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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Ticking boxes and changing the social world data collection and the new UK general practice contract | Author(s) | Kath Checkland, Ruth McDonald, Steve Harrison |
Journal title | Social Policy & Administration, vol 41, no 7, December 2007 |
Pages | pp 693-710 |
Keywords | General practice ; Information technology ; Contracts ; General practitioners ; Communication ; Patients ; Social surveys. |
Annotation | The new General Medical Services contract was introduced into general practice in the UK in 2004, and it links pay to performance far more than in the past. As a result, accurate data collection about patients and the care that they receive is now not only important for good patient care but also to prove that targets are being met. The use of electronic records and information technology has thus become much more sophisticated. This article reports the results from an ethnographic study of the early stages of the new contract in two general practices. As expected, electronic data collection had increased in importance in both practices, with consequences both for clinician-patient interactions and for the structures and processes in the practices, as uniform data collection instruments are put in place that privilege 'hard' biomedical data that can be easily coded above 'softer' more patient-centred information. Roles and responsibilities had been changed to reflect the needs of the new systems, and new software applications allowed increased surveillance of both doctors' and nurses' performance; both of these had an impact on patterns of authority in our study practices. Furthermore, the structural changes that were found acted to embed the new ways of working, ensuring their reproduction in the future. In spite of these effects, there was found little opposition to or critical reflection on the changes, and the doctors in the study continued to view their improved computer systems as neutral recording devices. The implication of these findings is discussed. (KJ/RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-071211207 A |
Classmark | L5: UVB: 6QH: QT6: U: LF: 3F |
Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing |
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...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing. |
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