Collaboration and competition in a children's health initiative coalition: A network analysis
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Valente, Thomas W. (Author)
- Coronges, Kathryn A. (Author)
- Stevens, Gregory D. (Author)
- Cousineau, Michael R. (Author)
Title
Collaboration and competition in a children's health initiative coalition: A network analysis
Abstract
Activating communities to achieve public health change and initiate policy reform usually requires collective action from many entities. This case study analyzes inter-organizational networks among members of a coalition created to expand health insurance coverage to uninsured children in a large metropolitan area. Six networks were measured: collaboration, competition, formal agreements, receive funding from, send funding to, and greater communication. The response rate was 65.8% (50 of the 76 active members). Positive network questions such as “who do you collaborate with” elicited many network choices whereas negative ones such as “who do you compete with” elicited few. The collaboration network had a core–periphery structure and analysis showed that a large network can be reduced to a small set of core organizations one-sixth the size of the whole. Centrality (out- and in-degree) was associated with perceived organizational function and perceived barriers to success. For example, organizations that received many choices as collaboration partners were more likely to perceive the coalition functioned well than those who received few choices. The study suggests that perceptions of organizational performance are associated with position in the network, central members are more likely to perceive the organization performs well than those on the periphery.
Publication
Evaluation and Program Planning
Volume
31
Issue
4
Pages
392-402
Date
novembro 1, 2008
Journal Abbr
Evaluation and Program Planning
ISSN
0149-7189
Citation
Valente, T. W., Coronges, K. A., Stevens, G. D., & Cousineau, M. R. (2008). Collaboration and competition in a children’s health initiative coalition: A network analysis. Evaluation and Program Planning, 31(4), 392–402. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.evalprogplan.2008.06.002
Sectors / Setores
Geography / Geografia
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