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Organizations seeking to create innovative environments in health care need to pay attention to a number of factors. These include making available sufficient resources, notably money and physical space, but also coordination and consultation regarding intellectual property and licensing; enabling access to engineers, software developers, and behavioral scientists; making providers and patients available to innovators; having a sufficiently long-term view; and insulating the innovation group from operational demands. If there is a single essential key to success, it is making innovation a strategic priority. Academic health systems are enormous generators of innovation in the form of generalizable research in biomedical sciences. Typically, much of that innovation is externally supported, and little is directed to improving care processes internally. In industries other than health care, organizations invest their own funds in research and development to promote innovation, and this investment is seen as a metric for a firm's commitment to its future. Increased investment in care-process innovation is long overdue.

Original publication

DOI

10.1377/hlthaff.2016.1311

Type

Journal article

Journal

Health affairs (Project Hope)

Publication Date

03/2017

Volume

36

Pages

400 - 407

Addresses

David W. Bates (dbates@partners.org) is chief of the Division of General Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital, in Boston, Massachusetts.

Keywords

Humans, Leadership, Diffusion of Innovation, Health Resources, Health Services Research, Organizational Innovation, Delivery of Health Care, Quality Improvement