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Care at the crossroads. Burnham has something big, and you may be quite pleased to see him



Social care funding is on its knees.

Andy Burnham MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Health, addressed a sympathetic audience at the #NHSConfed2014 yesterday, talking about unlocking resources for general medicine.

We live in crazy times. Newark saw the christening of the Conservative Party as the protest party you should vote if you wanted to STOP UKIP. But let me take you back to an era when the Labour Party had principles (!)  In August 1945, Aneurin Bevan was made Minster for Health following the 1945 General Election. The National Health Service (NHS) was one of the major achievements of Clement Attlee’s Labour government. By July 1948, Minister for Health, Aneurin Bevan had helped guide the National Health Service Act through Parliament.

A full day has been allocated to the Opposition health on Monday in parliament in part of their discussions on her Majesty’s Gracious Speech. Simon Stevens – NHS England’s new chief – has asked for solutions for well rehearsed issues, and Andy Burnham is clear that this is no time for another apprentice like Jeremy Hunt. Whilst being upbeat about the future of the health and social care system, he wants to move away from a “malnourished system”, with carers employed on zero hours contracts and less than the minimum wage. Indeed, this is a serious issue which has caused me some considerably anxiety too. A “product of [my] time in Government”, clearly this framework has also benefited from a parliamentary term in opposition.

Burnham crucially identifies not an inefficiency in which money is spent (although the ongoing Nicholson savings rumble on). But he does identify an inefficiency in outcomes (such as the near-inevitable fractured neck of the femur in the leg for a seemingly-trivial cost-saving in not purchasing a grab handrail). Labour, inevitably, though has an uphill battle now. The system appears to encourage the medical model of care, according to Burnham, encourages hospitalisation of people, so it is not simply a question of throwing money at the service. People are more than aware that an ‘unsustainable NHS’ is in a nutshell code for a NHS starved of adequate fundings.

Burnham feels that you can’t half-believe in ‘integration’, and is mollified about the consensus about a need for integration across all main political parties.

“I am really worried that the ‘Better Care Fund‘ might give integration a bad name”, comments Burnham.

People who have watching Burnham’s comments will note how Burnham has openly commented how he feels he has been misled by certain think-tanks in the past. A period of opposition has enabled Burnham conversely to obtain a crisis of insight. And yet he talks about his “precious moment” in order “to build a consensus of shared endeavour, which I intend to use to the full and very carefully.” Intriguingly, he does not wish to ‘foist a grand plan’ on voters after the next general election. This is of course is political speak for his ‘shared agenda’, driving a cultural change by stakeholders within the system. This is precisely what Burnham feels he has achieved through the commission on whole person care by Sir John Oldham.

“Not a medical or a treatment model, but a truly preventative service, that can at last aspire to give people a state of physical, mental and social wellbeing.”

Burnham wants to put a stop to the ‘random set of disconnected meetings with individuals within the service.’

An exercise was carried out at the start of the NHS.

This is the famous leaflet.

Pages from the first leaflet introducing NHS to British Public in 1948.

Burnham desires a new leaflet from an incoming Labour government to introduce how social care can become under the umbrella of the National Health Service.

“Going forward, you should expect to receive much more support in your home. The NHS will work to assemble one team to look after you covering all the needs you have. We want to build a personal solution that works for you, for your family, and for your carers, because if we get right at the very outset and the very beginning it’s more likely to work for you and give you what you want, and cost us all much less. We want you to have one point of contact for the co-ordination of your care. We know you are fed up with telling the same story to everyone who comes through the door. It’s frustrating for you, and wasteful for us. To get the care that you’re entitled to, when and where you want it, you will have powerful new rights set out in the NHS Constitution such as the right to a single point of contact for the coordination of all of your care and a personalised care plan that you have signed off. But – and there is a big but – to make of all this happen, you will changes in your local NHS, and, in particular, you will changes in your local hospital. We can do a better job of supporting you where you want to be, we won’t need to carry out as much treatment in hospitals, or have as many hospital beds. It is only by allowing the NHS to make this kind of change to move from hospital to home that we will all secure it for the rest of this century.”

