Litcius/Paper detail

Evidence use as sociomaterial practice? A qualitative study of decision-making on introducing service innovations in health care

Simon Turner, Danielle D ́Lima, Jessica Sheringham, Nick Swart, Emma Hudson, Stephen Morris, Naomi Fulop

2021Public Management Review19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A policy aspiration is that evidence should inform decision-making on introducing health service innovations. Internationally, innovation adoption has historically been slow and patchy. Three innovations in the English and Scottish National Health Service were analysed qualitatively: stroke service reconfiguration; revised national guidance on cancer referral; and ‘virtual’ glaucoma outpatient clinics. The authors identify three sociomaterial mechanisms through which evidence and context shape each other in decision-making: connecting, ordering, resisting. Shared preferences for research evidence enabled the medical profession to exert influence on decision-making, while other professions used alternative evidence. Implications for promoting inclusive public management around service innovations are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Public relationsService (business)ReferralSociologyNursingMedicineMarketingBusinessPolitical scienceBiologyPaleontologyHealth Policy Implementation ScienceMental Health and Patient InvolvementHealthcare Quality and Management