Can we mandate partnership working? Top down meets bottom up in structural reforms in Scotland and Norway

被引:3
作者
Huby, Guro Oyen [1 ]
Cook, Ailsa [2 ]
Kirchhoff, Ralf [3 ]
机构
[1] Ostfold Univ Coll, Fac Hlth & Welf Adm, Halden, Norway
[2] Outcome Focus Evidence Act Change Ltd, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[3] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Hlth Sci Alesund, Alesund, Norway
关键词
Care partnerships; Public sector reform; Health and social care; Policy implementation;
D O I
10.1108/JICA-11-2017-0041
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Purpose - Partnership working across health and social care is considered key to manage rising service demand whilst ensuring flexible and high-quality services. Evidence suggests that partnership working is a local concern and that wider structural context is important to sustain and direct local collaboration. "Top down" needs to create space for "bottom up" management of local contingency. Scotland and Norway have recently introduced "top down" structural reforms for mandatory partnerships. The purpose of this paper is to describe and compare these policies to consider the extent to which top-down approaches can facilitate effective partnerships that deliver on key goals. Design/methodology/approach - The authors compare Scottish (2015) and Norwegian (2012) reforms against the evidence of partnership working. The authors foreground the extent to which organisation, finance and performance management create room for partnerships to work collaboratively and in new ways. Findings - The two reforms are held in place by different health and social care organisation and governance arrangements. Room for manoeuvre at local levels has been jeopardised in both countries, but in different ways, mirroring existing structural challenges to partnership working. Known impact of the reforms hitherto suggests that the potential of partnerships to facilitate user-centred care may be compromised by an agenda of reducing pressure on hospital resources. Originality/value - Large-scale reforms risk losing sight of user outcomes. Making room for collaboration between user and services in delivering desired outcomes at individual and local levels is an incremental way to join bottom up to top down in partnership policy, retaining the necessary flexibility and involving key constituencies along the way.
引用
收藏
页码:109 / 119
页数:11
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]  
Agency for Public Management, 2015, STAT GOV MUN STUD US
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2013, NOU 2015 17
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2003, 200503 NOU MIN HLTH
[4]  
Audit Scotland, 2015, HLTH SOC CAR PROGR U
[5]  
Audit Scotland, 2017, SELF DIR SUPP 2017 P
[6]  
Audit Scotland, 2016, NHS IN SCOTL 2016
[7]  
Brekk A, 2015, NORDISKE ORGANISASJO, V17, P37
[8]   Factors that promote and hinder joint and integrated working between health and social care services: a review of research literature [J].
Cameron, Ailsa ;
Lart, Rachel ;
Bostock, Lisa ;
Coomber, Caroline .
HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY, 2014, 22 (03) :225-233
[9]  
Cook A., 2015, PARTNERSHIP WORKING
[10]  
Dayan M., 2017, Research report