Burnham feels that the NHS must be the ‘preferred provider’ and the DGH should be allowed to reinvent itself - building the notion of one team around the person. I personally have formed the opinion: “close smaller hospitals at haste, and repent at leisure“. Critics of marketisation will inevitably point out the blindingly obvious: that even with a NHS preferred provider, there’s still a market, and nothing short of abolition of the purchaser-provider split will remedy the faultlines. There could be a one person tariff or one person budget for a person for a year. It would give an acute trust a much more stable platform, according to Burnham, in contradistinction to the activity based tariff. This does require some rejigging of how we have the proper financial performance management system in place: there should be a drive, I feel, for rewarding behaviours in the system that promote good health rather than rewarding disproportionately the work necessary to deal with failures of good control, such as dialysis, amputations or laser treatment.

Burnham is clearly inspired by the ‘Future Hospitals’ soundings from the Royal Colleges of Physicians, focused on a new generation of generalist doctors working across boundaries of primary and secondary care:

“Since its inception, the NHS has had to adapt to reconcile the changing needs of patients with advances in medical science. Change and the evolution of services is the backbone of the NHS. Hospitals need to meet the requirements of their local population, while providing specialised services to a much larger geographical catchment area.”

Burnham even talks about possibly reviewing the “independent contractor” status of GPs.

Centralised care is mooted for people in life threatening situations. But Burnham has found that barriers to service reconfiguration exist through the current competition régime and market, with integration encouraging in contrast to collaboration, people before profit, and merge “without the nonsense of competition lawyers looking over their shoulders”. Therefore, Burnham repeats his pledge to remove the Health and Social Care Act (2012), which has driven “fragmentation, complexity and greater cost”. Under this construct, section 75 and its associated Regulations is disabling rather than enabling for health policy. There is clearly much work to be done here to make the legislation fit for purpose, as indeed I have discussed previously. Wider dangers are at play, as Burnham well knows, however. Here he is speaking about his opposition to TTIP (the EU-US Free Trade Treaty) which the BBC News did not seed fit to cover despite their Charter requirements for public broadcasting. And here is George Eaton writing about his opposition to TTIP in the New Statesman.

Burnham is clearly, to me, positioning himself to the left, distancing himself from previous Labour administrations. There are clearly budgets in the system somewhere, and while Burnham talks about unified budgets he does not put the emphasis on personal budgets. There is no doubt to me that personal budgets can never be ‘compulsory’, and each person group (e.g. people living with dementia) presents with unique challenges. It’s clear to me that deep down Andy Burnham is still in principle keen on something like the ‘National Care Service’, in preference to any gimmicks from the Cabinet Office. Burnham in the Q/A session with Anita Anand indeed describes how this had been thrown into the long grass at the time of Labour losing the general election in 2010, but how paying for social care in 2014 is as fundamentally unfair as paying for medicine had been pre-NHS according to Burnham. This would take some time to put in place, such as a mechanism for a mandatory insurance system, and a proper care coordinator infrastructure. And these are not without their own controversies. But, with Miliband playing safe one unintended consequence for neoliberal fanatics has been that it has not been possible to impose a strong neoliberal thrust to whole person care; and whatever Miliband’s personal preferences, the pendulum to me is definitely swinging to the left. Burnham talks specifically about a well planned social care system as part of the NHS.

And so Burnham looks genuinely burnt by previous administrations, and, whilst certain key players will want personal budgets and competition to be playing a greater part in policy, it appears to me that the current mood music is for Labour not appearing to promote privatisation of the NHS in any form.  The ultimate success of the next Labour administration will be determined by the clout of the Chancellor of Exchequer, whoever that is. It could yet be Ed Balls. For matters such as ‘purse strings’ on the social impact value bond or the private finance initiative, Burnham may have to slog out painful issues with Balls in the way that Aneurin Bevan once did with Ernie Bevin in a previous Labour existence. Burnham’s problem is ensuring continuity with the current system where services have been proactively pimped out to the private sector, but ultimately it is the general public who call the shots. Burnham knows he’s onto something big, and, for once, some people may be quite pleased to see him.

 

@legalaware

"Co-epetition" – how collaborative competition might ultimately benefit the patient



Diogenes

The debate about competition is polar. Either you’re a believer or not.

Yet competition can co-exist with collaboration. Also, in theory, integration or bundling could even be seen as ‘anti-competitive behaviour’.

