The NHS — is Scotland Different? a Case Study of the Management of Health Care in the Hospital Service in the West of Scotland 1947 – 1987

2000 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 155-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. McTavish

Management of the health service in Scotland and England, has since its creation, shown both divergence and congruence. In the initial decades in Scotland the executive hospital boards (which contained strong medical professional membership) and central government had a clearer relationship than in England. The health service-civil service machinery in Scotland was without doubt more to the forefront with higher status in the Scottish ‘polity’ than was the case in England. The 1970s reforms also indicated difference: despite the pro managerialist tones of the Farquarson Lang report in Scotland, a managerial emphasis was more apparent in the English reforms. By the 1980s, the government's clear intention that their ‘radical’ agenda should apply in Scotland and England was implemented in many instances: aspects of the new managerialism were applied as vigorously in the case examined than anywhere in England: the attempt to draw clinicians into resource management (as advocated in the Griffiths report) appeared to have advanced further in Scotland until well into the 1990s. Yet in other aspects, Scotland diverged from parts of England in the implementation of the 1980's agenda most notably in the growth of private practice though the case indicated significant Scottish developments here too. The article concludes by speculating on some Scottish differences in the coming years.

1997 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 661-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Curtis ◽  
Natasha Petukhova ◽  
Galina Sezonova ◽  
Nadia Netsenko

Elements of a “managed market” for health services have been introduced into the Russian health care system, which under the Soviet regime was run as a comprehensive state-managed system. The authors examine the recent development of health service reforms in a case study of the city of St. Petersburg and the surrounding Leningrad region. Evidence from key informants and a local survey of service users shows how alternative models of the managed market are being introduced in different parts of the study area. A critical review of the market-oriented strategies for reform emerging in the case study suggests that such reforms carry risks associated with the “traps of managed competition.” Future policy for health service systems in Russia must take these risks more fully into account.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen McCarthy ◽  
Paidi O'Raghallaigh ◽  
Simon Woodworth ◽  
Yoke Yin Lim ◽  
Louise C Kenny ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Health information technology (HIT) and associated data analytics offer significant opportunities for tackling some of the more complex challenges currently facing the health care sector. However, to deliver robust health care service improvements, it is essential that HIT solutions be designed by parallelly considering the 3 core pillars of health care quality: clinical effectiveness, patient safety, and patient experience. This requires multidisciplinary teams to design interventions that both adhere to medical protocols and achieve the tripartite goals of effectiveness, safety, and experience. OBJECTIVE In this paper, we present a design tool called <i>Integrated Patient Journey Mapping</i> (IPJM) that was developed to assist multidisciplinary teams in designing effective HIT solutions to address the 3 core pillars of health care quality. IPJM is intended to support the analysis of requirements as well as to promote empathy and the emergence of shared commitment and understanding among multidisciplinary teams. METHODS A 6-month, in-depth case study was conducted to derive findings on the use of IPJM during <i>Learning to Evaluate Blood Pressure at Home</i> (LEANBH), a connected health project that developed an HIT solution for the perinatal health context. Data were collected from over 700 hours of participant observations and 10 semistructured interviews. RESULTS The findings indicate that IPJM offered a constructive tool for multidisciplinary teams to work together in designing an HIT solution, through mapping the physical and emotional journey of patients for both the current service and the proposed connected health service. This allowed team members to consider the goals, tasks, constraints, and actors involved in the delivery of this journey and to capture requirements for the digital touchpoints of the connected health service. CONCLUSIONS Overall, IPJM facilitates the design and implementation of complex HITs that require multidisciplinary participation. CLINICALTRIAL


1988 ◽  
Vol 20 (11) ◽  
pp. 1461-1470 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Malczewski ◽  
W Ogryczak

In this paper the authors present an application of optimization techniques to the real-life problem of the reorganization of health-service areas. The problem is formulated as a linear programming problem with three objective functions. The values of the three objective functions proved to vary significantly depending on the assumed hierarchy of the objectives. Nevertheless, the multiobjective analysis based on parametric techniques was found to provide a compromise solution which implied significant improvement in the performance of the health-care system.


