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Consequences of how third sector organisations are commissioned in the NHS and local authorities in England: a mixed-methods study

Sheaff, R. ORCID: 0000-0002-7984-2627, Ellis Paine, A. ORCID: 0000-0002-4385-5098, Exworthy, M. ORCID: 0000-0003-4791-7513 , Gibson, A. ORCID: 0000-0003-2761-2819, Stuart, J. ORCID: 0000-0002-2316-6180, Jochum, V. ORCID: 0009-0006-8805-9761, Allen, P. ORCID: 0000-0001-5598-1684, Clark, J. ORCID: 0000-0002-8385-7223, Mannion, R. ORCID: 0000-0002-0680-8049 & Asthana, S. ORCID: 0000-0002-1483-2719 (2024). Consequences of how third sector organisations are commissioned in the NHS and local authorities in England: a mixed-methods study. Health and Social Care Delivery Research, 12(39), pp. 1-180. doi: 10.3310/ntdt7965

Abstract

Background
As a matter of policy, voluntary, community and social enterprises contribute substantially to the English health and care system. Few studies explain how the National Health Service and local authorities commission them, what outputs result, what contexts influence these outcomes and what differentiates this kind of commissioning.

Objectives
To explain how voluntary, community and social enterprises are commissioned, the consequences, what barriers both parties face and what absorptive capacities they need.

Design
Observational mixed-methods realist analysis: exploratory scoping, cross-sectional analysis of National Health Service Clinical Commissioning Group spending on voluntary, community and social enterprises, systematic comparison of case studies, action learning. Social prescribing, learning disability support and end-of-life care were tracers.

Setting
Maximum-variety sample of six English local health and care economies, 2019–23.

Participants
Commissioning staff; voluntary, community and social enterprise members.

Interventions
None; observational study.

Main outcome measures
How the consequences of commissioning compared with the original aims of the commissioners and the voluntary, community and social enterprises: predominantly qualitative (non-measurable) outcomes.

Data sources
Data sources were: 189 interviews, 58 policy and position papers, 37 items of rapportage, 692,659 Clinical Commissioning Group invoices, 102 Freedom of Information enquiries, 131 survey responses, 18 local project group meetings, 4 national action learning set meetings. Data collected in England during 2019–23.

Results
Two modes of commissioning operated in parallel. Commodified commissioning relied on creating a principal–agent relationship between commissioner and the voluntary, community and social enterprises, on formal competitive selection (‘procurement’) of providers. Collaborative commissioning relied on ‘embedded’ interorganisational relationships, mutual recognition of resource dependencies, a negotiated division of labour between organisations, and control through persuasion. Commissioners and voluntary, community and social enterprises often worked around the procurement regulations. Both modes were present everywhere but the balance depended inter alia on the number and size of voluntary, community and social enterprises in each locality, their past commissioning experience, the character of the tracer activity, and the level of deprivation and the geographic dispersal of the populations served. The COVID-19 pandemic produced a shift towards collaborative commissioning. Voluntary, community and social enterprises were not always funded at the full cost of their activity. Integrated Care System formation temporarily disrupted local co-commissioning networks but offered a longer-term prospect of greater voluntary, community and social enterprise influence on co-commissioning. To develop absorptive capacity, commissioners needed stronger managerial and communication capabilities, and voluntary, community and social enterprises needed greater capability to evidence what outcomes their proposals would deliver.

Limitations
Published data quality limited the spending profile accuracy, which did not include local authority commissioning. Case studies did not cover London, and focused on three tracer activities. Absorptive capacity survey was not a random sample.

Conclusions
The two modes of commissioning sometimes conflicted. Workarounds arose from organisations’ embeddedness and collaboration, which the procurement regulations often disrupted. Commissioning activity at below its full cost appears unsustainable.

Future work
Spending profiles of local authority commissioning; analysis of commissioning in London and of activities besides the present tracers. Analysis of absorptive capacity and its consequences, adjusting the concept for application to voluntary, community and social enterprises. Comparison with other health systems’ commissioning of voluntary, community and social enterprises.

Funding
This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR128107) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 39. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

Publication Type: Article
Additional Information: Copyright © 2024 Sheaff et al. This work was produced by Sheaff et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This is an Open Access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. For attribution the title, original author(s), the publication source – NIHR Journals Library, and the DOI of the publication must be cited.
Subjects: R Medicine > RA Public aspects of medicine > RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine
Departments: Bayes Business School
SWORD Depositor:
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