From General Practice to Primary Care

The industrialization of family medicine

Steve Iliffe author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:14th Feb '08

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

From General Practice to Primary Care cover

Highly commended in the Primary Health Care Category of the BMA Book Awards 2009

Do the many targets, guidelines and governance inherent in modern general practice mean the specialty is becoming increasingly impersonal and mechanised? Is this an advantage or a disadvantage? This book explores this idea, looking at implications for both staff and members of the public.Anxiety about medicine becoming impersonal and mechanised permeates the NHS. In addition, the popular media is full of stories about the health service and its unhappy staff, focusing on the belief that professionals and patients are being turned into assembly-line workers and objects. This is particularly prevalent in general practice, as plans for massive policlinics are revealed and payment systems shift seemingly inexorably towards incentives and targets. The ethos of family medicine, which places so much stress on continuity of care, psychosocial understanding of illness, and the careful management of doubt, is challenged by guidelines, governance, quality frameworks, and patient satisfaction surveys. General practice is being industrialized into primary care, or so it can seem. This book explores the many dimensions of industrialization as it has occurred to others in the past, and analyses the origins of the current wave of reform in general practice. It analyses why industrialization is being pursued as a government strategy, and explores its benefits and dangers. It concludes that the medical profession has reasons for being perturbed by industrialization, but that it has advantages as well as disadvantages for the NHS and the public. Its conclusions may not please either policy makers or practitioners, but they offer ways for professionals working in the community to customise current changes in potentially beneficial ways.

An excellent interpretation of where we have come from, where we might end up...and what we can do to achieve a degree of self determination in the face of recent reforms. * Primary Care Research Network, Greater London, Issue 8 *
Interesting, topical, and clear. The arguments are presented logically and in balanced way. An important - original - book. * Medical Book Awards *
Dr Iliffe convincingly describes the process of industrialisation of family medicine through a highly researched book littered with interesting quotes and references. I recommend this book to both new and experienced members of primary care who wish to understand more about this process of industrialisation and how we can best optimise the changes that it brings. * Primary Health Care Research and Development *
Professor Illife has presented a view of what is happening to general practice that is both immensely simple and profoundly complex. The changes that have afflicted general practice in the UK in the last 20 years are all part of a single process: industrialisation...he pursues his case in compelling historical and theoretical detail...this makes the book a challenging read...a thorough, impressive, and persuasive book. * London Journal of Primary Care *

  • Winner of Highly Commended in the Specialist Readership category of the MJA Open Book Awards 2008 Joint winner of the first prize on the New Non-Clinical Medical Book category - Royal Society of Medicine and Society of Authors Medical Book Awards 2008.

ISBN: 9780199214501

Dimensions: 215mm x 137mm x 14mm

Weight: 329g

248 pages