Title: Health service governance boards or bureaucrats
1Health service governance boards or bureaucrats
2Overview
- Governance what is it?
- Governance whose responsibility?
- The role of boards and the duties of directors
- Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Conclusion
3Governance what is it?
- No universal agreement on the definition of
governance or the structures that are necessary
to achieve good governance - Corporate governance encompasses the
arrangements by which the power of those in
control of the strategy and direction of an
entity is both delegated and limited to enhance
prospects for the entitys long-term success,
taking into account risk and the environment in
which it is operating. - The Uhrig Report
4Governance what is it?
Appoint and work through CEO
Adapted from Robert I. Tricker, International
Corporate Governance Text Readings and Cases,
New York Prentice Hall, 1994, p.149
5Governance what is it?
- The governing body is responsible for ensuring
that there is a strong governance system in place - The governance system permeates the organisation
everyone has a role in good governance - Good governance typically requires
- Strong, visionary leadership
- Sound strategy
- Effective policy
- Sensible and clear delegations of authority
- Effective monitoring of organisational
performance - Clear systems of accountability
- Strong risk management systems
6Governance what is it?
- Clinical Governance is a framework through which
NHS organizations are accountable for
continuously improving the quality of their
services and safeguarding high standards of care
by creating an environment in which excellence in
clinical care will flourish. - Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical Officer, NHS
7Governance whose responsibility?
- In large private sector companies with multiple
shareholders, the power to control the strategy
and direction of the entity usually is vested by
the companys owners in the Board of Directors - Community-owned organisations usually are
structured as companies limited by guarantee.
The owners are the members of the organisation,
and there are various mechanisms for appointing a
board to lead the company in the interests of the
members as a whole
8Governance whose responsibility?
- It is the Boards responsibility to ensure good
governance and to account to shareholders for
their record in this regard. - Sir Robert Hampel, UK Committee on Corporate
Governance
9Governance whose responsibility?
- Clinical governance is commonly discussed in the
health care sector as if it were a new and
distinct governance responsibility - There has been inadequate attention paid to
clinical governance in health care there has
been a culture of delegation of authority to
professionals, without effective risk management
or proper accountability structures - Some stakeholders thought that clinical groups or
the professional colleges were responsible for
clinical governance - There were insufficient rescue mechanisms if
self-regulation by the professions failed
10Governance whose responsibility?
- It makes no legal or practical sense to define
the scope of organisational governance in health
care as excluding the core business of the
organisation - Clinical governance in health care is a core
governance responsibility of the governing body,
similar to the responsibilities of the governing
body for - Financial governance
- Human resources governance (including governance
of occupational health and safety) - Information technology governance, etc.
- The clinical governance role is complex most
organisations are still developing structures,
skills and tools
11Governance whose responsibility?
- After heading two health inquiries in NSW and
South Australia, I have concluded that no one
runs hospitals Hospitals in Australia have a
life of their own with no clear lines of
responsibility and accountability. Only the good
sense of people in the system prevents it from
descending into chaos. No one runs hospitals.
Governance is fundamentally flawed . A highly
dysfunctional system in need of fundamental
reform. - John Menadue
12The role of boards and the duties of directors
- Individual directors have clearly defined legal
duties - To exercise care, diligence and skill
- To act bona fide, and in the companys best
interests - To not fetter their discretions
- To exercise powers only for proper corporate
purposes - To avoid conflicts of interest
- The last four are fiduciary duties (duties of
utmost good faith)
13The role of boards and the duties of directors
- Boards must ensure compliance with the law and
the companys constitution, but otherwise in the
private sector are autonomous entities,
accountable only to their owners - Directors must act in the best interests of the
company as a whole, in accordance with the
constitution and on behalf of the companys
shareholders or members
14The role of boards and the duties of directors
- The buck stops with the board
- shareholders of non-performing companies usually
will change their boards - directors who break the law (e.g. trading whilst
insolvent) may go to jail or face very
significant penalties - there are clear risks associated with being a
director, which need to be managed
15The role of boards and the duties of directors
- There have been many examples of governance
failure in both private and public sectors
(health and non-health) with serious consequences
(civil, criminal, reputational) for those with
governance responsibilities - National Safety Council
- National Australia Bank
- HIH Insurance
- OneTel
- Bristol Royal Infirmary
- King Edward Memorial Hospital
- Bundaberg Hospital
- Manitoba paediatric cardiac surgery
- Etc..
16Governance failures
- National Australia Bank
- 360 million loss due to rogue trading
- Approx 6 of turnover
- tearing apart its governance structures and
threatening to do even more damage in the
future. - the culture fostered the environment that
provided the opportunity for the traders to incur
losses, conceal them and escape detection despite
ample warning signs. This enabled them to
operate unchecked and flout the rules and
standards ultimately the board and CEO must
accept responsibility for the tone at the top.
17Governance failures
- HIH Royal Commission
- The hand and influence of Williams was
paramount. In itself, there was nothing
inherently wrong with a strong and forceful
influence guiding the affairs of the corporation
But in the modern commercial context such
influence must be subject to the countervailing
effect of close review, debate and questioning.
This appears to have been a commodity in short
supply at HIH there were very few occasions
where the board either rejected or materially
changed a proposal put forward by management.
The boards independence was compromised by the
influence of management in relation to its
deliberations.
18Governance failures
- National Safety Council
- Auditors advised that 106 million of trade
debtors could not be collected and that they
doubted the existence of assets valued at 86.8
million. The company appeared to be
irretrievably insolvent - A 97 million claim was made by the bank against
each honorary, part time director - The case was settled with all but the chairman
- In the result there was judgement for the
plaintiff against the second named defendant,
Maxwell Walter Eise, to the sum of 96,704,998
19Governance failures
- Bristol Royal Infirmary Inquiry
- It is an account of a time when there was no
agreed means of assessing the quality of care.
