Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care

Limit-setting in publicly funded healthcare is unavoidable, and increasingly important in the governance and management of the demand for health services. The work of limit-setting takes place in the organising of the provision of health services, where various health workers (professionals, adminis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nedlund, Ann-Charlotte
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Linköpings universitet, Utvärdering och hälsoekonomi 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-77366
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7519-909-2
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-liu-773662014-04-23T04:52:23ZDesigning for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health CareengNedlund, Ann-CharlotteLinköpings universitet, Utvärdering och hälsoekonomiLinköpings universitet, HälsouniversitetetLinköping2012Health carelimit-settinglegitimacypolicy workmediating institutionssense makinggovernanceLimit-setting in publicly funded healthcare is unavoidable, and increasingly important in the governance and management of the demand for health services. The work of limit-setting takes place in the organising of the provision of health services, where various health workers (professionals, administrators, unit managers, politicians) collectively exercise their skills. Limit-setting often creates tensions which impose the quest for legitimacy; it involves norms and values which are related to the interests of the health workers, and moreover to society at large. In that sense, limit-setting is related to internal processes of legitimacy within the healthcare organisation, i.e. internal legitimacy, and external processes of legitimacy where citizens are legitimating the activities in the healthcare organisation, i.e. external legitimacy. The purpose of this thesis was to discover, and increase the understanding of the dilemma associated with sustaining, generating and designing internal legitimacy, when working with a policy of limit-setting in healthcare, in relation to the provision of Assistive Technologies (AT). It has explored what health workers do when they are working with a policy, and in particular how they work out what they should be doing. Finally the role of mediating institutions in supporting and designing internal legitimacy, was explored in the thesis. Following a case-study design and a qualitative approach, where fifty-seven semi-structured open-ended interviews were conducted, data allowed the exploration of internal legitimacy in a context of complex interaction and construction of policy work in two Swedish county councils. This research produced a number of key findings; in an environment of finite resources health workers encountered situations that were characterised by conflicting pressures, and handled these by way of interaction, sense making, presenting arguments, negotiating and seeking support for an appropriate course of action and practices. The policy work with limit-setting can therefore be regarded as a dynamic interactive process, which incorporates several actors in different situations and locations, together negotiating and institutionalising the policy. Various policy sites, which had the role of mediating institutions, were identified, and were important in the interactive processes of forming a shared collective meaning in order to reach an appropriate act. Hence, designing legitimacy has to acknowledge the interactive policy work, and its contextual character, taking place at the different levels of a healthcare system. Doctoral thesis, monographinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-77366urn:isbn:978-91-7519-909-2Linköping University Medical Dissertations, 0345-0082 ; 1306application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Health care
limit-setting
legitimacy
policy work
mediating institutions
sense making
governance
spellingShingle Health care
limit-setting
legitimacy
policy work
mediating institutions
sense making
governance
Nedlund, Ann-Charlotte
Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care
description Limit-setting in publicly funded healthcare is unavoidable, and increasingly important in the governance and management of the demand for health services. The work of limit-setting takes place in the organising of the provision of health services, where various health workers (professionals, administrators, unit managers, politicians) collectively exercise their skills. Limit-setting often creates tensions which impose the quest for legitimacy; it involves norms and values which are related to the interests of the health workers, and moreover to society at large. In that sense, limit-setting is related to internal processes of legitimacy within the healthcare organisation, i.e. internal legitimacy, and external processes of legitimacy where citizens are legitimating the activities in the healthcare organisation, i.e. external legitimacy. The purpose of this thesis was to discover, and increase the understanding of the dilemma associated with sustaining, generating and designing internal legitimacy, when working with a policy of limit-setting in healthcare, in relation to the provision of Assistive Technologies (AT). It has explored what health workers do when they are working with a policy, and in particular how they work out what they should be doing. Finally the role of mediating institutions in supporting and designing internal legitimacy, was explored in the thesis. Following a case-study design and a qualitative approach, where fifty-seven semi-structured open-ended interviews were conducted, data allowed the exploration of internal legitimacy in a context of complex interaction and construction of policy work in two Swedish county councils. This research produced a number of key findings; in an environment of finite resources health workers encountered situations that were characterised by conflicting pressures, and handled these by way of interaction, sense making, presenting arguments, negotiating and seeking support for an appropriate course of action and practices. The policy work with limit-setting can therefore be regarded as a dynamic interactive process, which incorporates several actors in different situations and locations, together negotiating and institutionalising the policy. Various policy sites, which had the role of mediating institutions, were identified, and were important in the interactive processes of forming a shared collective meaning in order to reach an appropriate act. Hence, designing legitimacy has to acknowledge the interactive policy work, and its contextual character, taking place at the different levels of a healthcare system.
author Nedlund, Ann-Charlotte
author_facet Nedlund, Ann-Charlotte
author_sort Nedlund, Ann-Charlotte
title Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care
title_short Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care
title_full Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care
title_fullStr Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care
title_full_unstemmed Designing for Legitimacy : Policy Work and the Art of Juggling When Setting Limits in Health Care
title_sort designing for legitimacy : policy work and the art of juggling when setting limits in health care
publisher Linköpings universitet, Utvärdering och hälsoekonomi
publishDate 2012
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-77366
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7519-909-2
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