| Literature DB >> 17052342 |
Eva Lena Strandberg1, Ingvar Ovhed, Anders Håkansson, Margareta Troein.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The quality of health care and its costs have been a subject of considerable attention and lively discussion. Various methods have been introduced to measure, assess, and improve the quality of health care. Many professionals in health care have criticized quality work and its methods as being unsuitable for health care. The aim of the study was to obtain a deeper understanding of the meaning of quality work from the general practitioner's perspective.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17052342 PMCID: PMC1624837 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-7-60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Characteristics of the informants
| Experience of audit | No experience of audit | |
| Men | 4 | 3 |
| Women | 4 | 3 |
| Public employees | 6 | 5 |
| Private practice | 2 | 1 |
| Age range | 49–60 | 35–64 |
| Mean age | 54 | 45 |
The different steps of the analysis
| Examples of | |||
| "That's what you want after all, a bit of guidance so that there's some equality" | Care on equal terms | Reasons | Top-down |
| "Otherwise you risk being reported for what you do or don't do ... and even if you don't think about it all the time, it's something you know about ... and that means that, besides having a general desire to do good, so to speak, you naturally have it as a reason to try to stay updated and do the right things" | Good care | ||
| "We do it mostly because you've got to have something, it's what you're supposed to have according to the National Board of Health and Welfare" | External compulsion | ||
| "It has meant that I have been on quality courses and I've sat on the quality group at the County Council, where they worked with Quality, Development, Leadership, which I was dubious about. Far too big and too ... it didn't suit our work in primary care" | Externally imposed control system (package solutions) | Methods | |
| "Well, if we are to return to our own quality assurance system, here are 21 points, this here, our very own system that we sometimes take out to see if we fulfil ... and then we go through it and reflect, have we done this and that, does this work, have we written up, and things like that" | Locally developed control system | ||
| "You try all the time to keep updated when it comes to local, national, and international care programmes and the like, we try to work with the medical quality" | Internal demands | Reasons | Bottom-up |
| "One effect that is maybe not so noticeable, but I myself feel more secure in my own role, and I believe that I pass that on to the patients too: I know this is the best thing for you" | Good and equal care | ||
| "You do that all the time ... with the individual patient. Find out, follow up, because I meet each patient all the time" | Own follow-up | Methods | |
| "... we have at least an hour allocated each week when all the colleagues meet and you have a chance to present cases and get comments" | Collegial comparison | ||
Figure 1General practitioner's quality work.
Top-down – a coercive and demanding imposition
| "It |
| "The power of the patients has got bigger and bigger, they feel that they have that support from ... well, I don't know where they have the support from, whether it's from the regulations of the National Board of Health and Welfare or what it is, but they have it ... I suppose it has changed a bit here. The patient's position has really been strengthened a lot." |
| "I suppose that's what you want |
| "Just like so many other things, this is very much imposed top-down, but that doesn't change very much in practice." |
| "What little you can control you are very concerned about ... if something comes from outside that you suspect is supposed to control you, then there's a great risk that you'll show your claws." |
| "The resistance concerns time above all. You feel that it takes time away from time that you don't have." |
| "I think it would be more appropriate to call it a control system." |
| "Far too big and didn't suit our work, in primary care." |
| "This here |
| "We have some systematic work locally at the health centre too, you could say, for we have a quality council and we work with things here at the health centre that we perceive as important." |
Bottom-up – a natural and self-evident task
| "Besides having a general desire to do good, so to speak, you naturally have it as a reason to try to stay updated and do the right things." |
| "This thing of comparing yourself with others is interesting to discuss, since we work so much on our own, you know, you don't really know so much about what your colleagues do, you guess and I think that's an important part of it, that we compare ourselves, that we look at how the others do it and how I do it." |