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2 Regul. & Governance 1 (2008)

handle is hein.journals/rgulangnce2 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Regulation & Governance (2008) 2, 1-8


GUEST EDITORS' INTRODUCTION


Health care and new governance: The quest

for   effective regulation




We  are witnessing major changes in the governance of health care around the world in
response to dramatic developments  in medicine and  the global economy. Sweeping
reforms have been  introduced. New  institutional forms are emerging. Regulation is
evolving into a more complex institutional matrix that uses multiple tools. The result
has been the emergence of new forms of governance that seem better adapted to current
needs. Much  more must be done, but a major transformation is underway.
    These changes echo an earlier period of health care reform, and show remarkable
continuities with the pragmatist tradition that emerged initially in the US in the nineteenth
century, and spread in various forms throughout the world. A hallmark of this tradition,
from John Dewey  on, is the search for knowledgeable and effective institutions responsive
to changing social needs, aspirations, and visions of a just society. From this vantage point,
write Nonet and Selznick, the paradigmatic function of law is responsive regulation, mean-
ing (among other things) regulatory institutions committed to (i) enlarging their scope of
inquiry to embrace knowledge of the social contexts and effects of regulatory decisions; (ii)
a style of reasoning that reaches beyond mere rule-following by focusing on social con-
sequences; and (iii) testing alternative strategies for the implementation of mandates and
reconstructing those mandates in the light of what is learned (Nonet & Selznick 1978).
   In the early twentieth century, this pragmatic search for more knowledgeable and
effective institutions in health care was inspired by a mid-nineteenth century insight of
revolutionary proportions: the recognition that medical knowledge is not something
fixed but something that grows and evolves (Ludmerer 1999, p. 65). Reformers of that
day confronted a new  model  of medicine, new sources of information, and a revolt
against formalism. Drawing on pragmatist insights, they created new regulatory frame-
works to deal with the medical, moral, social, and economic aspects of the health care
revolution of their time, thus transforming hospitals and medical schools.
    Today, the global society faces challenges of a different order - another revolution
in medical knowledge  and the emergence of new information technologies - but the
pragmatist approach  still guides the search. A reaction against top-down regulatory
models, reminiscent of the earlier revolt against formalism, has opened the door to new
governance  approaches. These innovations  build on 100  years of experience with
regulation.
    This special health care issue of Regulation & Governance examines some of the
regulatory institutions involved in this complex contemporary transformation, paying
special attention to the problems they faced and methods developed to address these
challenges. Setting the stage for the articles that follow, Part 1 of this introduction
sketches some of the main problems facing health care regulation in the US and Europe,
while Parts 2 to 5 consider the regulatory response in light of four key themes: pluralism,
participation, accountability, and capacity.


© 2008 The Authors
Journal compilation © 2008 Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd


doi:10.1111/j.1748-5991.2007.00030.x

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