This article builds on Mannion and Exworthy’s account of the tensions between standardization and customization within health services to explore why these tensions exist. It highlights the limitations of explanations which root them in an expression of managerialism versus professionalism and suggests that each logic is embedded in a set of ontological, epistemological and moral commitments which are held in tension. At the front line of care delivery, people cannot resolve these tensions but must navigate and negotiate them. The legitimacy of a health system depends on its ability to deliver the ‘best of both worlds’ to citizens, offering the reassurance of sameness and the dignity of difference
Designing within complex service systems implies navigating across a plurality of norms and beliefs ...
Recent decades have seen the influence of the professions decline. Lately, commentators have suggest...
textabstractThis thesis discusses and relates two particular questions. The first more empirical qu...
This paper offers a short commentary on the editorial by Mannion and Exworthy. The paper highlights ...
Abstract This paper offers a short commentary on the editorial by Mannion and Exworthy. The paper h...
Recent years have witnessed a parallel and seemingly contradictory trend towards both the standardiz...
The healthcare context is characterized with new developments, technologies, ideas and expectations ...
Abstract The healthcare context is characterized with new developments, technologies, ideas and exp...
Abstract This commentary on the recent think piece by Mannion and Exworthy reviews their core argum...
Abstract In their 2017 article, Mannion and Exworthy provide a thoughtful and theory-based analysis...
Abstract Patients want their personal needs to be taken into account. Accordingly, the management o...
In their 2017 article, Mannion and Exworthy provide a thoughtful and theory-based analysis of two pa...
International audiencePatients want their personal needs to be taken into account. Accordingly, the ...
Healthcare is inevitably confronted by many kinds of variation. For example, patients have multiple ...
I would like to thank Dr. Benjamin Ewert (1) for his commentary on my short paper ‘Is patient choice...
Designing within complex service systems implies navigating across a plurality of norms and beliefs ...
Recent decades have seen the influence of the professions decline. Lately, commentators have suggest...
textabstractThis thesis discusses and relates two particular questions. The first more empirical qu...
This paper offers a short commentary on the editorial by Mannion and Exworthy. The paper highlights ...
Abstract This paper offers a short commentary on the editorial by Mannion and Exworthy. The paper h...
Recent years have witnessed a parallel and seemingly contradictory trend towards both the standardiz...
The healthcare context is characterized with new developments, technologies, ideas and expectations ...
Abstract The healthcare context is characterized with new developments, technologies, ideas and exp...
Abstract This commentary on the recent think piece by Mannion and Exworthy reviews their core argum...
Abstract In their 2017 article, Mannion and Exworthy provide a thoughtful and theory-based analysis...
Abstract Patients want their personal needs to be taken into account. Accordingly, the management o...
In their 2017 article, Mannion and Exworthy provide a thoughtful and theory-based analysis of two pa...
International audiencePatients want their personal needs to be taken into account. Accordingly, the ...
Healthcare is inevitably confronted by many kinds of variation. For example, patients have multiple ...
I would like to thank Dr. Benjamin Ewert (1) for his commentary on my short paper ‘Is patient choice...
Designing within complex service systems implies navigating across a plurality of norms and beliefs ...
Recent decades have seen the influence of the professions decline. Lately, commentators have suggest...
textabstractThis thesis discusses and relates two particular questions. The first more empirical qu...