A trick will be ultimately to find a way in which integration of services cannot offend competition law. As an useful starting point, Curry and Ham (2010) suggest that there are three levels of integration, the top of which is a “a macro-level or systems-level integration”, in which a single organisation or network takes full clinical and fiscal responsibility for the spectrum of health services for a defined population, Underneath is a “meso-level integration of services” for patients with particular conditions, which encompasses a continuum of care for a subset of patients with those conditions.

Ultimately, clinical commissioning groups, whatever expertise they precisely consist of, will need to source services which promote highest quality and best choice for its patients. And yet the law has to reconcile one of its fundamental rules (that everyone is innocent unless otherwise proven guilty), and the law should not penalise people wishing to work together if it is for the benefit of the patient. One is reminded of Diogenes of Sinope (412-323 B.C.) who was seen roaming about Athens with a lantern in broad daylight and looking for an honest man but never finding one.

“Co-epetition” can mean a ‘joint dominance’ of suppliers of health services, provided their activity does not abuse that dominance or distort the market. There are good reasons in business management why certain parties might choose to coordinate their commercial conduct to benefit patients, such as in bundling. Despite certain conflicting interests, they also share strong common values and are exposed to common risks. Such synergies in competences is well known to be essential for building cohesive organisational entities, and in forcing strategic alliances even if there is formal relationship at all.

Unfortunately, joint or collective dominance has been traditionally treated by the Competition Authorities as equivalent to oligopolistic dominance. The concept of joint dominance has been developed under both Article 102 of the Treaty on the functioning of EU.  There is some consensus among National Health Service (NHS) researchers, managers and clinical leaders that increased integration within the health system will enable the NHS to respond better to the growing burden of chronic illnesses. In “real markets”, the prohibition laid down in Article 102 TFEU has been justified by the consideration that harm should not be caused to the consumer, either directly or indirectly by undermining the effective competition.  However, healthcare is not a “real market”. Unlike the other concepts, co-opetition (blend of cooperation and competition) focuses on both cooperation and competition at the same time.

Basic principles of co-opetitive structures have been described in game theory, a scientific field that received more attention with the book “Theory of Games and Economic Behavior” in 1944 and the works of John Forbes Nash on non-cooperative games. It is also applied in the fields of political science and economics and even universally [works of V. Frank Asaro, J.D.: Universal Co-opetition, 2011, and The Tortoise Shell Code, novel, 2012]. Although several people have been credited with inventing the term co-opetition, including Sam Albert, Microsoft’s John Lauer, and Ray Noorda, Novell’s founder, its principles and practices were fully articulated originally in the 1996 book, “Co-opetition”, by Harvard and Yale business professors, Adam M. Brandenburger and Barry J. Nalebuff.

One sincerely hopes that NHS management will be able to cope with the pace of this debate too. Competitors with such management ability will likely forge a co-opetitive relationship. When two companies compete fiercely in a market, they likely perceive each other as an enemy to defeat, and have less willingness to collaborate, even if they have complementary skills and resources. One day, the best minds in the world will probably ‘have a go’ at producing a coherent construct of this for the NHS quasimarket.

“Co-epetition” provides, furthermore, a mechanism for English health policy to revisit yet again the notion of “public private partnerships” which first probably became really sexy about a decad ago at the heart of the government’s attempts “to revive Britain’s public services”. A decade later, Cameron is still lingering with this particular revival. The problem with how this is sold is that many have rightly rubbished the idea that the private sector is necessarily more “efficient”, an ab initio basic assumption, The private sector, both accidentally and sometimes quite deliberately, introduces needless reduplication and waste, evidenced by the cost of wastage in the US health market. However, the “dream” is that, in trying to bring the public and private sector together, the government hopes that the management skills and financial acumen of the business community will create better value for money for taxpayers.

Globally, diabetes is the second biggest therapeutic “market segment”, behind oncology, in terms of revenues generated. IMS Institute of Healthcare Informatics forecasts that the global diabetic segment will grow to $48-53 billion by 2016. In India, it is already the fastest growing segment. Diabetes medicines currently fall into two broad categories — tablets and injectable insulin. While domestic players are market leaders in the conventional oral drugs segment (market share of 80 per cent), multinational corporations (17 percent) are fast catching up with patent-protected new generation oral drugs. The anti-diabetes market has been consistently growing well above the pharmaceutical market for the past few years. It is possible to see the future in this crowded market in a coupled business strategy that involves in-licensing one or more compounds (new products from multi-national corporations), while continuing with time tested, less expensive (own) products for the mass market.

