Abstract

The external environment within which UK charitable hospice care operates is changing. More people are dying with conditions other than cancer; however, this disease still dominates modern hospice care. Organisational institutionalism offers a theoretical lens through which to consider the challenges facing the hospice movement. Concepts such as legitimacy, decoupling, deinstitutionalisation, and reinstitutionalisation can help hospice leaders understand the challenges of change and some of the strategies that can be employed at local and national levels. This paper outlines a number of environmental and influencing factors driving and impacting change. A model of institutional change is introduced, explored, and considered from the context of hospice. When it comes to understanding change, legitimacy is a major concept introduced to challenge and pose questions for hospices to address. This paper proposes a model demonstrating a perspective regarding the current structure of services within hospice organisations. The model argues that only hospice care for people with cancer is truly institutionalised and that other areas of care lack comparable legitimacy. It provides 3 directions for hospice in addressing the challenges faced: (i) decoupling, (ii) deinstitutionalisation then reinstitutionalisation, and (iii) a new social movement. The paper concludes with recommendations for future consideration.

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