Learning objectives |
- Recognize how the economics and governance of different
organizational types (firms, public health care organizations)
affect their behavior in innovation.
- Ability to apply data analytics to decisions on IHC.
- Skills in analyzing and handling inter-organizational
collaboration on innovation, such as e.g. public-private
partnerships
- Competence to integrate a number of factors, internal and
external to the organization, in decision-related
analysis
|
Course prerequisites |
15 seats til CBS students
15 seats to exchange students |
Examination |
The Economics
of Health Care Innovation:
|
Exam
ECTS |
7,5 |
Examination form |
Written sit-in exam on CBS'
computers |
Individual or group exam |
Individual exam |
Assignment type |
Written assignment |
Duration |
4 hours |
Grading scale |
7-step scale |
Examiner(s) |
Internal examiner and second internal
examiner |
Exam period |
Winter |
Aids |
Limited aids, see the list below:
The student is allowed to bring - Non-programmable, financial calculators: HP10bll+ or Texas BA
II Plus
- Language dictionaries in paper format
The student will have access to - Advanced IT application package
|
Make-up exam/re-exam |
Same examination form as the ordinary exam
If the number of registered candidates for the make-up
examination/re-take examination warrants that it may most
appropriately be held as an oral examination, the programme office
will inform the students that the make-up examination/re-take
examination will be held as an oral examination instead.
The form of this exam may be changed
for the make-up exam. If the number of registered participants for
the make-up exam warrants it , the make-up exam may most
appropriately be held as an oral exam (20 minutes without
preparation).There will be a second internal examiner for the oral
exam.
|
|
Course content and structure |
Healthcare systems across the world are facing increasing
challenges, such as ageing populations, ensuring a fair access in
developing countries, increasing costs. Innovative thinking is
crucial to meet these challenges but it is also equally important
to understand how the various actors can manage innovation
successfully.
This course enables students to analyze innovations and to
contribute to their managerial decision processes from this
economic perspective. It also trains students in data analytics and
quantitative methods applied to IHC.
- The course starts out with an intensive course in data
analytics, giving students the tools for examining data and
applying them to decision in IHC. These tools will be applied to a
number of subsequent topics addressed in the course.
- Innovations grow out of opportunities and their combinations.
Theories on innovation explain their building blocks and the
cognitive and economic factors shaping the transformation of
opportunities into inventions and innovations
- Innovations are associated with risks, costs and efforts and
will be undertaken only if the innovating agent is adequately
incentivized. For firms this involves the challenge of
appropriating the returns on their innovation costs through
patenting or other efforts aimed at appropriation. For public
institutions, such as hospitals, the innovations are linked to
incentives in more complicated ways affecting the way they are
conceived, carried out, prioritized and
implemented.
- Technologies evolve in cyclical patterns, affecting the
undertraining and adoption of specific innovations Understanding
technology cycles is required for a broad range of decisions in the
undertaking and adoption of specific innovations.
- Companies and other organizations are guided by strategies, and
innovations ideally should be strategically consistent in the way
they are pursued or adopted. In reality for companies this
questions of strategic consistency is less straightforward. In
addition, the question presents further complications for a public
health care system guided by multiple strategic goals some of which
represent ongoing compromises. The assessment and prioritization of
innovation from a strategic perspective gives rise to a number of
challenges for innovation management.
- Health care to large extent consists of services. Innovation in
services represents a number of challenges different from those
found in manufactured products. The strong “people component” of
services make them difficult to standardize, scale and apply into
effective diffusion, and innovative service organizations have
been required to manage their innovations in new ways. Students
must understand these service characteristics, and the way they are
addressed in innovation strategies.
- In innovation-intensive sectors, collaboration has become a
crucial part of firms’ strategy. Students will need to understand
the similarities and differences between collaboration with
suppliers, collaboration with competitors, and collaboration
between firms in different stages of the value chain. Focus will be
put on analyzing how collaboration can promote/hinder
innovation.
|
Description of the teaching methods |
Teaching includes lecture-style classes, in-class
workshops with students presenting and actively participating in
discussions around pre-assigned cases and/or exercises, and guest
presentations by practitioners. Preparation before class is of
crucial importance. |
Feedback during the teaching period |
Feedback will given at a session after the exam
has taken place. |
Student workload |
lectures |
30 hours |
crash course |
20 hours |
preparation of sessions |
75 hours |
class presentation/project |
35 hours |
exam preparation and exam |
65 hours |
|
Expected literature |
J. Barlow "Managing Innovation in Healthcare", World
Scientific
|