Using networks to enhance health services delivery: perspectives, paradoxes and propositions

Healthc Pap. 2006;7(2):10-26. doi: 10.12927/hcpap..18551.

Abstract

There is a growing need to better understand and address the consequences of an increasing reliance on networks used to enhance health services delivery. Networks seem to have emerged as the definitive solution for tackling complex healthcare problems together that we have not been able to adequately address separately. Emphasizing the collective and the collaborative, networks are assumed to address healthcare issues in ways that are superior to previous service-delivery models. While this assumption would appear to be sound theoretically, we have little empirical information available to actually understand what networks are, what they do and whether they achieve their stated goals--truly making a difference in the delivery of care and the maintenance of health. With a diversity of networks within Canada focused on health services delivery, this paper offers a multi-dimensional framework for conceptualizing how these complex inter-organizational relationships generate both challenges and opportunities. We identify six paradoxes that the networks create when used to enhance the delivery of health services and posit several propositions concerning the evaluative work that needs to be done to enhance our understanding of and confidence in this inter-organizational form. Unless these paradoxes are adequately recognized and addressed, the value and costs associated with developing and using networks in healthcare contexts will remain unclear at best. Given the broad interest in and use of networks proliferating in health-related arenas, it is time to amass the evidence and than align the perspectives. Are networks here to stay in healthcare because they make a difference or because we got tired of talking about the need for greater collaboration and so gave it a new name and frame? At the very least, it will be important to build on what we have already learned through research into collaboration in healthcare and related fields, and even more critical to be mindful of the pitfalls and possibilities of using networks as the solution of choice as we move forward.

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Community Networks / classification
  • Community Networks / organization & administration*
  • Cooperative Behavior
  • Delivery of Health Care, Integrated / classification
  • Delivery of Health Care, Integrated / organization & administration*
  • Efficiency, Organizational
  • Health Policy
  • Health Services Research
  • Humans
  • Interinstitutional Relations
  • Models, Organizational*
  • Organizational Innovation
  • Organizational Policy
  • Politics
  • Social Support