Performance management in British health care: will it deliver?

In its latest attempt to improve performance, the British National Health Service (NHS) has turned to the business models of performance management. A range of managerial instruments has been deployed, signaling national priorities to local managers and seeking to offer the information, incentives, and capacity they need to respond appropriately. The arrangements are intellectually coherent and offer the prospect of major improvements in the quality of British health care. However, implementation is at an early stage, and some key issues have to be addressed. The various performance management instruments have not yet been properly aligned, and greater conceptual clarity in implementation is required. Performance management will not be fully effective unless adequate capacity--in information, leadership, and managerial resources--is made available.

[1]  Jeremy M Grimshaw,et al.  When should clinical guidelines be updated? , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[2]  L J Donaldson,et al.  Clinical governance and the drive for quality improvement in the new NHS in England , 1998, BMJ.

[3]  Peter E. Hilsenrath,et al.  The World Health Report 2000 , 2002 .

[4]  R. Mannion,et al.  Impact of published clinical outcomes data: case study in NHS hospital trusts , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[5]  R. Mannion,et al.  Organisational culture and quality of health care , 2000, Quality in health care : QHC.

[6]  Jeremy Hurst,et al.  Performance measurement and performance management in OECD health systems , 2001 .

[7]  R. Klein Why Britain is reorganizing its national health service--yet again. , 1998, Health affairs.

[8]  Richard Smith,et al.  The failings of NICE , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[9]  P. Tyrer The national service framework: a scaffold for mental health , 1999, BMJ.

[10]  J. Grimshaw,et al.  Potential benefits, limitations, and harms of clinical guidelines , 1999, BMJ.

[11]  Julian Le Grand,et al.  Learning from the NHS internal market , 1998 .

[12]  Vincent Koen Public Expenditure Reform: The Health Care Sector in the United Kingdom , 2000 .

[13]  G. Teasdale Learning from Bristol: report of the public inquiry into children's heart surgery at Bristol Royal Infirmary 1984-1995 , 2002, British journal of neurosurgery.

[14]  Andrew Pettigrew,et al.  Managing Through Networks: Some Issues and Implications for the NHS , 1996 .