The Diffusion of an Organisational Innovation: Adopting 'Patient-Focused Care' in an N.H.S. Hospital Trust

Howorth, Chris, Mueller, Frank and Harvey, Charles

(2002)

Howorth, Chris, Mueller, Frank and Harvey, Charles (2002) The Diffusion of an Organisational Innovation: Adopting 'Patient-Focused Care' in an N.H.S. Hospital Trust. Competition and Change, 6 (2).

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Abstract

This paper deals with the diffusion and adoption of an organisational innovation, ‘Patient-Focused Care’, at a British Hospital Trust. We will be discussing how PFC emerged in the U.S. context, was propagated by policy makers, and judged worth adopting by organisational decision-makers. In providing an analysis of the case, we are attempting to bridge the gap between the policy context on the one hand [and], the organisational context on the other hand. The paper shows the importance of the ‘local’ context in shaping the adoption of a ‘global’ organisational innovation. The ‘appropriation process’ will play out in context-specific ways in terms of conflicts between managers and expert professionals; the way the ‘foreignness’ of the innovation plays out; and the way public policy-makers can influence the appropriation process. Most importantly, the paper intends to show how the cognitive boundaries of the N.H.S. as an ‘organisational field’ are beginning to move beyond national borders.

Information about this Version

This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 6/2002
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/a673e3c0-4f9f-83f2-cc71-afeba93a4a80/7/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleThe Diffusion of an Organisational Innovation: Adopting 'Patient-Focused Care' in an N.H.S. Hospital Trust
AuthorsHoworth, Chris
Mueller, Frank
Harvey, Charles
Uncontrolled Keywordsnew institutionalism, organisational innovation, international diffusion of innovation, organisational field, isomorphism, National Health Service
DepartmentsResearch Groups and Centres\Management\Public Services Management
Faculty of History and Social Science\Management
Research Groups and Centres\Management\Information and Communication Management
Faculty of History and Social Science\Health and Social Care
Research Groups and Centres\Management\Organisation Studies and Human Resource Management

Identifiers

doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10245290213674

Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 03-Jul-2014 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 03-Jul-2014

Notes

This is the authors final draft and not the published version


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