If the NHS should wish work together with private providers in provision of integrated bundles of healthcare, and the feeling is mutual in a way which clearly promotes patient choice, assuming that all parties see a rôle for the private sector in the NHS, the legislative framework should be re-engineered immediately to reflect that. This should a pivotal task for Monitor to turn its attention to.

Whatever the precise approach taken to “co-epetition”, the current legislative guidance will need to much better defined to ensure that any form of integration does not offend the anti-competitive environment.

 

The author is extremely grateful for the rich conversations he has had with Dr Na’eem Ahmed who is the first person to the author’s knowledge to acknowledge the potential value of this mode of provider dynamics for the NHS.

 

Many posts like this have originally appeared on the blog of the ‘Socialist Health Association’. For a biography of the author (Shibley), please go here.

Shibley’s CV is here.

Introducing collaboration into a competitive market: a perfect storm of NHS “bundling”?



bundlingAndy Burnham MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Health, announced at the Labour Party Annual Conference 2012, on 3 April 2012:

Andy Burnham 2012

 

 

However how to bring about a collaborative NHS is a formidable ask from a NHS which has just become geared up to private competition. To give an example, “bundles” in the NHS have been used, particularly by the Liberal Democrats and a beleaguered Earl Howe, to argue a case for ‘integrated care’ which has a whole plethora of meanings to healthcare experts. “Pure bundling” refers to a situation where products A and B can only be purchased together. This is the case, for example, when buying a business class ticket on the Eurostar, which includes a meal. Transport and meal can only be purchased together. “Mixed bundling” is where A and B can be purchased separately but purchasing them together is cheaper (there can be more than two products). This is what the Commission also refers to as “commercial tying”.

Allegations of anti-competitive bundling were significant parts of the antitrust cases against Microsoft in the United States and the European Union. Article 102 TFEU and s. 18 Competition Act provide a list of example behaviours that can constitute an abuse for these purposes and they are almost identical. The precise problem is making the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the contracts. For example, on 24 March 2004 Microsoft decision (IP/04/382), the Commission found that the bundling of Windows Media Player as a compulsory product to take (for free) when customers bought Windows 98 or Windows XP was an abuse of a dominant position. The reasoning was based on the fact that suppliers of competing products to Windows Media Player were being pushed out of the market. In addition to a large fine, the Commission ordered Microsoft to make the operating systems available without Windows Media Player within 90 days.

“Bundling” is a key aspect of  “A fair playing field for the benefit of NHS patients” published by Monitor in February 2013.

FRONT COVER

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

According to Monitor,

“Commissioning a range of services from a single provider through “one block contract”  contract will sometimes be the best way to secure efficient, effective and coordinated care. In such cases, commissioners must be able to determine the appropriate price for the bundled set of services. In other circumstances, bundling may exclude smaller providers who are well placed to provide one element of the service bundle.

Getting bundling decisions right is critical to delivering integrated care to patients. Our evidence suggests that the current NHS pricing system may be a barrier to make the best bundling decisions, particularly in relation to community and mental health services. Improving the pricing system entails developing standardised currencies (descriptions of what is being purchased for a given price) and  better data on providers’ costs.”

In an excellent document called “The Health and Social Care Bill: Where next?” from the Nuffield Trust in May 2011, this tension between collaboration and competition had been revisited.

The authors wrote then,

“Ideally [they] should build on the Vertical Agreements Block Exemption provisions in EU competition law within Article 101 (which covers restrictive agreements) that applies to agreements entered into by two or more organisations operating at different levels along the production chain. Almost all such agreements are exempted provided that the market share of the parties is less than 30 per cent. The rules should also build on the experience of US regulators in proactively establishing examples of permitted models of competition and collaboration in so-called ‘safe harbours’, especially if the market share was greater than 30 per cent.”

This has led lawyers and philosophers to consider how we might be able to ‘collaborate in a competitive market’. David Boaz concludes that ‘collaboration is as much part of capitalism as competition.” As for the immediate problem of how bundling might be promoted in the implementation of the Health and Social Care Act, Earl Howe on 24 April 2013 seemed to appreciate that “unbundling” might lead to fragmentation, providing that,

“It is interesting that some stakeholders have raised concerns about unbundling leading to fragmentation, while others are concerned about the effects of bundling too many services together. In practice, it is for clinically led commissioners to take decisions on whether or not services should be bundled in the best interests of patients. That is their job, and these regulations do nothing to require them to bundle or unbundle, as I have said.”

