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Network resilience in the face of health system reform
Authors:Rod Sheaff  Lawrence Benson  Lou Farbus  Jill Schofield  Russell Mannion  David Reeves
Affiliation:1. University of Plymouth, Plymouth, Devon, United Kingdom;2. Manchester Business School, Manchester University, United Kingdom;3. University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom;4. University of York, United Kingdom;5. National School for Health Research (NIHR) School for Primary Care Research, Manchester University, United Kingdom
Abstract:Many health systems now use networks as governance structures. Network ‘macroculture’ is the complex of artefacts, espoused values and unarticulated assumptions through which network members coordinate network activities. Knowledge of how network macroculture during 2006–2008 develops is therefore of value for understanding how health networks operate, how health system reforms affect them, and how networks function (and can be used) as governance structures. To examine how quasi-market reforms impact upon health networks' macrocultures we systematically compared longitudinal case studies of these impacts across two care networks, a programme network and a user-experience network in the English NHS. We conducted interviews with key informants, focus groups, non-participant observations of meetings and analyses of key documents. We found that in these networks, artefacts adapted to health system reform faster than espoused values did, and the latter adapted faster than basic underlying assumptions. These findings contribute to knowledge by providing empirical support for theories which hold that changes in networks' core practical activity are what stimulate changes in other aspects of network macroculture. The most powerful way of using network macroculture to manage the formation and operation of health networks therefore appears to be by focusing managerial activity on the ways in which networks produce their core artefacts.
Keywords:Networks   England   Commissioning   Culture   Quasi-market   NHS   Health systems
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