762
Views
3
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research articles

Commodification and healthcare in the third sector in England: from gift to commodity—and back?

, , , ORCID Icon &

References

  • Albalate, D., Bel, G., & Reeves, E. (2021). Government choice between contract termination and contract expiration in re-municipalization: A case of historical recurrence? International Review of Administrative Sciences, 87(3), 461–479.
  • Allen, P., Bartlett, W., Pérotin, V., Matchaya, G., Turner, S., & Zamora, B. (2011). Healthcare providers in the English National Health Service: Public, private or hybrids? International Journal of Public and Private Healthcare Management and Economics, 1(3), 1–18.
  • Altman, M. (2015). The social economics of growth and inequality. In The Elgar companion to social economics, 2nd edn. Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Anderson, G. F., Ballreich, J., Bleich, S., Boyd, C., DuGoff, E., Leff, B., Salzburg, C., & Wolff, J. (2015). Attributes common to programs that successfully treat high-need, high-cost individuals. American Journal of Managed Care, 21(11), e597–e600.
  • Bakker, D. H. d., Struijs, J. N., Baan, C. A., Raams, J., Wildt, J.-E. d., Vrijhoef, H. J. M., & Schut, F. T. (2012). Early results from adoption of bundled payment for diabetes care in the Netherlands show improvement in care coordination. Health Affairs, 31(2), 426–433. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2011.0912
  • Bambra, C. (2005). Cash versus services: ‘worlds of welfare’ and the decommodification of cash benefits and health care services. Journal of Social Policy, 34(2), 195–213.
  • Bar-Lev, S. (2015). The politics of healthcare informatics: Knowledge management using an electronic medical record system. Sociology of Health & Illness, 37(3), 404–421. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12213
  • Bergeron, H., & Castel, P. (2010). Captation, appariement, réseau: Une logique professionnelle d’organization des soins. Sociologie Du Travail, 52, 441–469.
  • Bergmark, Å. (2008). Market reforms in Swedish health care: Normative reorientation and welfare state sustainability. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 33(3), 241–261.
  • Bishop, S., & Waring, J. (2016). Becoming hybrid: The negotiated order on the front line of public–private partnerships. Human Relations, 69(10), 1937–1958. https://doi.org/10.1177/0018726716630389
  • Briot, P., Bréchat, P.-H., Reiss-Brennan, B., Cannon, W., Bréchat, N., & Teil, A. (2015). Integrated care delivery system for mental illness: A case study of Intermountain Healthcare (USA). Sante Publique, 1(HS), 199–208.
  • Busse, R., Geissler, A., Aaviksoo, A., Cots, F., Hakkinen, U., Kobel, C., Mateus, C., Or, Z., O’Reilly, J., Serden, L., Street, A., Tan, S. S., & Quentin, W. (2013). Diagnosis related groups in Europe: Moving towards transparency, efficiency, and quality in hospitals? BMJ, 346(3), f3197–f3197. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.f3197
  • Busse, R., Geissler, A., Quentin, W., & WIley, M.2011). Diagnosis-related groups in Europe: Moving towards transparency, efficiency and quality in hospitals. European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies & Open University Press.
  • Cabinet Office. (2018). Civil society strategy: building a future that works for everyone. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/732765/Civil_Society_Strategy_-_building_a_future_that_works_for_everyone.pdf
  • Caplan, R. L. (1989). The commodification of American health care. Social Science & Medicine, 28(11), 1139–1148.
  • Carvalho, L. F., & Rodrigues, J. (2015). Are markets everywhere? Understanding contemporary processes of commodification. In The Elgar companion to social economics, 2nd edn (pp. 267–286). Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Chambers, N., Sheaff, R., Mahon, A., Byng, R., Mannion, R., Charles, N., Exworthy, M., & Llewellyn, S. (2013). The practice of commissioning healthcare from a private provider: Learning from an in-depth case study. BMC Health Services Research, 13(Suppl 1), S4. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-S1-S4
  • Christiansen, I. (2017). Commodification of healthcare and its consequences. World Review of Political Economy, 8(1), 82–103.
  • Coupet, J., & McWilliams, A. (2017). Integrating organizational economics and resource dependence theory to explain the persistence of quasi markets. Administrative Sciences, 7(3), 29.
  • Currie, G., Croft, C., Chen, Y., Kiefer, T., Staniszewska, S., & Lilford, R. (2018). The capacity of health service commissioners to use evidence: A case study. Health Services Delivery Research, 6(12), 1–158.
  • Damery, S., Flanagan, S., & Combes, G. (2016). Does integrated care reduce hospital activity for patients with chronic diseases? An umbrella review of systematic reviews. BMJ Open, 6(11), e011952.
  • De Bono, D. S., Greenfield, D., Travaglia, J. F., Long, J. C., Black, D., Johnson, J., & Braithwaite, J. (2013). Nurses’ workarounds in acute healthcare settings: A scoping review. BMC Health Services Research, 13(1), 175.
  • Esping-Andersen, G. (1989). The three political economies of the welfare state. Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue Canadienne de Sociologie, 26(1), 10–36.
  • Esping-Andersen, G. (1990). The three worlds of welfare capitalism. Princeton University Press.
  • Esposito, L., & Perez, F. M. (2014). Neoliberalism and the commodification of mental health. Humanity & Society, 38(4), 414–442.
  • Exworthy, M., Powell, M., & Mohan, J. (1999). The NHS: quasi-market, quasi-hierarchy and quasi-network? Public Money & Management, 19(4), 15–22.
  • Glaser, W. (1987). Paying the Hospital: the organization, dynamics, and effects of differing financial arrangements. Jossey-Bass.
