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The Milbank Quarterly logoLink to The Milbank Quarterly
. 1997 Dec;75(4):533–561. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.00068

Public–Private Collaboration in Health and Human Service Delivery: Evidence from Community Partnerships

Gloria J Bazzoli 1,2, Rebecca Stein 2, Jeffrey A Alexander 3, Douglas A Conrad 4, Shoshanna Sofaer 5, Stephen M Shortell 2
PMCID: PMC2751060  PMID: 9415091

Abstract

The collaboration among public–private partnerships that applied to the Community Care Network (CCN) demonstration program of the Hospital Research and Educational Trust is examined. These partnerships link broad-based community coalitions with health and human service providers in efforts to improve community health and local service delivery. Although they willingly collaborated in identifying community health needs, coordinating services, and reporting to the community, partnership participants showed less alacrity in joining forces to reduce redundancy and increase efficiency. Such patterns suggest that organizations might best profit from working together on activities that maintain existing power relations and that have the potential to add prestige and attract new clients. Collaboration in these areas may be essential to building a foundation of trust that leads to future cooperation in more sensitive areas.

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