Abstract
PurposeThe COVID-19 pandemic has created a crisis for healthcare systems worldwide. There have been significant challenges to managing public and private health care and related services systems’ capacity to cope with testing, treatment and containment of the virus. Drawing on the foundational research by Frow et al. (2019), the paper explores how adopting a service ecosystem perspective provides insight into the complexity of healthcare systems during times of extreme stress and uncertainty.Design/methodology/approachA healthcare framework based on a review of the service ecosystem literature is developed, and the COVID-19 crisis in Australia provides an illustrative case.FindingsThe study demonstrates how the service ecosystem perspective provides new insight into the dynamics and multilayered nature of a healthcare system during a pandemic. Three propositions are developed that offer directions for future research and managerial applications.Practical implicationsThe research provides an understanding of the relevance of managerial flexibility, innovation, learning and knowledge sharing, which offers opportunities leading to greater resilience in the healthcare system. In particular, the research addresses how service providers in the service ecosystem learn from this pandemic to inform future practices.Originality/valueThe service ecosystem perspective for health care offers fresh thinking and an understanding of how a shared worldview, institutional practices and supportive and disruptive factors influence the systems’ overall well-being during a crisis such as COVID-19.
Reference67 articles.
1. Australian Government (2016), “How does Australia's health system work?”, available at: https://www.aihw.gov.au/getmedia/f2ae1191-bbf2-47b6-a9d4-1b2ca65553a1/ah16-2-1-how-does-australias-health-system-work.pdf.aspx (accessed 7 June 2020).
2. Australian Government Department of Health (2020), “Australian health protection principal committee (AHPPC)”, available at: https://www.health.gov.au/committees-and-groups/australian-health-protection-principal-committee-ahppc (accessed 29 July 2020).
3. Autio, E. and Thomas, L.D.W. (2020), “Value co-creation in ecosystems: insights and research promise from three disciplinary perspectives”, Chapter 6, in Nambisan, S., Lyytinen, K. and Yoo, Y. (Eds), Handbook of Digital Innovation, Edward Elgar.
4. Building resilience for palliative care clinicians: an approach to burnout prevention based on individual skills and workplace factors;Journal of Pain and Symptom Management,2016
5. The economic geography of Australia and its analysis: from industrial to post-industrial regions;Geographical Research,2012
Cited by
47 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献