But the guidance from Earl Howe and Monitor has not been that forthcoming about how integrated services through mechanisms such as bundling can be introduced so as to not offend EU competition law, given that the primary effect of the introduction of the Health and Social Care Act will be, as widely warned against, to introduce a fragmented privatised market into NHS services.

An ethos of collaboration is essential for the NHS to succeed



Andrew Lansley

Andrew Lansley

As a result of the Health and Social Care Act, the number of private healthcare providers have been allowed to increase under the figleaf of a well reputed brand, the NHS, but now allowing maximisation of shareholder dividend for private companies. The failure in regulation of the energy utilities should be a cautionary tale regarding how the new NHS is to be regulated, especially since the rule book for the NHS, Monitor, is heavily based on the rulebook for the utilities. The dogma that competition drives quality, promoted by Julian LeGrand and others, has been totally toxic in a coherent debate, and demonstrates a fundamental lack of an understanding of how health professionals in the NHS actually function. People in the NHS are very willing to work with each other, making referrals for the general benefit of the holistic care of the patient, without having to worry about personalised budgets or financial conflicts of interest. It is disgraceful that healthcare thinktanks have been allowed to peddle a language of competition, without giving due credit to the language of collaboration, which is at the heart of much contemporary management, including  notably innovation. (more…)

An ethos of collaboration is essential for the NHS to succeed



 

 

As a result of the Health and Social Care Act, the number of private healthcare providers have been allowed to increase under the figleaf of a well reputed brand, the NHS, but now allowing maximisation of shareholder dividend for private companies. The failure in regulation of the energy utilities should be a cautionary tale regarding how the new NHS is to be regulated, especially since the rule book for the NHS, Monitor, is heavily based on the rulebook for the utilities. The dogma that competition drives quality, promoted by Julian LeGrand and others, has been totally toxic in a coherent debate, and demonstrates a fundamental lack of an understanding of how health professionals in the NHS actually function. People in the NHS are very willing to work with each other, making referrals for the general benefit of the holistic care of the patient, without having to worry about personalised budgets or financial conflicts of interest. It is disgraceful that healthcare thinktanks have been allowed to peddle a language of competition, without giving due credit to the language of collaboration, which is at the heart of much contemporary management, including  notably innovation.

It has now been belatedly admitted that there need to move beyond fragmented care to an integrated approach in which patients receive high-quality co-ordinated services. There is of course a useful rôle for competition, but it has to be acknowledged that healthcare professionals all try to provide the optimal medical care for their patient in the NHS, irrespective of cost, as this is literally a life-death sector, unlike production of a widget. The implication is that competition itself need not be a barrier to collaboration provided that the risks of the wrong kind of competition are addressed. Porter and Teisberg’s argument is related to the analysis of Christensen and colleagues (Christensen et al 2009), who see the solution to the problems of health care in the United States as lying in competition between integrated systems. And when the United States coughs we of course sneeze.

In 2011, the Kings Fund produced a pamphlet entitled, “Where next for the NHS reforms? The Case for Integrated Care”. This was before the inevitable enactment of the Health and Social Care Act (2012). This pamphlet was nonetheless useful in articulating that there are many barriers to the implementation of integrated care, including organisational complexity, divisions between GPs and specialists, perverse financial incentives, and the absence of a single electronic medical record available throughout the NHS. The Kings Fund at that time argued that enhanced primary care involves an action to reduce variations in the quality of primary care and to provide additional services that help to keep people out of hospital. This required a network of primary care providers that promote and maintain continuity of care with local people and act as hubs not only for the provision of generalist care but also for access to diagnostics and chronic disease management. This was of course before a wholesale shift in the ownership and outsourcing of the functions of the NHS had taken place, and what exists now is nothing short of a mess.

