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The stipulation-stimulation spiral: A model of system change.

Sara A Kreindler
Published in: The International journal of health planning and management (2019)
This paper proposes a general model, based on what is known about the nature of (complex) systems, of how systems-in particular, health care systems-respond to attempted change. Inferences are drawn from a critical literature review and reinterpretation of two primary studies. The two fundamental system-change approaches are "stipulation" and "stimulation": stip(ulation) attempts to elicit a specific response from the system; stim(ulation) encourages the system to generate diverse responses. Each has a unique strength: stip's is precision, the ability to directly impact the desired outcome and only that outcome; stim's is resonance, the ability to take advantage of behavior already present within the system. Each approach's inherent strength is its complement's inherent weakness; thus, stip and stim often clash if attempted simultaneously but can reinforce each other if applied in alternation. Opposite patterns (the "stip-stim spiral" vs "stip-stim stalemate") are observed to underpin successful vs failed system change: The crucial difference is whether decision-makers respond to a need for precision/resonance by strengthening the appropriate approach (stipulation/stimulation, respectively), or merely by weakening its complement. With further validation, the model has the potential to yield a more fundamental understanding of why system-change efforts fail and how they can succeed.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
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  • human health