Medical regulation, spectacular transparency and the blame business

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to explore general practitioners' (GPs') and psychiatrists' views and experiences of transparent forms of medical regulation in practice, as well as those of medical regulators and those representing patients and professionals.Design methodology...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health organization and management 2010, Vol.24 (6), p.597-610
Hauptverfasser: McGivern, Gerry, Fischer, Michael
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container_title Journal of health organization and management
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creator McGivern, Gerry
Fischer, Michael
description Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to explore general practitioners' (GPs') and psychiatrists' views and experiences of transparent forms of medical regulation in practice, as well as those of medical regulators and those representing patients and professionals.Design methodology approach - The research included interviews with GPs, psychiatrists and others involved in medical regulation, representing patients and professionals. A qualitative narrative analysis of the interviews was then conducted.Findings - Narratives suggest rising levels of complaints, legalisation and blame within the National Health Service (NHS). Three key themes emerge. First, doctors feel "guilty until proven innocent" within increasingly legalised regulatory systems and are consequently practising more defensively. Second, regulation is described as providing "spectacular transparency", driven by political responses to high profile scandals rather than its effects in practice, which can be seen as a social defence. Finally, it is suggested that a "blame business" is driving this form of transparency, in which self-interested regulators, the media, lawyers, and even some patient organisations are fuelling transparency in a wider culture of blame.Research limitations implications - A relatively small number of people were interviewed, so further research testing the findings would be useful.Practical implications - Transparency has some perverse effects on doctors' practice.Social implications - Rising levels of blame has perverse consequences for patient care, as doctors are practicing more defensively as a result, as well as significant financial implications for NHS funding.Originality value - Transparent forms of regulation are assumed to be beneficial and yet little research has examined its effects in practice. In this paper we highlight a number of perverse effects of transparency in practice.
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A qualitative narrative analysis of the interviews was then conducted.Findings - Narratives suggest rising levels of complaints, legalisation and blame within the National Health Service (NHS). Three key themes emerge. First, doctors feel "guilty until proven innocent" within increasingly legalised regulatory systems and are consequently practising more defensively. Second, regulation is described as providing "spectacular transparency", driven by political responses to high profile scandals rather than its effects in practice, which can be seen as a social defence. 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subjects Accountability
Blame
Compensation
Complaints
Doctors
General Practitioners - legislation & jurisprudence
General Practitioners - standards
Government Regulation
Health administration
Humans
Legal fees
Legislation
Litigation
Management accountability
Medical profession
Medical regulation
Medical sciences
Medicine
Narratives
National health services
Physicians
Power
Professionals
Psychiatrists
Psychiatry - legislation & jurisprudence
Psychiatry - standards
Regulation
Risk management
Social Control, Formal - methods
State Medicine - legislation & jurisprudence
State Medicine - standards
Studies
Transparency
title Medical regulation, spectacular transparency and the blame business
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