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 other professions 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. Author Bio From 1978 to 2007 Steve Iliffe worked in an inner-city general practice, helping build a large multi-disciplinary team of doctors, nurses, psychologists and counsellors that achieved Beacon status for patient services. He leads a research team that works on service development and evaluation, innovative approaches to professional education and the provision of services. His research interests are in health promotion in later life, the recognition of and response to dementia syndromes, hospital at home services, and exercise as therapy for older people, and he is on the editorial board for numerous journals on these subjects. He is an Associate Director of the national co-ordinating centre for Dementias and Neurodegenerative Diseases networks (DeNDRoN) with a responsibility for primary care and patient and public involvement, and was a member of the NICE/SCIE dementia guidelines development group. In 2006 he won the inaugural William Farr medal for contribution to health care for older people. |