说法,避免合作风险的努力是成功的,导致了新思维和共同生产过程的同化,并有实例表明这如何导致了变革性的变化。
在探索与结构弱势群体共同生产的创新时,我们的研究结果表明,在应用现有理论框架时需要考虑其他几个因素。这些因素包括创新的哲学性质、需要随着时间的推移研究创新本身的演变、更加关注作为现有权力结构破坏者的合作过程,以及强调推动组织文化的变革性变化。