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Pathways to professionalism? Quality improvement, care pathways, and the interplay of standardisation and clinical autonomy
- Source :
- Sociology of healthillness. 39(8)
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Care pathways are a prominent feature of efforts to improve healthcare quality, outcomes and accountability, but sociological studies of pathways often find professional resistance to standardisation. This qualitative study examined the adoption and adaptation of a novel pathway as part of a randomised controlled trial in an unusually complex, non-linear field - emergency general surgery - by teams of surgeons and physicians in six theoretically sampled sites in the UK. We find near-universal receptivity to the concept of a pathway as a means of improving peri-operative processes and outcomes, but concern about the impact on appropriate professional judgement. However, this concern translated not into resistance and implementation failure, but into a nuancing of the pathways-as-realised in each site, and their use as a means of enhancing professional decision-making and inter-professional collaboration. We discuss our findings in the context of recent literature on the interplay between managerialism and professionalism in healthcare, and highlight practical and theoretical implications.
- Subjects :
- Health (social science)
Quality management
media_common.quotation_subject
Health Personnel
education
Resistance (psychoanalysis)
Context (language use)
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Nursing
Health care
Medicine
Humans
Professional Autonomy
030212 general & internal medicine
Qualitative Research
media_common
Laparotomy
business.industry
030503 health policy & services
Health Policy
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Quality Improvement
United Kingdom
Managerialism
Professionalism
General Surgery
Accountability
Engineering ethics
Clinical Competence
0305 other medical science
business
Emergency Service, Hospital
Autonomy
Qualitative research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14679566
- Volume :
- 39
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Sociology of healthillness
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1773247ddb8d8151c601fdd0556264fa