2013
DOI: 10.3310/hsdr01060
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Towards a framework for enhancing the performance of NHS boards: a synthesis of the evidence about board governance, board effectiveness and board development

Abstract: BackgroundThere is a need to reduce the variation in organisational performance across the NHS for which boards hold ultimate responsibility. By exploring how boards can add value, we hope that this research will benefit patients and improve service efficiency and effectiveness.ObjectivesWe know that there are knowledge gaps in relation to the composition and characteristics of effective boards in the NHS, their impact and the range of tools and techniques available for developing effective boards. This realis… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Several theoretical frameworks of board governance have been developed, 19,20 and here we make the distinction between whether boards are conceptualised in either instrumental or symbolic terms. Guidance on the role and conduct of NHS boards is most usually informed by instrumentalist assumptions of the role of boards as forums for deliberation, conciliation and decision-making.…”
Section: Theories Of Board Behaviourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several theoretical frameworks of board governance have been developed, 19,20 and here we make the distinction between whether boards are conceptualised in either instrumental or symbolic terms. Guidance on the role and conduct of NHS boards is most usually informed by instrumentalist assumptions of the role of boards as forums for deliberation, conciliation and decision-making.…”
Section: Theories Of Board Behaviourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the one hand, this suggests that the recruitment of business experts to the boards of public hospitals may not be as negative as predicted (disproving hypothesis 1). In the health policy literature, it is frequently argued that the financial orientation of many boards will be at the expense of quality (Chambers et al ). In the NHS, this idea has also featured in government reports on the failings of leadership, including the Francis inquiry (2013) and the Berwick review on quality and patient safety (2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is here a possibility of getting ‘too close’, that is without sufficient challenge, or in corporate governance terms, focussing on a joint endeavour or stewardship approach, which itself has been found to contain that potential hazard [27]. There may also be a contingency perspective at play, that is an understanding about the stage in the commissioning or service improvement cycle when this was entirely appropriate to achieve the objectives of both parties and in particular when this a new kind of initiative for both parties.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%