Literature DB >> 14757802

The next phase of healthcare improvement: what can we learn from social movements?

P Bate1, G Robert, H Bevan.   

Abstract

To date, improvement in health care has relied mainly on a "top down" programme by programme approach to service change and development. This has spawned a multitude of different and often impressive improvement schemes and activities. We question whether what has been happening will be sufficient to achieve the desired scale of change within the time scales set. Is it a case of "more of the same" or are there new and different approaches that might now be usefully implemented? Evidence from the social sciences suggests that other perspectives may help to recast large scale organisational change efforts in a new light and offer a different, though complementary, approach to improvement thinking and practice. Particularly prominent is the recognition that such large scale change in organisations relies not only on the "external drivers" but on the ability to connect with and mobilise people's own "internal" energies and drivers for change, thus creating a "bottom up" locally led "grass roots" movement for improvement and change.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 14757802      PMCID: PMC1758052          DOI: 10.1136/qshc.2003.006965

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care        ISSN: 1475-3898


  16 in total

1.  Improving quality and safety of care using "technovigilance": an ethnographic case study of secondary use of data from an electronic prescribing and decision support system.

Authors:  Mary Dixon-Woods; Sabi Redwood; Myles Leslie; Joel Minion; Graham P Martin; Jamie J Coleman
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 4.911

2.  Interventions in organizational and community context: a framework for building evidence on dissemination and implementation in health services research.

Authors:  Peter Mendel; Lisa S Meredith; Michael Schoenbaum; Cathy D Sherbourne; Kenneth B Wells
Journal:  Adm Policy Ment Health       Date:  2007-11-08

3.  Explaining Michigan: developing an ex post theory of a quality improvement program.

Authors:  Mary Dixon-Woods; Charles L Bosk; Emma Louise Aveling; Christine A Goeschel; Peter J Pronovost
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 4.911

4.  Prospects and problems of transferring quality-improvement methods from health care to social services: two case studies.

Authors:  Truls Neubeck; Mattias Elg; Thomas Schneider; Boel Andersson-Gäre
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2014

5.  Experience-based design: from redesigning the system around the patient to co-designing services with the patient.

Authors:  Paul Bate; Glenn Robert
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2006-10

6.  Problems and promises of innovation: why healthcare needs to rethink its love/hate relationship with the new.

Authors:  Mary Dixon-Woods; Rene Amalberti; Steve Goodman; Bo Bergman; Paul Glasziou
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 7.035

7.  Beyond evidence: the micropolitics of improvement.

Authors:  Ann Langley; Jean-Louis Denis
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 7.035

8.  Rethinking capacity building for knowledge mobilisation: developing multilevel capabilities in healthcare organisations.

Authors:  Roman Kislov; Heather Waterman; Gill Harvey; Ruth Boaden
Journal:  Implement Sci       Date:  2014-11-15       Impact factor: 7.327

Review 9.  A framework for scaling up health interventions: lessons from large-scale improvement initiatives in Africa.

Authors:  Pierre M Barker; Amy Reid; Marie W Schall
Journal:  Implement Sci       Date:  2016-01-29       Impact factor: 7.327

10.  Healthcare Quality Improvement and 'work engagement'; concluding results from a national, longitudinal, cross-sectional study of the 'Productive Ward-Releasing Time to Care' Programme.

Authors:  Mark White; Tony Butterworth; John Sg Wells
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 2.655

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