scholarly journals Contracting with General Dental Services: a mixed-methods study on factors influencing responses to contracts in English general dental practice

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (28) ◽  
pp. 1-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Harris ◽  
Elizabeth Perkins ◽  
Robin Holt ◽  
Steve Brown ◽  
Jayne Garner ◽  
...  

BackgroundIndependent contractor status of NHS general dental practitioners (GDPs) and general medical practitioners (GMPs) has meant that both groups have commercial as well as professional identities. Their relationship with the state is governed by a NHS contract, the terms of which have been the focus of much negotiation and struggle in recent years. Previous study of dental contracting has taken a classical economics perspective, viewing practitioners’ behaviour as a fully rational search for contract loopholes. We apply institutional theory to this context for the first time, where individuals’ behaviour is understood as being influenced by wider institutional forces such as growing consumer demands, commercial pressures and challenges to medical professionalism. Practitioners hold values and beliefs, and carry out routines and practices which are consistent with the field’s institutional logics. By identifying institutional logics in the dental practice organisational field, we expose where tensions exist, helping to explain why contracting appears as a continual cycle of reform and resistance.AimsTo identify the factors which facilitate and hinder the use of contractual processes to manage and strategically develop General Dental Services, using a comparison with medical practice to highlight factors which are particular to NHS dental practice.MethodsFollowing a systematic review of health-care contracting theory and interviews with stakeholders, we undertook case studies of 16 dental and six medical practices. Case study data collection involved interviews, observation and documentary evidence; 120 interviews were undertaken in all. We tested and refined our findings using a questionnaire to GDPs and further interviews with commissioners.ResultsWe found that, for all three sets of actors (GDPs, GMPs, commissioners), multiple logics exist. These were interacting and sometimes in competition. We found an emergent logic of population health managerialism in dental practice, which is less compatible than the other dental practice logics of ownership responsibility, professional clinical values and entrepreneurialism. This was in contrast to medical practice, where we found a more ready acceptance of external accountability and notions of the delivery of ‘cost-effective’ care. Our quantitative work enabled us to refine and test our conceptualisations of dental practice logics. We identified that population health managerialism comprised both a logic of managerialism and a public goods logic, and that practitioners might be resistant to one and not the other. We also linked individual practitioners’ behaviour to wider institutional forces by showing that logics were predictive of responses to NHS dental contracts at the dental chair-side (the micro level), as well as predictive of approaches to wider contractual relationships with commissioners (the macro level).ConclusionsResponses to contracts can be shaped by environmental forces and not just determined at the level of the individual. In NHS medical practice, goals are more closely aligned with commissioning goals than in general dental practice. The optimal contractual agreement between GDPs and commissioners, therefore, will be one which aims at the ‘satisfactory’ rather than the ‘ideal’; and a ‘successful’ NHS dental contract is likely to be one where neither party promotes its self-interest above the other. Future work on opportunism in health care should widen its focus beyond the self-interest of providers and look at the contribution of contextual factors such as the relationship between the government and professional bodies, the role of the media, and providers’ social and professional networks.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.

Author(s):  
Wendy Lipworth

Using an institutional theory framework, this chapter discusses the place of the pharmaceutical industry within the health care organizational field, and the wide-ranging effects the industry has on the other organizations in the field. It then provides a snapshot of the discourse that has emerged about the pharmaceutical industry, and about commercialization and marketization of the health care more generally. This paints a picture of deep ambivalence toward the pharmaceutical industry, both within and between stakeholder groups. The chapter ends with an effort to explain this ambivalence as the effect of competing institutional logics. This, in turn, points to some suggestions as to how the pharmaceutical industry might be better accommodated within the health care organizational field, without losing sight of the need for ongoing critique of industry behavior.


