Welsh Victoria K, Sanders Tom, Richardson Jane C, Wynne-Jones Gwenllian, Jinks Clare, Mallen Christian D
Arthritis Research UK Primary Care Centre, Primary Care Sciences, Keele University, Keele, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK.
BMC Fam Pract. 2014 May 17;15:100. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-15-100.
The study aimed to explore the views of general practitioners (GPs), nurses and physiotherapists towards extending the role of sickness certification beyond the medical profession in primary care.
Fifteen GPs, seven nurses and six physiotherapists were selected to achieve varied respondent characteristics including sex, geographical location, service duration and post-graduate specialist training. Constant-comparative qualitative analysis of data from 28 semi-structured telephone interviews was undertaken.
The majority of respondents supported the extended role concept; however members of each professional group also rejected the notion. Respondents employed four different legitimacy claims to justify their views and define their occupational boundaries in relation to sickness certification practice. Condition-specific legitimacy, the ability to adopt a holistic approach to sickness certification, system efficiency and control-related arguments were used to different degrees by each occupation. Practical suggestions for the extension of the sickness certification role beyond the medical profession are underpinned by the sociological theory of professional identity.
Extending the authority to certify sickness absence beyond the medical profession is not simply a matter of addressing practical and organisational obstacles. There is also a need to consider the impact on, and preferences of, the specific occupations and their respective boundary claims. This paper explores the implications of extending the sick certification role beyond general practice. We conclude that the main policy challenge of such a move is to a) persuade GPs to relinquish this role (or to share it with other professions), and b) to understand the 'boundary work' involved.
本研究旨在探讨全科医生(GPs)、护士和物理治疗师对于在初级医疗保健中将疾病证明角色扩展至医疗行业以外的看法。
选取了15名全科医生、7名护士和6名物理治疗师,以确保受访者具有不同的特征,包括性别、地理位置、服务年限和研究生专业培训经历。对28次半结构化电话访谈的数据进行了持续比较定性分析。
大多数受访者支持扩展角色的概念;然而,每个专业群体的成员也都反对这一概念。受访者采用了四种不同的合法性主张来证明他们的观点,并界定他们在疾病证明实践中的职业界限。每种职业在不同程度上使用了特定病情合法性、对疾病证明采取整体方法的能力、系统效率和与控制相关的论点。将疾病证明角色扩展至医疗行业以外的实际建议以职业认同的社会学理论为基础。
将疾病缺勤证明的权力扩展至医疗行业以外不仅仅是解决实际和组织障碍的问题。还需要考虑对特定职业及其各自边界主张的影响和偏好。本文探讨了将疾病证明角色扩展至全科医疗以外的影响。我们得出结论,此举的主要政策挑战在于:a)说服全科医生放弃这一角色(或将其与其他职业共享),以及b)理解其中涉及的“边界工作”。