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1.
Sociol Health Illn ; 45(4): 734-753, 2023 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36707128

RESUMEN

The 'improvement' of health care is now established and growing as a field of research and practice. This article, based on qualitative data from interviews with 21 senior leaders in this field, analyses the growth of improvement expertise as not simply an expansion but also a multiplication of 'ways of knowing'. It illustrates how health-care improvement is an area where contests about relevant kinds of knowledge, approaches and purposes proliferate and intersect. One dimension of this story relates to the increasing relevance of sociological expertise-both as a disciplinary contributor to this arena of research and practice and as a spur to reflexive critique. The analysis highlights the threat of persistent hierarchies within improvement expertise reproducing and amplifying restricted conceptions of both improvement and 'better' health care.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud , Sociología , Humanos
2.
J Med Philos ; 48(1): 33-49, 2023 02 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36592336

RESUMEN

Patient safety is a central aspect of healthcare quality, focusing on preventable, iatrogenic harm. Harm, in this context, is typically assumed to mean physical injury to patients, often caused by technical error. However, some contributions to the patient safety literature have argued that disrespectful behavior towards patients can cause harm, even when it does not lead to physical injury. This paper investigates the nature of such dignitary harms and explores whether they should be included within the scope of patient safety as a field of practice. We argue that dignitary harms in health care are-at least sometimes-preventable, iatrogenic harms. While we caution against including dignitary harms within the scope of patient safety just because they are relevantly similar to other iatrogenic harms, we suggest that thinking about dignitary harms can help to elucidate the value of patient safety, and to illuminate the evolving relationship between safety and quality.


Asunto(s)
Seguridad del Paciente , Calidad de la Atención de Salud , Humanos , Enfermedad Iatrogénica/prevención & control
3.
Med Humanit ; 48(4): 480-488, 2022 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35210355

RESUMEN

In this paper we seek to illuminate the importance of aesthetics for healthcare quality and encourage more explicit discussion of aesthetics in healthcare improvement scholarship and practice. We hope to contribute to and help develop the hinterland between arts-based initiatives in healthcare and the 'normal business' of healthcare quality improvement. Our broad contention is: (1) That aesthetic considerations should be seen as of universal relevance across quality debates (2) That they never be assumed to have a marginal or even secondary status; and (3) That taking aesthetic considerations seriously calls for explicit discussion of associated uncertainties and dilemmas and a readiness to welcome aesthetics expertise into improvement debates.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud , Instituciones de Salud , Humanos , Estética , Humanidades
4.
Med Humanit ; 48(1): 85-93, 2022 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34035179

RESUMEN

In this paper, we consider the role of conversations in contributing to healthcare quality improvement. More specifically, we suggest that conversations can be important in responding to what we call 'normative complexity'. As well as reflecting on the value of conversations, the aim is to introduce the dimension of normative complexity as something that requires theoretical and practical attention alongside the more recognised challenges of complex systems, which we label, for short, as 'explanatory complexity'. In brief, normative complexity relates to the inherent difficulty of deciding what kinds of changes are 'improvements' or, more broadly, what is valuable in healthcare. We suggest that explanatory and normative complexity intersect and that anyone interested in healthcare improvement needs to be sensitive to both. After briefly introducing the idea of normative complexity, we consider some contrasting examples of conversations, reflecting on how they do and might contribute to healthcare quality. We discuss both conversations that are deliberately organised and facilitated ('orchestrated conversations') and more informally occurring and routine conversations. In the first half of the paper, we draw on some examples of orchestrated and routine conversations to open up these issues. In the second half of the paper, we bring some more theoretical lenses to bear on both conversations and normative complexity, summarise what we take to be the value of conversations and draw together some of the implications of our discussion. In summary, we argue that conversations can play a crucial role in negotiating the normative complexity of healthcare quality improvement because of their capacity to hold together a plurality of perspectives, to contribute and respond to emergence and to help underpin institutional conditions for empathy and imagination.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación , Atención a la Salud , Instituciones de Salud , Humanos , Mejoramiento de la Calidad
5.
BMC Med Ethics ; 22(1): 91, 2021 07 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34256744

