Title: COMPLEXITY AND HEALTHCARE ORGANISATION
1COMPLEXITY AND HEALTHCARE ORGANISATION
D Kernick St Thomas Health Centre Exeter
2Complexity and health care organisation
- Are health care systems different?
- The path to complexity in health care policy
- Complexity descriptive and prescriptive options -
concept edge of chaos - The use of metaphor in health systems
3Is health care different to other organisations?
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8(No Transcript)
9Is the message getting through?
- In the long run it is more efficient and
effective to motivate and empower rather than to
issue detailed commands
The Cabinet Office 20001 - Management through hierarchy alongside
management through networks Milburn 2002 - The NHS is the epitome of a complex adaptive
system. Such systems dont always respond well
to mechanistic formulae.
Fillingham 2002
10(No Transcript)
11Complexity and health care organisation
- Are health care systems different?
- The path to complexity in health care policy
- Complexity descriptive and prescriptive options -
concept edge of chaos - The use of metaphor in health systems
12Performance measurement and management - concerns
- where persons are exposed to the workings of
laws which are inconsistent with their wills or
needs, they remain neither passive, helpless or
powerless but actively strive to modify the
working of such alien laws. - Selznick 1943
13Performance measurement and management - concerns
- Lipsky - Street level bureaucracy dilemmas of
the individual in public services 1980 - Goodharts Law 1990
- Goddard balance checking and trusting 1999
14Low connectivity Stable Paradigms consolidate
15Low connectivity Stable, Paradigms consolidate
Unstable High connectivity Highly innovative but
gains not consolidated
16Low connectivity Stable Paradigms consolidate
Self organised criticality Maximally adaptive and
Efficient. Each element optimally fit without
disrupting fitness of others
Chaotic Unstable High connectivity Highly
innovative but gains not consolidated
17Holding the system at self organised criticality
the interplay between regulation and gaming
(positive deviance)
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20Low connectivity Stable Paradigms consolidate
Self organised criticality Maximally adaptive and
Efficient. Each element optimally fit without
disrupting fitness of others
Chaotic Unstable High connectivity Highly
innovative but gains not consolidated
21Complexity and health care organisation
- Are health care systems different?
- The path to complexity in health care policy
- Complexity descriptive and prescriptive options -
concept edge of chaos - The use of metaphor in health systems
22Imported organisational metaphors
23Is the NHS organisation fit for purpose?
- Value for money? Efficient?
- Adaptable/flexible?
- Robust?
24(No Transcript)
25A shift to Governmentality in the NHS
- Shaping the conduct of conduct
- Clear pathways and share feedback
- Nuturing developing social capital
- Incentives that motivate the intrinsic values of
staff - From competition to co-operation
26Alternative simple rules for leaders
- Have a vision and share it
- Agree core values - what is good and what is bad
- Agree boundaries - what is in and what is out
- Value and build on relationships
- Build on existing strengths
- Learn by failure
27(No Transcript)
28All this talk About organisation is doing my head
in
Im sorry to hear that doctor
29COMPLEXITY AND HEALTHCARE ORGANISATION
D Kernick St Thomas Health Centre Exeter