It is all too easy to produce politics-based evidence for contemporary healthcare in the NHS, but it is perhaps worth taking note of disasters from abroad. Martin Painter, writing in The Australian Journal of Public Administration in 2008, was one of the first to point out the dangers of privatisising the State, discussing Vietnam and China. In Vietnam and China, decentralisation is a by-product, both by default and design, of the transition to a state-managed market economy. A dual process of horizontal and vertical decentralisation was occurring simultaneously in both the economic and political arena, with an increasingly high level of de facto political/fiscal decentralisation, much of it occurring by default as local governing units try to meet rising demand for services. This is accompanied by the marketisation and socialisation of services such as education and health. Accompanying both of these processes is a trend towards greater ‘autonomisation’ of service delivery units, including the emergence of new ‘para-state’ entities. This could be seen akin to the enthusiasm demonstrated by New Labour for the NHS Foundation Trust, and the Francis Report (2013) promises to provide useful insights into the definition of this new model army of autonomous units. Most of these decentralisation processes were recognised to be the by-product of marketisation, rather than part of a process of deliberate state restructuring in pursuit of ideals of decentralised government. The cumulative effects include a significant fragmentation of the state, a high potential for informalisation and corruption, and a growing set of performance accountability problems in the delivery of public services.

With fragmentation, in addition to a lack of coherent national policy, brings a culture of mistrust which is toxic for any organisation, let alone economic sequelae (discussed later in this article.) According to the Deloitte LLP 2010 “Ethics & Workplace Survey,” when asked what factors contributed to their plans to seek new 9-to-5 work environments, 48 percent of employees cited a “loss of trust,” 46 percent said a “lack of transparency in communications,” and 40 percent noted “unfair treatment or unethical behavior by employers.” Hospitals are among the most complex types of hierarchical social organisations. Collaboration within and across hospital departments can improve efficiency, effectiveness and the quality of services, but competition for resources, professional differences and hierarchical management practices hinder innovation. However, coordinating activities across functional and interorganisational boundaries is difficult. Conflicting goals and competition for scarce resources diminish trust and the willingness of decision makers across the value chain to work together. Several researchers have identified collaboration as a means of reducing various different types of conflict both between and within organisations, in the private sector. Importantly, the “dynamic-capabilities” approach highlights two realities that underlie a firm’s opportunity to exploit collaboration. First, the word “dynamic” implies the ability to rapidly change a firm’s resource base in response to a changing environment. Second, by definition, a capability is “the firm’s ability to integrate, build, and reconfigure internal and external competencies”. The literature consistently employs terms such as “coordinate,” “combine,” and “integrate” to describe the process of capability development. These core concepts suggest the need to work effectively across organisational boundaries. Thus, decision makers should consider the orientations and strategic conflict literatures as they seek to achieve inimitable advantage via a dynamic collaboration capability.

The aim of collaboration is to produce “synergy”, that is, outcomes that are only possible by working with others. However, effective collaborative functioning is hard to achieve, because various institutions, departments and professionals have different aims, traditions, styles of working and mandates. Overcoming differences to forge productive collaboration is a key challenge to the implementation of innovative health promotion. Collaboration is a multifaceted concept with many synonyms. One person’s ‘teamwork’ can be another person’s ‘alliance’ or ‘collaboration’. Kickbusch and Quick (1998) define health promotion partnerships as the bringing together of “a set of factors for the common goal of improving the health of populations based on mutually agreed roles and principles”. Straus (2002) sees collaboration as problem solving and consensus building. Cooperation and collaboration between organisation units is also risky, and marked by uncertainty regarding a partner’s skills, goals, and reliability, as well as the pair’s ability to work together. This can be cast as an issue of incomplete information, and the most obvious way to reduce uncertainty is to improve the information used in choosing a partner. There are two possible sources: experience and other firms. Past experiences with another unit will both improve abilities to cooperate and yield information about that firm. Successful collaboration involves common knowledge, shared routines, similar ways of thinking, and tacit knowledge, all of which can be built through repeated cooperation. In addition, it also creates trust, both in terms of motives and in terms of competencies. As a consequence, there is inertia in partnership formation, and stability in network structures: firms will, all else being equal, prefer partners with whom they have worked in the past.

A problem is that collaboration may require investment from the NHS, which is justified if the partners realise valued aims that could not have been realised by the partners working in isolation. However, it may also be that one or more partners consider at least part of their investment of time, effort and money to be wasted – resulting in antagony, which is the opposite of synergy. While some waste is perhaps inevitable (‘that meeting was a complete waste of our time!’), when the waste is judged excessive, collaboration may fall in danger of crumbling before aims are achieved. This is among the reasons that many collaborations cease functioning before they have achieved their aims. However, recent experience is that public health networks can produce economies of scale, enable shared expertise, increase capacity and support professional development across all three domains of public health – health improvement, health protection and health care.  Networks potentially fit well with current moves across local government towards cross-authority collaboration. Future plans need to ensure that the work of existing public health networks is not lost. Within local government, public health networks will offer new opportunities for collaboration, including shared services, intelligence and analysis and cross-authority public health commissioning.