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Poverty and social deprivation have adverse effects on health outcomes and place a significant burden on healthcare systems. There are some actions that can be taken to tackle them from within healthcare institutions, but clinicians who seek to make frontline services more responsive to the social determinants of health and the social context of people's lives can face a range of ethical challenges. We summarise and consider a case in which clinicians introduced a poverty screening initiative (PSI) into paediatric practice using the discourse and methodology of healthcare quality improvement (QI). DISCUSSION: Whilst suggesting that interventions like the PSI are a potentially valuable extension of clinical roles, which take advantage of the unique affordances of clinical settings, we argue that there is a tendency for such settings to continuously reproduce a narrower set of norms. We illustrate how the framing of an initiative as QI can help legitimate and secure funding for practical efforts to help address social ends from within clinical service, but also how it can constrain and disguise the value of this work. A combination of methodological emphases within QI and managerialism within healthcare institutions leads to the prioritisation, often implicitly, of a limited set of aims and governing values for healthcare. This can act as an obstacle to a genuine broadening of the clinical agenda, reinforcing norms of clinical practice that effectively push poverty 'off limits.' We set out the ethical dilemmas facing clinicians who seek to navigate this landscape in order to address poverty and the social determinants of health. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that reclaiming QI as a more deliberative tool that is sensitive to these ethical dilemmas can enable managers, clinicians and patients to pursue health-related values and ends, broadly conceived, as part of an expansive range of social and personal goods.


Asunto(s)
Pobreza , Mejoramiento de la Calidad , Niño , Atención a la Salud , Instituciones de Salud , Humanos , Calidad de la Atención de Salud
6.
Arch Dis Child Educ Pract Ed ; 106(6): 370-377, 2021 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33355214

RESUMEN

Quality improvement (QI) has tremendous potential to tackle the shortcomings of health services. But health professionals have not yet fully embraced QI as part of their day-to-day concerns. Indeed, QI is sometimes experienced as a brake on quality rather than a catalyst for improvement. This can happen, for example, if there is too much emphasis on meeting short-term institutional goals rather than on addressing long-term health needs. This emphasis also risks equating quality with safety and efficiency measures while neglecting patient-centredness and equity. QI does not have to be like this. We suggest that the conscientious and critical engagement of health professionals in QI can lead to genuinely better and more far-reaching outcomes for child health. We also distinguish between QI projects that repair the status quo and those that seek to reform it, arguing that there is an important place for both.


Asunto(s)
Salud Infantil , Mejoramiento de la Calidad , Niño , Humanos
7.
Health Care Anal ; 29(1): 39-58, 2021 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33341924

RESUMEN

This paper analyses the ethics of routine measurement for healthcare improvement. Routine measurement is an increasingly central part of healthcare system design and is taken to be necessary for successful healthcare improvement efforts. It is widely recognised that the effectiveness of routine measurement in bringing about improvement is limited-it often produces only modest effects or fails to generate anticipated improvements at all. We seek to show that these concerns do not exhaust the ethics of routine measurement. Even if routine measurement does lead to healthcare improvements, it has associated ethical costs which are not necessarily justified by its benefits. We argue that the practice of routine measurement changes the function of the healthcare system, resulting in an unintended and ethically significant transformation of the sector. It is difficult to determine whether such changes are justified or offset by the benefits of routine measurement because there may be no shared understanding of what is 'good' in healthcare by which to compare the benefits of routine measurement with the goods that are precluded by it. We counsel that the practice of routine measurement should proceed with caution and should be recognised to be an ethically significant choice, rather than an inevitability.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud , Mejoramiento de la Calidad/ética , Humanos , Indicadores de Calidad de la Atención de Salud
8.
J Med Ethics ; 46(2): 118-122, 2020 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31732680

RESUMEN

In this paper, we argue that there are important ethical questions about healthcare improvement which are underexplored. We start by drawing on two existing literatures: first, the prevailing, primarily governance-oriented, application of ethics to healthcare 'quality improvement' (QI), and second, the application of QI to healthcare ethics. We show that these are insufficient for ethical analysis of healthcare improvement. In pursuit of a broader agenda for an ethics of healthcare improvement, we note that QI and ethics can, in some respects, be treated as closely related concerns and not simply as externally related agendas. To support our argument, we explore the gap between 'quality' and 'ethics' discourses and ask about the possible differences between 'good quality healthcare' and 'good healthcare'. We suggest that the word 'quality' both adds to and subtracts from the idea of 'good healthcare', and in particular that the technicist inflection of quality discourses needs to be set in the context of broader conceptualisations of healthcare improvement. We introduce the distinction between quality as a measurable property and quality as an evaluative judgement, suggesting that a core, but neglected, question for an ethics of healthcare improvement is striking the balance between these two conceptions of quality.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud/ética , Análisis Ético , Mejoramiento de la Calidad/ética , Calidad de la Atención de Salud/ética , Formación de Concepto , Atención a la Salud/normas , Humanos
9.
Sociol Health Illn ; 42 Suppl 1: 21-34, 2020 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31749190

