The Oxford Handbook of Healthcare Innovation bridges theory and practice of mainstream innovation studies as applied in the healthcare sector, offering valuable resources to professionals, policymakers, and researchers.
The Oxford Handbook of Healthcare Innovation bridges theory and practice of mainstream innovation studies as applied in the healthcare sector, offering valuable resources to professionals, policymakers, and researchers.
The Oxford Handbook of Healthcare Innovation bridges theory and practice of mainstream innovation studies as applied in the healthcare sector, offering valuable resources to professionals, policymakers, and researchers who are dedicated to addressing the complexities of modern healthcare. It advances the latest developments in healthcare innovation research and practice and, with its global emphasis, draws from research and case studies from bothhigh-income as well as low and middle-income countries. The diverse selection of topics covered in the chapters are categorized into three parts reflective broadly of the innovation process:development, diffusion, and evaluation and governance. With over fifty contributors, a range of twenty-seven topics are explored, from frugal, reverse, disruptive and open innovation, to knowledge brokerage, epistemic communities, decolonization, and change management. Within each chapter, contributors discuss the state-of-the-debate in their domain of expertise at three levels of analysis -- micro, meso, and macro -- and with respect to the organizational, social, and technological aspects ofhealthcare.
Yasser Bhatti is a scholar of strategy and innovation and conducts research in emerging models of innovation and strategies which promote equitable and sustainable growth. He is currently based at the MBS College of Business and Entrepreneurship and holds honorary affiliations at his prior institutions of work: Oxford University, Imperial College London, and Queen Mary University of London. Sue Dopson is Deputy Dean for People and Equity, Diversity and Inclusion(EDI), and Professor of Organisational Behaviour at the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford. She is also a Fellow of Green Templeton College. She has led a number of research projects in publicand private sector organizations and her research within the healthcare sector informs government policy and practice. Tomas Farchi is a professor of Organizational Behavior in the Management and Human Resource department at HEC Paris, and Associate Fellow at Saïd Business School, University of Oxford. His research focuses on how groups and organizations can mobilize and translate knowledge from different fields to address complex business, scientific and/or societal challenges. MatthewHarris is a Clinical Reader in Public Health Medicine at Imperial College London; Theme lead for Innovation and Evaluation in the NW London NIHR Applied Research Collaboration; Director of Postgraduate TaughtProgrammes in the School of Public Health; and Honorary NHS Consultant in Public Health Medicine in the Imperial College NHS Trust.
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