Managed networks are increasingly common in the British National Health Service (NHS) as a means of streamlining and standardizing patient care across organizational and professional boundaries. However, there has been limited research regarding whether this technique is the most appropriate management style for delivery of health services. This article draws upon the authors' research on managed clinical networks for cancer in the UK–a model that set out to guide and develop knowledge flows across cancer service providers. It examines how the initial purpose of these networks was distorted by the broader function of New Labour's ‘modernization agenda’, which has ultimately focused on organizational restructuring and adhering to government ...
The research on which this article is based has been carried out over a period of five years (1992‐1...
Aim(s): A discussion paper on the United Kingdom (UK) National Health Service (NHS) market reforms. ...
It has been widely argued that strategic change in organizations is best supported by encouraging ne...
The managed network model of organization is becoming increasingly common in the UK National Health ...
There has been increased interest in the United Kingdom in network-based modes of organising in the ...
We explore the argument that a new mode of health care organizing is emerging which moves beyond the...
Networks have been celebrated for some time as vital to the operation of fluid, post-bureaucratic an...
Hierarchies, markets and networks have been described as three alternative styles of organizing, eac...
Until now, research has given us only a limited understanding of how managers actually make sense of...
An enduring feature of new public management (NPM) in many countries has been the move to create mor...
Policy background The ‘managed-care network ’ is a novel mode of organisation and management that is...
The focus of this paper is on the impact of managerialism and the new public management on the profe...
In attempting to reform public services, governments worldwide have sought to effect change through ...
An enduring feature of new public management (NPM) in many countries has been the move to create mor...
In attempting to reform public services, governments worldwide have sought to effect change through ...
The research on which this article is based has been carried out over a period of five years (1992‐1...
Aim(s): A discussion paper on the United Kingdom (UK) National Health Service (NHS) market reforms. ...
It has been widely argued that strategic change in organizations is best supported by encouraging ne...
The managed network model of organization is becoming increasingly common in the UK National Health ...
There has been increased interest in the United Kingdom in network-based modes of organising in the ...
We explore the argument that a new mode of health care organizing is emerging which moves beyond the...
Networks have been celebrated for some time as vital to the operation of fluid, post-bureaucratic an...
Hierarchies, markets and networks have been described as three alternative styles of organizing, eac...
Until now, research has given us only a limited understanding of how managers actually make sense of...
An enduring feature of new public management (NPM) in many countries has been the move to create mor...
Policy background The ‘managed-care network ’ is a novel mode of organisation and management that is...
The focus of this paper is on the impact of managerialism and the new public management on the profe...
In attempting to reform public services, governments worldwide have sought to effect change through ...
An enduring feature of new public management (NPM) in many countries has been the move to create mor...
In attempting to reform public services, governments worldwide have sought to effect change through ...
The research on which this article is based has been carried out over a period of five years (1992‐1...
Aim(s): A discussion paper on the United Kingdom (UK) National Health Service (NHS) market reforms. ...
It has been widely argued that strategic change in organizations is best supported by encouraging ne...