RESUMEN

This article illustrates and discusses the idea of 'implicit normativity', and specifically its relevance to the management of ethical uncertainty. In particular I consider (i) the role implicit normativity plays in masking and containing potential ethical uncertainty and (ii) the contrast and boundary between implicit normativity and 'overt ethics' where ethical contestation - as well as particular processes and agents - are highlighted as salient. Using examples I show how the idea of implicit normativity can be applied not only to specific practices but also to whole fields of practice. The notion of 'moral settlements' - along with the explanatory role of the threat of 'chaos' - is introduced and elucidated to develop these points. I argue that attention to the management of ethical uncertainty shows the critically important contribution that an ambitious sociology of ethics can make to clinical ethics, including by helping to formulate and drive home questions about the 'ethics of ethics'. The account presented here has resonances with work that seeks to use sociological lenses to move beyond conventional bioethics, including Petersen's (2013) call for a 'normative sociology'.


Asunto(s)
Bioética , Principios Morales , Humanos , Sociología , Incertidumbre
10.
Health Expect ; 22(5): 838-848, 2019 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31054218

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Policy discussions reference ideas of informed and active users of e-health services who gain agency through self-management, choice and care delivered outside clinical settings. In this article, we aim to problematize this association by "thinking with" material from multiple disciplines to generate higher order insights to inform service development, research and policy. METHODS: Drawing on meta-narrative review methods, we gathered perspectives from multiple disciplines using an iterative process of expert consultation to identify seminal papers citation mapping, synthesis and peer review. RESULTS: We identify six relevant paradigms from sociology, philosophy, health services research, public health, the study of social movements and computer studies. Bringing these paradigms together illuminates the contrasting epistemological and ontological framings that co-exist in this area, including competing conceptualizations of e-health technologies as: neutral tools for service delivery, mediators within complex and unpredictable clinical interactions and as agents in their own right. DISCUSSION: There is a need for e-health policy to recognize many human and non-human actors, the blurred boundaries between them and the unpredictable and evolving interactions that constitute engagement with e-health care. Established models for e-health service development and policy making are not designed for this landscape. There is nothing to be gained by asking whether e-health, in general, either "increases" or "decreases" agency. Rather specific types and aspects of e-health have diverse effects and can be simultaneously enabling and disempowering, and be differentially experienced by differently positioned and resourced actors.


Asunto(s)
Narración , Automanejo , Salud Sexual , Telemedicina , Política de Salud , Servicios de Salud , Humanos , Automanejo/métodos , Telemedicina/métodos
11.
Health Care Anal ; 27(3): 157-170, 2019 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31165964

RESUMEN

In this paper we argue that austerity creates working conditions that can undermine professionalism in healthcare. We characterise austerity in terms of overlapping economic, social and ethical dimensions and explain how these can pose significant challenges for healthcare professionals. Amongst other things, austerity is detrimental to healthcare practice because it creates shortages of material and staff resources, negatively affects relationships and institutional cultures, and creates increased burdens and pressures for staff, not least as a result of deteriorating public health conditions. After discussing the multiple dimensions of austerity, we consider the challenges it creates for professional ethics in healthcare. We highlight three mechanisms-intensification of work, practitioner isolation, and organisational alienation-which pose acute problems for healthcare professionals working under conditions of austerity. These mechanisms can turn 'routine moral stress' into moral distress and, at the same time, make poor care much more likely. While professionalism clearly depends on individual capabilities and behaviours, it also depends upon a complex sets of social conditions being established and maintained. The problems caused by austerity reveal a need to broaden the scope of professional ethics so that it includes the responsibilities of 'role constructors' and not just 'role occupiers'. Austerity therefore presents opportunities for health professionals and associated 'role constructors' to contribute to a reimagining of future models of healthcare professionalism.


Asunto(s)
Recesión Económica , Ética Profesional , Personal de Salud/ética , Profesionalismo , Atención a la Salud/ética , Humanos
12.
BMC Med Ethics ; 19(1): 69, 2018 07 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29991344

RESUMEN

This commentary welcomes the work of Ives et al. on Standards of practice in Empirical Bioethics, and especially the dialogical spirit in which the standards have been constructed and offered. It also raises some questions about the consistent interpretation and use of such standards.


