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      Foreword by Norbert Nabet The Challenges of Altering Frontiers: For Other More Collaborative Approaches

      Healthcare systems are complex, the result of historical evolutions that are sometimes contradictory, rich in their diversity but finally well enough organized to resist change, especially institutional change. In France, however, it is the institution that drives change: a hyper-regulated and over-administered system, the fruit of our poorly tamed health history, rich in specificities, achievements and compromises, and therefore of compartments and sectors with their own governance, representations, rates, authorities, hindered or finally protected by their own partitions.

      In France, the law and the administration, in the name of quality, safety and equal access to healthcare, use their traditional tools to organize the system, its robustness and universality, as well as its performance and evolution.

      On the one hand, spectacular health crises impose strong and visible, and therefore legislative, reactions. Accustomed to dealing with problems at this level of power, governments have become accustomed to the legislative ritual, turning each presidential term into an opportunity to reform, improve and transform the entire healthcare system, which everyone now, certainly for the sake of simplicity, agrees to refer to it as a healthcare “system”.

      Moreover, since the beginning of the 2000s, two symbolic and operational guardianships have been more or less in competition with each other, each issuing its own rules, recommendations and therefore partitions to redundant central and territorial administrations.

      Unfortunately, if the objective changes, the means resist and the law still prescribes these evolutions, which are for many a decompartmentalization. The homeric struggles of lobbies and corporations condemning, most of the time, the mountain to give birth to a mouse. The system devised by the government is thus often cut off from its essence because it was necessary to find a point of balance in the parliamentary debate and negotiations, be they deliberate or political.

      With this barely caricatural observation, what can we do? Perhaps, first of all, question our system in order to understand what would make it a readable, controllable and therefore decompartmentalizable organization. Understand in order to act. Choose a reading grid to define a master plan and finally a strategy of actions and innovations that does not erect new partitions and does not increase the cacophony.

      Thus, for example, it is not only possible to consider our system, but also our innovation projects, as value propositions addressed to one or more segments of the population or patients, through specific channels and according to specific relationship patterns, relying on resources and activities that mobilize partners. Each of these elements naturally has a cost that must be considered and optimized. It is certainly the methodical, pragmatic and uncompromising analysis of these processes or stages that will enable us to understand and build health organizations that are readable, manageable and therefore decompartmentalizing.

      Then, on this basis, the innovation of practices and organizations is first and foremost conceivable at constant law. It is also necessary to point out the legislator’s will to leave a little more room for operators (and not only their representatives) and patients to develop their professional organizations locally and concretely by providing them with contractual and financial tools to help them (art. 51 of the

      It is in this context that the innovations reported in this book were conceived. They are most often the work of pioneers whose leadership and charisma have made it possible to create a space of freedom. In this respect, they show us the way and demonstrate the usefulness of decompartmentalization not only in operating theaters, centers or territories, but also in the production of knowledge and professional practices among professionals themselves and with patients.

      In all cases, the methods of benchmarking and exchanging practices are central to the dissemination of innovative practices. Operators are too often totally immersed in their work, looking for solutions that, most of the time, exist just a few kilometers away. Facilitating exchanges, the use of social networks, and the publication and distribution of specialized journals or books – such as the one you are about to read, which demonstrates the will, enthusiasm and competence of all the players in our healthcare system – is undoubtedly the best way to progress.

      Norbert NABET

      Director

      Institutional and partnership relations

      NEHS Group

      March 2021

      1 1 ARS: Agence Régionale de Santé; i.e. Regional Healthcare Agency.

      2 2 ONDAM: national health insurance expenditure target.

      3 3 HPST: Hôpital, Patient, Santé et Territoire; Hospital, Patient, Health and Territory.

      4 4 CPTS: Communauté Professionnelle Territoriale de Santé; Professional Territorial Community for Health; GHT: Groupement Hospitalier de Territoire; Territorial Hospital Grouping.

      5 5 LFSS: Loi de Financement de la Sécurité Sociale; Law for the Financing of Social Insurance.

      Introduction

      The Challenges of “Altering Frontiers”: The Multiple Facets of Boundaries to Cross and Articulate

      In most developed countries, health systems and organizations at first glance seem a kind of mystery to anyone wishing to understand their mechanisms and dynamics. Their challenges are well known, and meeting them is a challenge (aging population, rise in chronic diseases,

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