2021 ◽  
Vol 940 (1) ◽  
pp. 012042
Author(s):  
N Himayati ◽  
T Joko ◽  
M Raharjo

Abstract Characteristics of Solid Medical Waste As long as the hospital as a health service provider is a source of solid medical waste generation. The current COVID-19 pandemic can potentially increase the number of medical waste generation in health care facilities. The COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on changing the characteristics of the medical waste produced. This study describes the characteristics of hospital solid medical waste during the COVID-19 pandemic at the X Referral Covid Hospital in Semarang City. The study results show that the ratio of increasing solid medical waste during the 2020 pandemic ranges from 1.39 to 2.08 kg/bed/day. Handling medical waste in this condition is a challenge that needs to be appropriately managed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fran Baum ◽  
Helen van Eyk ◽  
Catherine Hurley

This paper examines a case study of local health care reform in Australia that had as one of its aims the desire to increase the health promotion and partnership work of the region. The case study highlights the pressures contemporary health systems are facing and the challenge of re-orientating health services towards health promotion in this environment. Qualitative research, including interviews, focus groups, a staff survey and policy analysis were used to identify health system professionals? perceptions of the impact of health care reform. The case study portrays a complex system that is subject to frequent change but little reform. Our case study indicates that features of health systems that encourage collaborative partnerships are those where there is: an environment that encourages trust; a common purpose among the key players; a supportive external environment; practical projects to work on; organisational stability; commitment from staff throughout organisations; willingness to commit resources; evidence that change is likely to improve outcomes for users; and an organisational environment in which learning from past experience is encouraged. A number of constraints and tensions that work against introducing a greater emphasis on health promotion and collaboration within the system studied are discussed, including tensions between central funding bureaucracies and health care agencies and the reform fatigue and increasing cynicism among staff resulting from continuous change. The paper concludes that against the chaotic background of contemporary health service reform it is very difficult to bring about genuine reform to achieve a shift to more emphasis on health promotion and partnerships.


10.2196/17416 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. e17416
Author(s):  
Stephen McCarthy ◽  
Paidi O'Raghallaigh ◽  
Simon Woodworth ◽  
Yoke Yin Lim ◽  
Louise C Kenny ◽  
...  

Background Health information technology (HIT) and associated data analytics offer significant opportunities for tackling some of the more complex challenges currently facing the health care sector. However, to deliver robust health care service improvements, it is essential that HIT solutions be designed by parallelly considering the 3 core pillars of health care quality: clinical effectiveness, patient safety, and patient experience. This requires multidisciplinary teams to design interventions that both adhere to medical protocols and achieve the tripartite goals of effectiveness, safety, and experience. Objective In this paper, we present a design tool called Integrated Patient Journey Mapping (IPJM) that was developed to assist multidisciplinary teams in designing effective HIT solutions to address the 3 core pillars of health care quality. IPJM is intended to support the analysis of requirements as well as to promote empathy and the emergence of shared commitment and understanding among multidisciplinary teams. Methods A 6-month, in-depth case study was conducted to derive findings on the use of IPJM during Learning to Evaluate Blood Pressure at Home (LEANBH), a connected health project that developed an HIT solution for the perinatal health context. Data were collected from over 700 hours of participant observations and 10 semistructured interviews. Results The findings indicate that IPJM offered a constructive tool for multidisciplinary teams to work together in designing an HIT solution, through mapping the physical and emotional journey of patients for both the current service and the proposed connected health service. This allowed team members to consider the goals, tasks, constraints, and actors involved in the delivery of this journey and to capture requirements for the digital touchpoints of the connected health service. Conclusions Overall, IPJM facilitates the design and implementation of complex HITs that require multidisciplinary participation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Van Eyk ◽  
Fran Baum ◽  
Graeme Houghton

This paper describes the evaluation of a case study of health service reform in southern Adelaide. A mail survey,interviews and focus groups were used to gain an understanding of health care providers' perceptions and experiencesof reform. The paper discusses lessons learnt about health service reform and its impact on people working in thehealth system. It finds that continual change that is not based on a well-articulated vision is likely to lead to 'reformfatigue' and low morale. An action research approach can be used by researchers to help managers and staffunderstand the context in which reform is happening, and thus give support to organisational learning.


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