Asunto(s)
Bioética , Consenso , Humanos
13.
Health Care Anal ; 26(2): 109-123, 2018 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29270810

RESUMEN

In this editorial essay I explore the possibilities of 'improvement scholarship' in order to set the scene for the theme of, and the other papers in, this issue. I contrast a narrow conception of quality improvement (QI) research with a much broader and more inclusive conception, arguing that we should greatly extend the existing dialogue between 'problem-solving' and 'critical' currents in improvement research. I have in mind the potential for building a much larger conversation between those people in 'improvement science' who are expressly concerned with tackling the problems facing healthcare and the wider group of colleagues who are engaged in health-related scholarship but who do not see themselves as particularly interested in quality improvement, indeed who may be critical of the language or concerns of QI. As one contribution to that conversation I suggest that that the increasing emphasis on theory and rigour in improvement research should include more focus on normative theory and rigour. The remaining papers in the issue are introduced including the various ways in which they handle the 'implicit normativity' of QI research and practice, and the linked theme of combining relatively 'tidy' and potentially 'unruly' forms of knowledge.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud , Becas , Mejoramiento de la Calidad/organización & administración , Ciencia , Humanos , Mejoramiento de la Calidad/normas , Ciencias Sociales
14.
Health Care Anal ; 26(1): 48-65, 2018 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27896539

RESUMEN

There are various reasons why efforts to promote "support for self-management" have rarely delivered the kinds of sustainable improvements in healthcare experiences, health and wellbeing that policy leaders internationally have hoped for. This paper explains how the basis of failure is in some respects built into the ideas that underpin many of these efforts. When (the promotion of) support for self-management is narrowly oriented towards educating and motivating patients to adopt the behaviours recommended for disease control, it implicitly reflects and perpetuates limited and somewhat instrumental views of patients. It tends to: restrict the pursuit of respectful and enabling 'partnership working'; run the risk of undermining patients' self-evaluative attitudes (and then of failing to notice that as harmful); limit recognition of the supportive value of clinician-patient relationships; and obscure the practical and ethical tensions that clinicians face in the delivery of support for self-management. We suggest that a focus on enabling people to live (and die) well with their long-term conditions is a promising starting point for a more adequate conception of support for self-management. We then outline the theoretical advantages that a capabilities approach to thinking about living well can bring to the development of an account of support for self-management, explaining, for example, how it can accommodate the range of what matters to people (both generally and more specifically) for living well, help keep the importance of disease control in perspective, recognize social influences on people's values, behaviours and wellbeing, and illuminate more of the rich potential and practical and ethical challenges of supporting self-management in practice.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad Crónica/psicología , Manejo de la Enfermedad , Atención Dirigida al Paciente/métodos , Relaciones Profesional-Paciente , Autocuidado , Apoyo Social , Humanos , Calidad de Vida
15.
Health Expect ; 20(2): 243-259, 2017 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27075246

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Health policies internationally advocate 'support for self-management', but it is not clear how the promise of the concept can be fulfilled. OBJECTIVE: To synthesize research into professional practitioners' perspectives, practices and experiences to help inform a reconceptualization of support for self-management. DESIGN: Critical interpretive synthesis using systematic searches of literature published 2000-2014. FINDINGS: We summarized key insights from 164 relevant papers in an annotated bibliography. The literature illustrates striking variations in approaches to support for self-management and interpretations of associated concepts. We focused particularly on the somewhat neglected question of the purpose of support. We suggest that this can illuminate and explain important differences between narrower and broader approaches. Narrower approaches support people to manage their condition(s) well in terms of disease control. This purpose can underpin more hierarchical practitioner-patient communication and more limited views of patient empowerment. It is often associated with experiences of failure and frustration. Broader approaches support people to manage well with their condition(s). They can keep work on disease control in perspective as attention focuses on what matters to people and how they can be supported to shape their own lives. Broader approaches are currently less evident in practice. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Broader approaches seem necessary to fulfil the promise of support for self-management, especially for patient empowerment. A commitment to enable people to live well with long-term conditions could provide a coherent basis for the forms and outcomes of support that policies aspire to. The implications of such a commitment need further attention.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad Crónica/terapia , Participación del Paciente , Automanejo , Apoyo Social , Humanos
16.
BMC Fam Pract ; 18(1): 39, 2017 Mar 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28320325

