scholarly journals Incontinence Control System (Interstim®) for the Fecal Incontinence Treatment at Healthcare Public Sector in Mexico

2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. A868
Author(s):  
O Cerezo ◽  
D Orozco ◽  
A Saracho ◽  
F Lemus ◽  
B Flores ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 05 (12) ◽  
pp. 714-724
Author(s):  
Muhammad Barkindo Umar ◽  
Jeremiah Yusuf Karfe ◽  
Gambo Sule ◽  
Ado Ahmed

2020 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nanang Shonhadji ◽  
Ach Maulidi

Purpose The purpose of this study is to extend existing theory by developing a contingency theory for the public sector and to provide a landscape for local government to deal with white-collar crime. In recent years, the theme of risk management and internal controls, which is popular in the industry and private sector, has been mirrored by public sector organisations. Of course, it is to improve fraud risk control systems. We have to accept that public sector organisations have a growing need to control the (fraud) risks in a rapidly changing economic environment. Within this situation an effective internal control is becoming strategically important in many organisations, as it is proving to be a cost-efficient way to manage these risks in everyday operations. Here, the authors conducted a case study on the risk management control system at an Indonesian local government. Design/methodology/approach This study uses mixed methods, integrating quantitative and qualitative data – in-depth interviews and questionnaires were required to address the social phenomenon being investigated. Findings This study found that the structure of the control system fits a generic model, in which control systems are fundamental factors to all departments. It shows that control systems can support managers to align employee capabilities, activities and performance with the organisation’s goals and missions. In addition, the authors could identify, risk assessment and monitoring activities are effective measures of controlling organisation’s activities, and potentially could diagnose potential (fraud) risks, deterring to the achievement of organisational aims. Ideally, those aspects should be performed on a continuous basis if organisations want to prevent the spread of numerous potential menaces. In other words, if an organisation fails to carry out risk assessment correctly, it will result in unidentified possibility of fraud risks. The more explicit the risk assessment, the more effective the detection of fraud. Practical implications It can be alternative to consider Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission’s internal control as fraud mitigation in local government. Originality/value This study offers new directive discussion about internal controls as notion of fraud mitigation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 185
Author(s):  
Pietra Paola Amata ◽  
Leonardo Draghetti ◽  
Sabrina Galiotto ◽  
Rebecca L. Orelli ◽  
Marco Tieghi

The paper sheds light on management control strategies in public administrations, particularly in the case of Legislative Assembly of the Emilia-Romagna Region (AL-RER), to understand reasons, process and effects in the introduction of a management control system. The research makes use of documentary analysis and participatory observation during the years 2015-2019 to reconstruct the motivations, process and results of the introduction of a new management control system. The analysis shows that the introduction of a management control system required different strategies of change and a reorganisation of activities and processes of AL-RER. It also offered an occasion of legitimisation of the AL-RER governance based on the management control results. Furthermore, the analysis shows that the process of introducing a management control system faced obstacles that acted as inhibitors to its introduction. It was possible to overcome the obstacles thanks to an intermediate step, which required a revision of the AL-RER strategies, and a cultural, political, and organisational change. The paper contributes to the advancement of knowledge on the subject of strategies and processes followed by public sector organisations, in particular by regions, in the introduction of management control systems, offering a first contribution concerning obstacles and benefits deriving from the introduction of such systems. The research is also of interest for public sector management, politicians and technicians, as well as for management control specialists, that have to make decisions about the introduction of management control systems.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 591-613
Author(s):  
Dian Anita Nuswantara ◽  
Ach Maulidi ◽  

Abstract In a globalised scenario, the topic of an enormous increase of malfeasance in the local governments, posing catastrophic threats which come from vicious bureaucratic apparatus, becomes a global phenomenon. This current study uses case study material on the risk management control system specially the control environment in Indonesia local governments to extend existing theory by developing a contingency theory for the public sector. Within local government, contingency theory has emerged as a lens for exploring the links between public sector initiatives to improve risk mitigation and the structure of the control system. The case illustrates that the discretion of control environment - the encouragement of a local government’s control environment - is considered as a springboard for fraud deterrence and might be the loopholes in the government control systems.


2015 ◽  
Vol 125 (3) ◽  
pp. 540-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holly E. Richter ◽  
Catherine A. Matthews ◽  
Tristi Muir ◽  
Michelle M. Takase-Sanchez ◽  
Douglass S. Hale ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 41
Author(s):  
Philip Ayagre ◽  
Julius Aidoo-Buameh

The study established the relationship between the perceived commitment to ethical values, integrity of public sector managers and its impact on the internal control system of public sector organisations in Ghana. The study employed pearson’s correlation to explain the association between the ethical environment and the internal control system. Results revealed statistically significant negative association between the ethical environment and three components of the internal control system investigated in the study. The findings of the study should be of concern to policy makers, development partners, auditors, boards of public sector organisations as they play their fiduciary roles in the country.


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