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Journal ArticleDOI

Autonomy and bureaucratic accountability in primary care: what English general practitioners say

Stephen Harrison, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2002 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 2, pp 208-226
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TLDR
GPs’ perceptions of how current government policies, and the new institutions and governance arrangements that they have created impact on physicians’ ability to set their own limits and to judge their own work are investigated.
Abstract
Clinical autonomy has long been seen as conceptually central to the analysis of the occupational status of the medical profession, though the implications for this of recent developments in health care managerialism have been disputed by theorists. In particular, the question has arisen as to whether ‘restratification’, that is, the active involvement of physicians in this process, should be construed as medical elites exerting control over the rank and file in order to protect the profession as a whole, or as an incursion from outside it. This paper uses interview data from 49 general medical practitioners in Northern England. It investigates their perceptions of how current government policies, and the new institutions and governance arrangements that they have created impact on physicians’ ability to set their own limits and to judge their own work. We found a clear acceptance by GPs of the need to discharge ‘bureaucratic accountability’, in particular to maintain records of their clinical decisions. This provides the possibility of external surveillance of medical work, and thus implies a clear reduction in autonomy over the content of medical work on the part of rank-and-file GPs, who may regret this situation but offer little resistance to it. Our findings illustrate a form of restratification; the most frequently reported immediate source of pressure to modify casenote recording was the Primary Care Group (PCG), an organisation constitutionally dominated by physicians acting in a managerial capacity. Nevertheless, the agendas of PCGs are largely driven by central government and our study thus provides further evidence of the intermediary or contingent (rather than independent) character of professional autonomy.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of management on medical professionalism: a review

TL;DR: It is argued that comparative, longitudinal and cross-sectional research is necessary, and there is a need to overcome the hegemony/resistance framework in current analyses of the impact of management on professionalism.
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Impact of financial incentives on clinical autonomy and internal motivation in primary care: ethnographic study.

TL;DR: Investigation of financial incentives for quality of care introduced in the 2004 general practitioner contract did not seem to have damaged the internal motivation of the general practitioners studied, although more concern was expressed by nurses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in doctor-manager relationships.

TL;DR: How management structures have changed over the past few decades is explored and how a better understanding of the dynamics behind healthcare delivery might help to ease the tensions between doctors and their managers is explained.
Journal ArticleDOI

The bureaucratization of safety

TL;DR: In this paper, the author examines the bureaucratization of safety, and the increase in safety as measurable bureaucratic accountability, and concludes with possible ideas for addressing such problems, including a reduced marginal yield of safety initiatives, bureaucratic entrepreneurism and pettiness, an inability to predict unexpected events, structural secrecy, "numbers games," the creation of new safety problems, and constraints on organization members' personal freedom, diversity and creativity, as well as a hampering of innovation.

Checkland C, Harrison H, McDonald R, Grant S, CampbellS, Guthrie B. Biomedicine, holism and general medical practice: responses to the 2004 General Practitioner contract.

Abstract: In 2004 a new contract was introduced for General Practitioners in the UK, which introduced a significant element of 'pay-for-performance', including both clinical and organisational targets. The introduction of this contract has caused interest across the world, particularly amongst those responsible for commissioning primary care services. It can be argued that the clinical targets in the contract (known as the Quality and Outcomes Framework, QOF) represent a move towards a more biomedical model of health and illness, which is contrary to the ideal of providing holistic (or biopsychosocial) care that has been traditionally espoused by GPs. This paper reports results from two linked studies (in England and Scotland) investigating the early stages of the new contract. We describe the way in which four practices with different organisational approaches and espoused identities have all changed their practice structures, consultations and clinical care in response to QOF in ways which will result in patients receiving a more biomedical type of care. In spite of these observed changes, respondents continued to maintain discursive claims to holism. We discuss how this disconnection between rhetoric and reality can be maintained, and consider its implications for the future development of GPs' claims to a professional identity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Theory of Social and Economic Organization

TL;DR: A synthetic polyisoprene rubber latex produced by emulsifying a solution of polyisoperene rubber in an organic solvent with water and removing the solvent from the resulting oil-in-water emulsion is significantly improved with respect to mechanical stability, wet gel strength and dry film strength as mentioned in this paper.
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TL;DR: The Theory of Social and Economic Organization as mentioned in this paper is based on Weber's philosophical inquiries into the nature of authority and how it is transmitted, and identifies three types of authority: the charismatic, based on the individual qualities of a leader and reverence for them among his or her followers; the traditional based on custom and usage; and the rational-legal, according to the rule of objective law.
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TL;DR: In this paper, a critical language study and social emancipation: language education in the schools is discussed, as well as critical discourse analysis in practice: interpretation, explanation, and the position of the analyst.