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Support for self-management (SSM) is a prominent strand of health policy internationally, particularly for primary care. It is often discussed and evaluated in terms of patients' knowledge, skills and confidence, health-related behaviours, disease control or risk reduction, and service use and costs. However, these goals are limited, both as guides to professional practice and as indicators of its quality. In order to better understand what it means to support self-management well, we examined health professionals' views of success in their work with people with long-term conditions. This study formed part of a broader project to develop a conceptual account of SSM that can reflect and promote good practice. METHODS: Semi-structured individual interviews (n = 26) and subsequent group discussions (n = 5 groups, 30 participants) with diverse health professionals working with people with diabetes and/or Parkinson's disease in NHS services in London, northern England or Scotland. The interviews explored examples of more and less successful work, ways of defining success, and ideas about what facilitates success in practice. Subsequent group discussions considered the practical implications of different accounts of SSM. Interviews and group discussions were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically. RESULTS: Participants identified a wide range of interlinked aspects or elements of success relating to: health, wellbeing and quality of life; how well people (can) manage; and professional-patient relationships. They also mentioned a number of considerations that have important implications for assessing the quality of their own performance. These considerations in part reflect variations in what matters and what is realistically achievable for particular people, in particular situations and at particular times, as well as the complexity of questions of attribution. CONCLUSIONS: A nuanced assessment of the quality of support for self-management requires attention to the responsiveness of professional practice to a wide, complex range of personal and situational states, as well as actions and interactions over time. A narrow focus on particular indicators can lead to insensitive or even perverse judgements and perhaps counterproductive effects. More open, critical discussions about both success and the assessment of quality are needed to facilitate good professional practice and service improvement initiatives.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud/normas , Política de Salud , Evaluación de Resultado en la Atención de Salud/métodos , Atención Primaria de Salud/normas , Investigación Cualitativa , Calidad de Vida , Autocuidado/normas , Inglaterra , Humanos , Relaciones Profesional-Paciente , Escocia
17.
Sociol Health Illn ; 38(7): 1043-57, 2016 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27460832

RESUMEN

This article explores power relations between clinicians, patients and families as clinicians engage in patient-centred ethical work. Specifically, we draw on actor-network theory to interrogate the role of non-human elements in distributing power relations in clinical settings, as clinicians attempt to manage the expectations of patients and families. Using the activities of a multidisciplinary team providing deep brain stimulation to children with severe movement disorders as an example, we illustrate how a patient-centred tool is implicated in establishing relations that constitute four modes of power: 'power over', 'power to', "power storage" and "power/discretion". We argue that understanding the role of non-human elements in structuring power relations can guide and inform bioethical discussions on the suitability of patient-centred approaches in clinical settings.


Asunto(s)
Bioética , Atención Dirigida al Paciente/ética , Poder Psicológico , Antropología Cultural , Toma de Decisiones , Humanos , Relaciones Médico-Paciente
18.
Health Promot J Austr ; 26(3): 200-204, 2015 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26650894

RESUMEN

The intersectoral and interdisciplinary nature of health promotion gives rise to ethical questions. This is because health promotion depends upon alliances between people who often have different perspectives on what matters in particular cases or different visions of the good society. This paper draws on the ambivalent relationship that health promoters can have with biomedicine to illustrate and explore the nature of these ethical questions. Examples from everyday life are used to underline the familiar nature of the kinds of coalitions and compromises that are needed to work alongside others with different values to oneself. It is suggested that analogous kinds of compromise are needed in health promotion and that this requires a form of 'diplomatic ethics' for health promoters that, in turn, raises questions about their ethical integrity.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Cooperativa , Promoción de la Salud/ética , Grupo de Atención al Paciente/ética , Humanos
20.
J Health Serv Res Policy ; 29(1): 42-50, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37497689

RESUMEN

Disrespect in health care often persists despite firm commitments to respectful service provision. This conceptual paper highlights how the ways in which respect and disrespect are characterised can have practical implications for how well disrespect can be tackled. We stress the need to focus explicitly on disrespect (not only respect) and propose that disrespect can usefully be understood as a failure to relate to people as equals. This characterisation is consonant with some accounts of respect but sometimes obscured by a focus on respecting people's autonomy and dignity. Emphasising equality is consistent with connections patients draw between being (dis)respected and (in)equality. It readily accommodates microaggressions as forms of disrespect, helping to understand how and why experiences of disrespect may be unintentional and to explain why even small instances of disrespect are wrong. Our view of disrespect with an emphasis on equality strengthens the demand that health systems take disrespect seriously as a problem of social injustice and tackle it at institutional, not just individual levels. It suggests several strategies for practical action. Emphasising relational equality is not an easy or short-term fix for disrespect, but it signals a direction of travel towards an important improvement ambition.


Asunto(s)
Servicios de Salud Materna , Relaciones Profesional-Paciente , Humanos , Femenino , Embarazo , Actitud del Personal de Salud
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