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The Social Organization of Best Practice: An Institutional Ethnography of Physicians’ Work

Autor Fiona Webster
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 iun 2021
This book explores how best practice for acute stroke care was developed, translated and taken up in medical practice across various sites in the province of Ontario using institutional ethnographic research. Institutional ethnography, an approach developed by Dorothy E. Smith, builds on Smith’s understanding of the social organization of knowledge, allowing for an examination of the complex social relations organizing people’s experiences of their everyday working lives.
This work thereby makes visible some of the assumptions and hidden priorities underlying the emphasis given to translating scientific knowledge into medical practice. In this study, the discourses of both evidence-based medicine and knowledge translation, purportedly designed to improve patient care, come into view as managerial tools that directed healthcare resources toward academic hospitals rather than community sites where the majority of patients receive care. These models institutionalize inequities in access to care while claiming to resolve them.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030431679
ISBN-10: 3030431673
Pagini: 127
Ilustrații: XI, 127 p. 1 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2020
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Developing the Ethnographic Study.- Chapter 3: Setting the Stage for Implementing Evidence: the OSS.- Chapter 4: The Everyday Practices of RCTs.- Chapter 5: Variations in the Implementation of Evidence.-Chapter 6: Evaluating the OSS.- Chapter 7: Conclusion.

Notă biografică

Fiona Webster is Associate Professor in the Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada. Webster obtained her PhD in sociology under the supervision of Dorothy E. Smith at the University of Toronto, Canada.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

‘This book offers a unique critique of evidence based-medicine and how it plays out in everyday practice. It engages with and problematizes the scholarship around “best practice” in an informed and perceptive manner and in doing so, advances the field in a critical way.’
—      Grainne Kearney, Clinical Lecturer in the School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Biomedical Sciences, Queen’s University Belfast, Ireland
‘Webster’s institutional ethnographic research describes how standardizing approaches actually play out in practice. In rich, thick detail we are shown the institutional processes that organize how objective clinical evidence is “rolled out” into the context-laden, deeply social world of healthcare. Offering a unique counter-narrative, the book is illustrative of gaps and risks that may arise when local knowledge is subordinated to coordinated directives from afar.’
—      Janet Rankin, AssociateProfessor of Nursing, University of Calgary, Canada This book explores how best practice for acute stroke care was developed, translated and taken up in medical practice across various sites in the province of Ontario using institutional ethnographic research. Institutional ethnography, an approach developed by Dorothy E. Smith, builds on Smith’s understanding of the social organization of knowledge, allowing for an examination of the complex social relations organizing people’s experiences of their everyday working lives.
This work thereby makes visible some of the assumptions and hidden priorities underlying the emphasis given to translating scientific knowledge into medical practice. In this study, the discourses of both evidence-based medicine and knowledge translation, purportedly designed to improve patient care, come into view as managerial tools that directed healthcare resources toward academic hospitals rather than community sites where the majority of patients receive care. These models institutionalize inequities in access to care while claiming to resolve them.

Caracteristici

One of the only institutional ethnographies from the standpoint of the physician Uncovers the different elements of a complex institutional structure: the development, implementation, and everyday practice of evidence based medicine Complicates our understanding of evidence based medicine and knowledge translation