Скачать книгу

of Big Data and artificial intelligence, financial equilibrium, increasing inequalities in access to healthcare and healthcare services, the desire for greater patient autonomy and the legitimacy of their voice and experiences, etc.). Conditions are identified as being reinforced by a system that is too procedural, losing its ability to respond in a personalized and individualized manner to the needs of its users and patients. It appears to be “ungovernable” through the usual channels when it comes to dealing with crises with sudden manifestations that are part of a complex network of causes (such as the COVID-19 pandemic or climate change).

      Once this diagnosis has been made, the avenues for transformation have also been identified around the central priority of altering frontiers in a system that is too strongly compartmentalized: inventing new forms of governance and cooperation to counter the impossibility of doing things “collectively” in a pluralist system, and giving back room for maneuver and spaces for inventiveness and transformation to local stakeholders in the face of a system that is heavily top-down and has little trust and legitimacy in a number of stakeholders; and yet, health systems remain difficult to transform when there is an extraordinary number of experiments, creative approaches, local dynamics, organizational reorganizations, etc.

      This is why the angle of this book is that of “altering frontiers”, at the micro (stakeholders), meso (various collectives, organized groups) and now macro (organizations) levels. Indeed, the expression “altering frontiers” offers different viewpoints, enabling the researcher and professional and institutional stakeholders to rethink what constitutes a boundary and to act on them in order to organize or coordinate activities differently. This book therefore proposes a new way of analyzing organizational innovations that aim to transform the healthcare system from a vertical and compartmentalized approach to a more horizontal and decompartmentalized one. This approach provides a multifaceted view of the drivers, favorable conditions and methodological principles that can support sustainable transformations in order to “rebuild institutions”.

      Thinking of innovation from a perspective of “altering frontiers” invites us, on the contrary, to invest in that which forms a boundary. Indeed, a boundary makes it possible to name, identify, make tangible or visible what is distinctive between what is inside or outside a “space” (Lamont & Molnar 2002). There are thus multiple dimensions (Zietsma & Lawrence 2010; Bucher & Langley 2016): social, relational, cognitive, symbolic, geographical, temporal, material, institutional, etc. (Zietsma & Lawrence 2010; Bucher & Langley 2016). From this perspective, innovation becomes opportune when crossing boundaries, and makes it possible.

      Another way of rethinking boundaries is to design new spaces conducive to innovation (Grenier & Denis 2017), taking the form of original structural reorganizations, which may be internal and/or external, and bringing together stakeholders from different services or structures. This is the case, for example, of teams reshaping their relationships and knowledge when, according to Delphine Wannenmacher (Chapter 4), they use a new technology (surgical robot) to deliver care differently. In this chapter, the author shows in particular how much, with respect to this robot, visual communication (and associated skills) is reduced and the usual partitions (with regard to time and division of work) are no longer effective. In the same way, the creation of service clusters within hospitals constitutes, for Christelle Havard (Chapter 5), a potential for transformation provided that the stakeholders can carry out cooperative work, at three levels: structural (at the level of the hospital as a whole, to divide and coordinate work), operational (at the level of a department, to organize care tasks around the patient) and trajectorial (around the patient to design and implement a care plan). Finally, we can cite the example of the PTA (plateforme territoriale d’appui, territorial support platform), which organizes in an original way the coordination between so-called “front-line” professionals to provide a coordinated response to patients in complex situations. For Matthieu Sibé, Sandrine Cueille and Tamara Roberts (Chapter 7), this organizational innovation will reach its full capacity to provide individualized solutions in the monitoring of trajectories if the stakeholders reinvent their relationships and governance according to the adhocracy model (Mintzberg 1993). This form reflects flexible organizations, combining multidisciplinary and crossdisciplinary skills, capable of adapting to the needs and constraints of the tasks to be accomplished. In this way, another lesson from the various contributions in this book is that the managerial and organizational innovation that accompanies the adoption of new intervention models, new tools or processes only produces its effects if the paradigms relating to modes of governance and decision-making are also transformed (Moore & Hartley 2008).

      Following the example of this type of university, a community of practice forms spaces conducive to building new knowledge, beyond the diversity of stakeholders, and could generate misunderstandings if it is not accompanied in this way. This misunderstanding is of three kinds (Carlile 2004): syntactic, when the misunderstanding concerns words or acronyms; semantic, when it stems from different representations or values; and pragmatic, when it calls into question the re-articulation of interests and areas of power.

      These spaces are favorable to the co-construction of knowledge and discursive elements when they have certain characteristics. Thus, Delphine Wannenmacher (Chapter 4) draws our attention to the importance of establishing interactive and

Скачать книгу