Literature DB >> 24372316

Organisational innovation and control practices: the case of public-private mix in tuberculosis control in India.

Nora Engel1, Harro van Lente.   

Abstract

Partnerships between public and private healthcare providers are often seen as an important way to improve health care in resource-constrained settings. Despite the reconfirmed policy support for including private providers into public tuberculosis control in India, the public-private mix (PPM) activities continue to face apprehension at local implementation sites. This article investigates the causes for those difficulties by examining PPM initiatives as cases of organisational innovation. It examines findings from semi-structured interviews, observations and document analyses in India around three different PPM models and the attempts of innovating and scaling up. The results reveal that in PPM initiatives underlying problem definitions and different control practices, including supervision, standardisation and culture, continue to clash and ultimately hinder the scaling up of PPM. Successful PPM initiatives require organisational control practices which are rooted in different professions to be bridged. This entails difficult balancing acts between innovation and control. The innovators handle those differently, based on their own ideas of the problem that PPM should address and their own control practices. We offer new perspectives on why collaboration is so difficult and show a possible way to mitigate the established apprehensions between professions in order to make organisational innovations, such as PPM, sustainable and scalable.
© 2013 The Authors Sociology of Health & Illness © 2013 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  India; control; innovation; public-private mix; tuberculosis

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24372316     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12125

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  4 in total

1.  Private Practitioners' Perspectives on Their Involvement With the Tuberculosis Control Programme in a Southern Indian State.

Authors:  Solomon Salve; Kabir Sheikh; John Dh Porter
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2016-11-01

2.  Understanding the complex relationships among actors involved in the implementation of public-private mix (PPM) for TB control in India, using social theory.

Authors:  Solomon Salve; Kristine Harris; Kabir Sheikh; John D H Porter
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2018-06-07

3.  Public-private partnerships in primary health care: a scoping review.

Authors:  Nasrin Joudyian; Leila Doshmangir; Mahdi Mahdavi; Jafar Sadegh Tabrizi; Vladimir Sergeevich Gordeev
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 2.655

4.  Conforming to partnership values: a qualitative case study of public-private mix for TB control in Ghana.

Authors:  Joshua Amo-Adjei
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2016-01-05       Impact factor: 2.640

  4 in total

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