在早期的国民健康服务下,曼彻斯特的学术全科实践:社会医学的失败实验。

M. Perry
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在第二次世界大战期间,医学学者希望改革英国的医疗实践和教育,提高医生对健康不良的社会和环境原因的敏感度,并使他们注重预防。在国家卫生服务(NHS)启动之初,中央计划旨在通过将孤立的城市全科医生(gp)分组到一个实验性卫生中心来提高他们的地位。这为社会医学提供了一个场所,鼓励与地方当局工作人员(护士、助产士和社会工作者)的合作和研究。曼彻斯特的案例研究证实,如果其他地方缺乏团队合作的条件,医疗中心的工作就无法传播。学术规划的失败可以归结为一种自上而下的方法对士气低落的城市实践。虽然参与者没有形成一个自治团体,但经济激励推动了其他地方集体实践的增长,使保健中心对政府来说是多余的。全科医师学院与此同时发展,为学术学科提供了另一条道路。案例研究还表明,群体的出现与实践中的心理取向之间存在关系。以病人为中心的模式在教学中变得很重要,并赋予该学科身份,但它对日常实践的影响可能很小。
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Academic general practice in Manchester under the early National Health Service: a failed experiment in social medicine.
During the Second World War, medical academics hoped to reform medical practice and education in Great Britain, increasing doctors' sensitivity to the social and environmental causes of ill health and orientating them towards prevention. At the start of the National Health Service (NHS), central planning aimed to raise the status of isolated urban general practitioners (GPs) by grouping them in an experimental health centre. This offered a locus for social medicine, encouraging cooperation and research with local authority staff (nurses, midwives, and social workers). The Manchester case study confirms that health centre working could not be disseminated while conditions for teamwork were absent elsewhere. The failure of academic planning can be attributed to a top-down approach upon demoralized urban practice. While the participants did not form an autonomous group, economic incentives drove the growth of group practice elsewhere and made health centres superfluous to government. The College of General Practitioners developed in parallel, offering an alternative path towards an academic discipline. The case study also suggests a relationship between the emergence of groups and a psychological orientation in practice. A patient-centred model became important within teaching and gave identity to the displine, but it probably had little impact on everyday practice.
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