There were no standards for evaluating
performance. There was confusion throughout the
NHS as to who was responsible for monitoring the
quality of care. - It is an account of a hospital where there was a
club culture' an imbalance of power, with too
much control in the hands of a few individuals.
20Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Most public hospitals in all states and
territories are owned by Government - In most states, Government runs public hospitals
directly (owner-operated) there is no
independent governance structure - Governance responsibilities are delegated from
the Minister through the bureaucracy to hospital
CEOs and via hospital CEOs throughout their
management teams - In one state only at present (Victoria) public
hospitals are established as companies (under the
Health Services Act) and are governed by
independent boards of directors
21Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Responding to the clear voice of the local
community . the Commonwealth will . support
the establishment of a Mersey Community Hospital
Trust, comprising regional local government,
business and health profession leaders, to run
the hospital on behalf of the community -
- This plan has been put together by locals for
locals. If the community consensus is to give it
a go, and it involves no extra cost to the
Tasmanian Government, I believe that this spirit
of community self-help deserves encouragement and
support. - Prime Minister John Howard, 1/8/2007
22Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- States reject hospital board proposal
- State Health Ministers have resoundingly
rejected Tony Abbott's proposal as a tired
concept, a diversion.. - The Health Ministers say putting local boards in
charge of hospitals would simply add another
level of bureaucracy to the system and drain the
already limited resources.They also point out
that the system of hospital boards has been
tested before and was generally found not to
work. - ABC radio, The World Today, 2/10/2007
23Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- The objective is to establish a governance system
that supports the delivery of sustainable health
services - If our system is not designed for sustainability,
there will be - safety and quality consequences for patients
- cost consequences, because short-term solutions
to support unsustainable services almost
invariably generate excessive costs - poor continuity and integration of care
- reduced community confidence in the health care
system - potential consequences for directors
(reputational or legal)
24Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
-
- The role of government is itself a defining
factor in establishing appropriate governance
arrangements for statutory authorities.
Governments are held accountable by the
electorate for the performance of government as a
whole. Where statutory authorities are failing to
perform adequately, the electorate will expect
governments to act. Inevitably, therefore, there
is a role for Ministers in the governance of
statutory authorities. - The Uhrig Report
25Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
-
- There is a lack of effective governance for
several of the authorities considered by the
review due to several factors including unclear
boundaries in their delegation, a lack of clarity
in their relationships with Ministers and
portfolio departments, and a lack of
accountability for the exercise of their power.
This lack of governance arises primarily due to a
hands off attitude assumed by many when dealing
with statutory authorities. This situation is
often further complicated by the presence of a
board, particularly those where it is impractical
for government to provide the full governing
powers required to be effective. - The Uhrig Report
26Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Factors that diminish the effectiveness of public
sector governance - Unclear boundaries in delegation
- Lack of clarity in relationships with Ministers
and Departments - Lack of accountability
- Difficulty recruiting people with requisite
skills to the governing body - The Uhrig Report
27Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Where a board has limited power to act, its
ability to provide governance is reduced and its
existence adds another layer, potentially
clouding accountabilities. Given the nature of
government, the circumstances in which a board
can be given full power to act are going to be
rare and are most likely to be limited to those
authorities which are commercial in nature. - The Uhrig Report
28Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Will local community-controlled boards be the
answer to problems in Australias health care
system? - Is it possible for effective decisions which
accord with the desires of the community to be
made by community-controlled boards?
29Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Possibly..
- In Victoria, boards are considered to be working
well - It can be an effective model but its not a
magic bullet which will solve all the problems
of the health care system - there is still a bureaucracy, and it has a
significant role in managing the performance of
hospitals and their boards - there is a significant cost (directors of
metropolitan health boards in Victoria are
remunerated at semi-commercial rates) - there is a large training investment
- hospitals still face the problems of balancing
demand, supply and quality - some boards have had performance problems,
necessitating Ministerial/Departmental
intervention
30Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Other observations about boards of governance of
public hospitals - a good bureaucracy can govern effectively the
key is appropriate delegation of authority and
effective accountability systems - the health care system is extremely complex and
daunting to many lay people who may be asked to
play a governance role - many people are wary of the personal risks of
being a director, particularly in a sector that
is plagued by high inflation and a history of
funding challenges - most states have tried and discarded hospital
governing boards in favour of direct bureaucratic
governance
31Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Issues that must be addressed in the design of
the governance structure - Will the company be a Corporations Act company
(with resulting specific legal duties for
directors)? - What if there is not a single community voice?
- What if the board is unable to govern the entity
effectively (financial and clinical governance
are particular challenges) - How will the entity be capitalised?
- Will Government guarantee the hospitals
financial position?
32Boards or bureaucrats does it matter?
- Issues that must be addressed in the design of
the governance structure (cont.) - How will the Boards performance be monitored?
- What if Government is not satisfied with what the
board is doing? - Will the Minister and/or Departmental secretary
have rights to direct the Board in the interests
of the community? - Will the Minister have step in rights?
33Conclusion
- Good governance of health care is important to
the community - Clinical and financial governance are particular
challenges - Boards of governance operate well but not
perfectly in Victoria - Other states have tried and discarded them
34Conclusion
- Delegations and accountabilities need to be clear
- Due attention needs to be given to selection and
training of directors - There is an ongoing monitoring and board
management role for Government - Boards are not a magic bullet and attention
needs to be paid to the governance structure, the
composition of the board, the accountability of
the board and the ongoing role of government
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