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Why resilience in health care systems is more than coping with disasters: implications for health care policy

Behrens, Doris A., Rauner, Marion S. and Sommersguter-Reichmann, Margit 2022. Why resilience in health care systems is more than coping with disasters: implications for health care policy. Schmalenbach Journal of Business Research 74 (4) , pp. 465-495. 10.1007/s41471-022-00132-0

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Abstract

Health care systems need to be resilient to deal with disasters like the global spread of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) on top of serving the changing needs of a multi-morbid, ageing and often dispersed population. This paper identifies, discusses and augments critical dimensions of resilience retrieved from the academic literature. It pulls together an integrated concept of resilience characterised by organisational capabilities. Our concept does not focus on the micro-level like most resilience literature in health care but addresses the system level with many stakeholders involved. Distinguishing exogenous shocks to the health care system into adverse events and planned innovations provides the basis for our conclusions and insights. It becomes apparent only when dealing with planned interventions that transformative capabilities are indispensable to cope with sudden increases in health care pressures. Due to the current focus on absorptive and adaptive resilience, organisations over-rely on management capabilities that cannot generate a lasting increase in functionality. Therefore, reducing the resilience discussion to bouncing back from adverse events could deceive organisations into cultivating a suboptimal mix of organisational capabilities lacking transformative capabilities, which pave the way for a structural change that aims at a sustainably higher functionality.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Published Online
Status: Published
Schools: Mathematics
Additional Information: License information from Publisher: LICENSE 1: URL: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, Type: open-access
Publisher: SpringerOpen
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 23 December 2022
Date of Acceptance: 10 March 2022
Last Modified: 02 Jun 2023 22:39
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/155268

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