A lot of time inevitably has been lost in a package of unelected reforms costing around £2bn so far, and will continue to be lost if the Health and Social Care Act (2012) is repealed. However, Andy Burnham has promised to move forward by allowing existant structures to do ‘different things’. Either way, Part 3 of the Act is definitely to be reversed under Burnham’s plans, and it seems as if Burnham wants to re-engineer the NHS such that private companies do not participate in ‘economic undertakings’ in such a way that EU competition law is triggered. This, I feel, would be a valuable time for Andy Burnham to admit that, while there is a rôle for competition, there is also a value role for collaboration and solidarity, through which other organisational competencies could be embedded such that key aspects are promoted like innovation or leadership. No experience goes to waste.

Why David Cameron should share his iPad app with Ed Miliband



At 07.12 a.m. on Thursday, the BBC Radio 4 Today programme ran an item about the effects of adoption of technology. Sir Victor Blank believes that we communicate less in modern day society. He asked the BBC’s technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones to investigate whether innovations such as email and social media have hindered, rather than helped, communication.

The Telegraph newspaper reported recently on an intriguing adoption of innovative technology. Programmers inside the Cabinet Office are designing a new app that will bring together all the latest information from across Whitehall. The idea for the app came from a trip by advisers to the US. The software will allow the Prime Minister to see the latest NHS waiting-list figures, crime statistics, unemployment numbers and a wide variety of other data at a glance. It will also include “real time” news information from Google and Twitter, according to the Times. Mr Cameron is known to be an iPad devotee, using it to read newspapers as well as to tune into radio programmes, According to an article in the Huffington Post, the app is due to be unveiled in March. Officials say it may also be made available to the public, meaning it is unlikely the app will contain security sensitive government information.

I strongly believe in the thesis that technology assists innovative research, and that, specifically, the iPad is a godsend for people who engage in academic research like me.

Innovation is central to organisational growth and competitiveness (Tidd et al., 2001). Effective innovation can transform highly-functioning politicians into world leaders and ordinary organisations into stimulating environments for employees. Poor innovation within political parties could lead to poor morale both within H.M. Government and its official opposition, and ultimately stagnation and decline of the entire political process.

Organisations often face an “innovation paradox“; they must innovate in order to compete against one another, but in order to achieve the innovation, they may need to collaborate with organisations they compete against. In David Cameron’s case, this means collaborating with the app designers, sharing some of his ‘secrets’ about how he wishes ‘to do’ government. If Cameron succeeds here, he will have achieved a nirvana of the political process that he is said to be passionate about; including opening up a huge amount of stored information to the general public.

Traditionally organisations have been secretive of their innovations to protect any emerging intellectual property, but in this case also valuable information about how effectively the U.K. is being run. Over the years, such a secretive culture has been reinforced in the minds of other stakeholders, including M.P.s and voters, that the political environment is cut-throat and that innovation is how parties might gain competitive advantage over one other. Thus, the concept of open knowledge exchange with other independent organisations, even within a distributed innovation network, might be difficult for those people working in politics to accept.

This might result in members of the Conservative Party being apprehensive about exchanging knowledge with individuals outside their organisation, both within the Coalition and outside of it, in case of divulging information that was not intended to be exchanged. The presence of trust between individuals from the collaborating organisations is a key determinant in the success of collaboration.  However, a key advantage for the network was a dramatic lowering of cognitive distance and increased collaboration and sense of community within the consortium. The physical separation between the political parties, especially in Portcullis House, is also not that huge.

In summary, I feel that Ed Miliband should embrace David Cameron’s new app, and they should both embrace a collaborative, innovative spirit. Whilst it may not make for a massive competitive advantage for Cameron compared to Miliband, it might make the sharing of ideas and information a more interesting and challing one intellectually.

 

Reference

Tidd, J, J Blessant and K Pavitt (2001). Managing Innovation: Integrating Technological, Market and Organisational Change. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.

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