Learning objectives |
- Understand the fundamental principles and main concepts of
managing innovation in a healthcare context, as well as the
different ways of developing and managing an innovative culture in
a healthcare context;
- Understand the different contexts and sources of innovation in
healthcare, e.g. by firms as an instrument of competition, by
non-profits organizations for improvement of their services or for
reducing their costs, by medical professionals for improved care
and even by patients and their informal caregivers.
- Understand the intrapreneurial process and apply
intrapreneurial best practices to innovation projects or ventures
inside existing organizations
- Recognize how the economics and governance of different
organizational types (firms, public health care organizations)
affect their behavior in innovation.
- Develop the competences to integrate a number of factors,
internal and external to the organization, in decision-related
analysis
- Upon successful completion of the course each student should
have demonstrated their ability to articulate innovation management
issues and to apply the knowledge acquired in a healthcare
context.
|
Course prerequisites |
This is a mandatory course for the MSc in
Business Administration and Innovation in Health Care.
To sign up send a 1-page motivational letter and a grade transcript
to ihc@cbs.dk before the registration deadline for elective
courses. You may find the registration deadlines on
my.cbs.dk (
https://studentcbs.sharepoint.com/graduate/pages/registration-for-electives.aspx
)
Please also remember to sign up through the online
registration. |
Prerequisites for registering for the exam
(activities during the teaching period) |
Number of compulsory
activities which must be approved: 1
Compulsory home
assignments
During the course students are expected to perform case analysis
in groups of 4 or 5 students and upload their case solutions in
Digital Exam. There will typically be 3 - 4 questions to be
addressed in relation to each case (max 3 pages), and the students
need to prepare a brief response. For preparing the response,
students need to read the case and eventually discuss it with
fellow students before answering the questions. To be admitted to
the exam, 1 case analysis (done in groups) out of 2 has to be
approved.
|
Examination |
Health Care
Innovation Management:
|
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-point grading scale |
Examiner(s) |
One internal examiner |
Exam period |
Winter |
Aids |
Closed book: no aids
However, at all
written sit-in exams the student has access to the basic IT
application package (Microsoft Office (minus Excel), digital pen
and paper, 7-zip file manager, Adobe Acrobat, Texlive, VLC player,
Windows Media Player), and the student is allowed to bring simple
writing and drawing utensils (non-digital). PLEASE NOTE: Students
are not allowed to communicate with others during the
exam. |
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.
|
Description of the exam
procedure
Individual 4 hour written closed-books exam, including some
questions about the case
studies.
|
|
Course content, structure and pedagogical
approach |
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 and management
innovation.
- The course starts out with an introduction on innovation, main
concepts and principles.
- Innovations grow out of opportunities and their combinations.
Theories on innovation and innovation modes explain their building
blocks and the cognitive and economic factors shaping the
transformation of opportunities into inventions and
innovations.
- Innovations in health care come from different sources and are
developed in different context, e.g. by firms as an instrument of
competition, by non-profits organizations as instrument for
improvement of their services or for reducing their costs, by
medical professionals for improved care of their patients and by
patients and their informal caregivers to help them cope with the
limitations imposed by their condition.
- Innovations are associated with risks, costs and efforts and
will be undertaken only if the innovating agent is adequatel
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, case
discussion, 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 be given in connection with
mandatory activities. |
Student workload |
lectures |
32 hours |
preparation for sessions |
60 hours |
Preparation of case analysis and written solutions |
72 hours |
Exam preparation and 4 hrs sit-in exam |
44 hours |
|