What is it about?

The paper examined a bold and ambitious scheme known as the North East transformation system (NETS). The principal aim of the NETS is the achievement of a step-change in the quality of health services delivered to people living in the North East region of England. The paper charts the origins of the NETS and its early journey before describing what happened to it when the UK coalition government published its proposals for unexpected major structural change in the NHS. This had a profound impact on the leadership and direction of the NETS and resulted in it taking a different direction from that intended.

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Why is it important?

We demonstrate the importance of context for the likely outcome and success of complex transformational change initiatives. These require time to become embedded and demonstrate results especially when focused on changing culture and behaviour. But, in practice, allowing sufficient time during which the organisation may remain sufficiently stable to allow the change intervention to run its course and become embedded and sustainable is highly problematic. The consequence is that bold and ambitious efforts like the NETS are not given the space and stability to prove themselves. Too often, politics and external environmental pressures intrude in ways that may prove dysfunctional and negative.

Perspectives

This paper demonstrates the challenges of transforming and improving healthcare and stresses the impact of politics on health policy and the negative consequences of constant organisational change.

Dr Adrian Small
Northumbria University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Doing transformational change in the English NHS in the context of “big bang” redisorganisation, Journal of Health Organization and Management, March 2015, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/jhom-01-2014-0019.
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