Literature DB >> 19103913

'We can't get anything done because...': making sense of 'barriers' to Practice-based Commissioning.

Kath Checkland1, Anna Coleman, Stephen Harrison, Urara Hiroeh.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the issues raised by participants as 'barriers' to the development of Practice-based Commissioning (PBC) in 'early adopter' sites in England.
METHODS: Detailed case studies of five PBC consortia in three Primary Care Trusts (PCTs). Data collection included interviews with a wide range of respondents (46 in total), including general practitioners, PCT employees, Local Authority employees and patient representatives, observation of many different types of meetings (68 in total), and analysis of documents tabled at meetings and circulated at other times.
RESULTS: It has been claimed that progress in developing PBC has been slow. Our respondents articulated a number of factors that they felt were holding them back, which could have been identified as 'barriers' preventing change. The issues raised were consistent across our sites (lack of time, resources and personnel, and difficult relationships with the PCT), but observation suggested that these issues arose out of very different organizational 'sensemaking', and as a result the apparent 'barriers' had different meanings in different organizational contexts.
CONCLUSION: Weick's concept of 'organizational sensemaking' provides a useful framework within which to explore the problems encountered when implementing policy. Observational methods are a powerful tool in understanding sensemaking. The variations in sensemaking that we observed suggest that the use of 'barrier' metaphors in descriptions of implementation problems risks homogenizing the portrayal of situations that differ greatly in reality. This implies that top-down or centrally driven solutions to such situations will often be inappropriate.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19103913     DOI: 10.1258/jhsrp.2008.008043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Serv Res Policy        ISSN: 1355-8196


  3 in total

1.  Primary care in an era of hospital bed reduction: what can we infer from QOF and PBC?

Authors:  Kath Checkland; Stephen Harrison
Journal:  London J Prim Care (Abingdon)       Date:  2010-12

2.  Exception reporting in the Quality and Outcomes Framework: views of practice staff - a qualitative study.

Authors:  Stephen Campbell; Kerin Hannon; Helen Lester
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 5.386

3.  A comparison of policy and direct practice stakeholder perceptions of factors affecting evidence-based practice implementation using concept mapping.

Authors:  Amy E Green; Gregory A Aarons
Journal:  Implement Sci       Date:  2011-09-07       Impact factor: 7.327

  3 in total

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