Making Wicked Problems Governable – the Case of Managed Networks in Health Care

Leadership in Health Services

ISSN: 1751-1879

Article publication date: 26 April 2013

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Keywords

Citation

(2013), "Making Wicked Problems Governable – the Case of Managed Networks in Health Care", Leadership in Health Services, Vol. 26 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/lhs.2013.21126baa.007

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Making Wicked Problems Governable – the Case of Managed Networks in Health Care

Making Wicked Problems Governable – the Case of Managed Networks in Health Care

Article Type: Recent publications From: Leadership in Health Services, Volume 26, Issue 2

Ewan Ferlie, Louise Fitzgerald, Gerry McGivern, Sue Dopson and Chris BennettOUPISBN: 978-0-19-960301-5

Keywords: Health care reorganisation in the NHS, Managed networks and healthcare policy, Leadership and healthcare reform

Over the last 30 years, scholars of health care organizations have been searching for concepts and images to illuminate their underlying, and shifting, modes of organizing. Nowhere has this controversy been more intense than in the UK, given the long succession of top-down reorganizations within the NHS over the last 30 years. This book characterises the nature of key reforms – namely managed networks – introduced in the UK National Health Service during the New Labour period (1997-2010), combining rich empirical case material of such managed networks drawn from different health policy arenas (clinical genetics, cancer networks, sexual health networks, and long term care) with a theoretically informed analysis.

The book makes three key contributions. First, it argues that New Labour’s reforms included an important network element consistent with underlying network governance ideas, specifying conditions of ”success” for these managed networks and exploring how much progress was empirically evident. Second, in order to conceptualise many of the complex health policy arenas studied, the book uses the concept of ”wicked problems”: problematic situations with no obvious solutions, whose scope goes beyond any one agency, often with conflicting stakeholder interests, where there are major social and behavioural dimensions to be considered alongside clinical considerations. Third, it makes a contribution to the expanding Foucauldian and governmentality-based literature on health care organizations, by re-theorising organizational processes and policy developments which do not fit either professional dominance or NPM models from a governmentality perspective.

From the empirical evidence gathered, the book argues that managed networks (as opposed to alternative governance modes of hierarchy or markets) may well be the most suitable governance mode in those many and expanding policy arenas characterised by ”wicked problems”, and should be given more time to develop and reach their potential.

Contents include:

  • Introduction and overview.

  • “Reforming” health care organizations: from new public management to network governance?

  • A governmentality based perspective on UK health care organizations.

  • Genetics translation networks: the continuing autonomy of academic science.

  • Managed cancer networks: exemplars of evidence based governmentality?

  • Sexual health networks: working with problematic human behaviours.

  • Networks for older people’s care: a really wicked problem.

  • The limited role of information and communication: technologies in managed networks.

  • Leadership in health care networks: small committed clinical managerial hybrid teams and evidence-based identity work.

  • Inter-organizational learning within the networks: a disappointing pattern.

  • Governmentality and health care networks.

  • New Labour and UK health care: managed networks, wicked problems, and post NPM organising.

  • Concluding discussion: overall contribution and forward look.

Please note these are not reviews of the titles given. They are descriptions of the publication, based on information provided by the publishers.

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