“…In recent years however there has been something of a resurgence of interest in the concept in specific domains such as healthcare, possibly because these are areas where formerly procedure-based work has given way to far more diverse types of activity as healthcare technology has developed, professions like nursing have become more recognised as diverse and skilled and managerial restructuring has also placed pressures on pre-existing structures (e.g., Cathcart, et al, 2004;Doran et al, 2004;McCutcheon et al, 2009;Meyer, 2008;New, 2009;Wong et al, 2009) The modern way to view Span of control is therefore not in terms of trying to design the 'perfect organisation' once and for all, but in using the concept to understand under which circumstances work is easier and harder to manage and to answer questions concerning the nature of a managerial role, what kinds of support are required, how many lines of report a manager can handle and how much time a manager can spend on supervision (Meyer, 2008). It may be the case for example that a team that can be easily managed in normal circumstances may become far more challenging to oversee when moved to a different site, given different tasks to do or perhaps working under unusual forms of disruption.…”