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South African health decentralisation: requiring contextually intelligent leaders

Ellenore Meyer (Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Family Medicine, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa)
Leena Thomas (Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of District Health, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa)
Selma Smith (Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Family Medicine, University of Pretoria)
Caren Scheepers (Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, Johannesburg, South Africa)

Publication date: 11 October 2017

Abstract

Subject area

Public Health; Leadership; Organisational Development; Organisational Behaviour; Public Administration Management.

Study level/applicability

Postgraduate level for honours or masters programmes in courses on public health; executive leadership and management programmes; MBA level.

Case overview

The case unpacks decentralisation as a means to promote and improve local decision-making and accountability through community participation and engagements. Ayanda Nkele was a programme manager in a health district in South Africa. He was faced with many challenges when trying to implement his programme, most of which were related to local authority, responsibilities and decision-making abilities at his level. This case describes briefly the South African health system. and how it functions. It describes the proposed changes to the health system and its transformation towards Universal Health Coverage. The decision space analysis as discussed in the case illustrates the types of decentralisation in the country and how this also applies to Nkele’s level.

Expected learning outcomes

Understanding the concepts and principles of decentralisation within the context of strengthening district health services, the re-engineering of primary health care (PHC) and rolling out a National Health Insurance in South Africa. Applying the “decision space” approach to analyse the extent of decentralisation. Grasping the requirement of leaders to be “contextually intelligent” and identify the important contextual variables to take into account when analysing public health care.

Supplementary materials

Teaching Notes are available for educators only. Please contact your library to gain login details or email support@emeraldinsight.com to request teaching notes.

Subject code

CSS 7: Management Science.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Disclaimer. This case is written solely for educational purposes and is not intended to represent successful or unsuccessful managerial decision-making. The authors may have disguised names; financial and other recognisable information to protect confidentiality.

Citation

Meyer, E., Thomas, L., Smith, S. and Scheepers, C. (2017), "South African health decentralisation: requiring contextually intelligent leaders", , Vol. 7 No. 4. https://doi.org/10.1108/EEMCS-12-2016-0230

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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