  • Goldstein, M. M., & Bowers, D. G. (2015). The patient as consumer: Empowerment or commodification? Currents in contemporary bioethics. The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 43(1), 162–165.
  • Harrison, S. (2009). Co-optation, commodification and the medical model: Governing UK medicine since 1991. Public Administration, 87(2), 184–197. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9299.2009.01752.x
  • Hildebrandt, H., Pimperl, A., Schulte, T., Hermann, C., Riedel, H., Schubert, I., Koester, I., Siegel, A., & Wetzel, M. (2015). Pursuing the triple aim: Evaluation of the integrated care system Gesundes Kinzigtal: Population health, patient experience and cost-effectiveness. Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung, Gesundheitsschutz, 58(4–5), 383–392.
  • Kifmann, M. (2017). Competition policy for health care provision in Germany. Health Policy, 121(2), 119–125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2016.11.014
  • Krajewski, M. (2010). Commodifying and embedding services of general interests in transnational contexts—the example of healthcare liberalisation in the EU and the WTO. Karl Polanyi, globalisation and the potential of law in transnational markets. Bloomsbury.
  • Lalley, C., & Malloch, K. (2010). Workarounds: the hidden pathway to excellence. Nurse Leader, 8(4), 29–32. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mnl.2010.05.009
  • Leister, J. E., & Stausberg, J. (2005). Comparison of cost accounting methods from different DRG systems and their effect on health care quality. Health Policy, 74(1), 46–55. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2004.12.001
  • Lupton, D. (2014). The commodification of patient opinion: The digital patient experience economy in the age of big data. Sociology of Health & Illness, 36(6), 856–869. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12109
  • Mackintosh, M. (2006). Commercialisation, inequality and the limits to transition in health care: A Polanyian framework for policy analysis. Journal of International Development, 18(3), 393–406. https://doi.org/10.1002/jid.1290
  • Mazanderani, F., Locock, L., & Powell, J. (2013). Biographical value: Towards a conceptualisation of the commodification of illness narratives in contemporary healthcare. Sociology of Health & Illness, 35(6), 891–905. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12001
  • McClean, S., & Moore, R. (2013). Money, commodification and complementary health care: Theorising personalised medicine within depersonalised systems of exchange. Social Theory & Health, 11(2), 194–214.
  • NHS. (2019). The NHS long term plan. www.longtermplan.nhs.uk
  • Noort, B. A. C., Ahaus, K., van der Vaart, T., Chambers, N., & Sheaff, R. (2020). How healthcare systems shape a purchaser’s strategies and actions when managing chronic care. Health Policy, 124(6), 628–638. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2020.03.009
  • Norman, A. H., Russell, A. J., & Merli, C. (2016). The quality and outcomes framework: Body commodification in UK general practice. Social Science & Medicine, 170(December), 77–86.
  • OECD. (2015). OECD guidelines on corporate governance of state-owned enterprises. http://doi.org/10.1787/9789264244160-en
  • Osipovič, D., & Allen, P. (2021). Analysis of the Health and Care Bill 2021: procurement, payment, competition and patient choice provisions [working paper]. PRUComm.
  • Petsoulas, C., Allen, P., Hughes, D., Vincent-Jones, P., & Roberts, J. (2011). The use of standard contracts in the English National Health Service: A case study analysis. Social Science & Medicine, 73(2), 185–192. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.05.021
  • Roemer, M. (1993). National Health Systems of the World. Oxford University Press.
  • Saltman, R. B., Rico, A., & Boerma, W. (2006). PHC in the driver’s seat: Organizational reform in European PHC. Open University Press.
  • Scheper-Hughes, N. (2001). Bodies for sale–whole or in parts. Body & Society, 7(2–3), 1–8.
  • Sheaff, R., Charles, N., Mahon, A., Chambers, N., Morando, V., Exworthy, M., Mannion, R., & Llewellyn, S. (2015). NHS commissioning practice and health system governance: A mixed-methods realistic evaluation. Health Services and Delivery Research, 3(10), 1–184. https://doi.org/10.3310/hsdr03100
  • Stoeckle, J. D. (2000). From service to commodity: Corporization, competition, commodification, and customer culture transforms health care. Croatian Medical Journal, 41(2), 141–143.
  • Tan, S. S., Geissler, A., Serdén, L., Heurgren, M., van Ineveld, B. M., Redekop, W. K., & Hakkaart-van Roijen, L. (2014). DRG systems in Europe: Variations in cost accounting systems among 12 countries. European Journal of Public Health, 24(6), 1023–1028. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/cku025
  • Titmuss, R. (1997). The gift relationship. LSE Books.
  • Tonkens, E., Bröer, C., van Sambeek, N., & van Hassel, D. (2013). Pretenders and performers: Professional responses to the commodification of health care. Social Theory & Health, 11(4), 368–387. https://doi.org/10.1057/sth.2013.5
  • Vincent-Jones, P. (2007). The new public contracting: public versus private ordering? Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, 14(2), 259–278.
  • Vlaanderen, F. P., Tanke, M. A., Bloem, B. R., Faber, M. J., Eijkenaar, F., Schut, F. T., & Jeurissen, P. P. T. (2019). Design and effects of outcome-based payment models in healthcare: A systematic review. The European Journal of Health Economics, 20(2), 217–232. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10198-018-0989-8
  • Vogelsmeier, A. A., Halbesleben, J. R. B., & Scott-Cawiezell, J. R. (2008). Technology implementation and workarounds in the nursing home. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: JAMIA, 15(1), 114–119. https://doi.org/10.1197/jamia.M2378
  • Williamson, J. (1993). Democracy and the ‘Washington consensus’. World Development, 21(8), 1329–1336.