2019 ◽  
Vol 73 (4) ◽  
pp. 464-489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Émilie Gibeau ◽  
Ann Langley ◽  
Jean-Louis Denis ◽  
Nicolas van Schendel

Collective leadership arrangements in which two people jointly occupy a shared leadership role space are often thought to enable the bridging of competing demands and sources of expertise and legitimacy in pluralistic settings where multiple institutional logics coexist. This research investigates 20 co-leadership dyads in health care organizations to examine whether, when, and how co-leadership arrangements can enable the bridging of institutional logics. Empirical findings suggest that the potential for bridging through co-leadership arrangements is present, but that it may often be achieved through the assimilation of one side by the other rather than balanced integration of competing demands. We conclude that the challenge of collective leadership (and of co-leadership, in particular) may lie not only in developing smooth relations among multiple leaders and their followers, but also in maintaining and mobilizing the tensions that can make their collaboration most fruitful. We suggest that the collective leadership literature has often missed the significance of this central paradox: that collective leadership may be most needed where it is most difficult to achieve. When it seems to operate most smoothly, it is possible that it may not always be fulfilling its mission.


2000 ◽  
Vol os7 (3) ◽  
pp. 125-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A Brunton ◽  
Randa Abidia ◽  
Tatiana V Macfarlane ◽  
Nairn HF Wilson

Purpose of study To evaluate the suitability of two non-sterile, powder-free gloves for routine use in general dental practice. Basic procedures Randomly allocated blind evaluation of two powder-free gloves by five dentists and five dental nurses in general dental practice. Each dentist and dental nurse were allocated a four-day supply of two unnamed powder-free gloves. Following glove usage a questionnaire sought their views regarding ease of donning, operator comfort, puncture and tear resistance, and tactile sensitivity. Details of procedure undertaken, time of wear and puncture and tear formation for the dentists’ gloves were also recorded. The dentists’ gloves were retained and subsequently tested for punctures and tears. Main findings In terms of ease of donning, operator discomfort, tear resistance and tactile sensitivity neither glove was ideal, however one glove was rated higher than the other. Overall, the dentists noticed only half of the punctures and tears detected in the laboratory. One glove was more prone to punctures with the other glove more liable to tear. Time worn in excess of 20 minutes and endodontic procedures were associated with a higher incidence of punctures. Principal conclusions The two powder-free gloves evaluated in this study would appear not to be suitable for routine use in general dental practice. Further developments are required before powder-free gloves of the type evaluated can be expected to receive widespread acceptance for routine use by dentists and dental nurses in general dental practice.


Author(s):  
D.S TISHKOV ◽  

Compulsory health insurance is an integral part of health care. Dental care is provided in two forms: private dental services and public dental services based on budget clinics. The purpose of this study is to study dental health in Russia by comparing the policy of compulsory medical insurance and private services in dental practice. During the study, dental health indicators were studied at three levels: indicators for monitoring the oral health of children and adolescents. In the second part, indicators for monitoring oral health in the General population were studied. In the third part, indicators for monitoring the quality of life of the oral cavity were studied. Statistical data processing included implementation of correlation analysis of the obtained data. The results show that social health insurance provides people with equal opportunities for dental services, and health care reforms have improved oral health. Thus, the data obtained indicate the need to Finance the health care system in view of improving the quality of dental care for children and adults, as well as through the introduction of primary and secondary prevention programs.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 43-45
Author(s):  
Kinga Bączyk-Rozwadowska

Abstract Civil liability for medical malpractice may be attributed either to a doctor or a hospital when any of these persons’ acts or omissions cause injuries to a patient; it may be also the hospital’s liability for the damage caused by negligence of its staff (doctors and other personnel). The rules that govern this liability and the way of compensating the damage are different due to the grounds on which the doctor performs medical services and, in case of hospital’s liability, the relation between a doctor and a health care institution. A doctor who runs his private medical practice bears civil liability individually and is obliged to pay damages if any of his patient suffers injury in connection with the treatment. However, a doctor who acts as employee of a health care institution is protected by the provisions of the Labour Code and exempted from civil liability to a patient. On the other hand, a so-called independent contractor’s liability is joint and several with a hospital that has engaged him. However, case law seems to protect such doctors and treat them as hospital’s employees if certain premises are fulfilled (like de facto subordination of the doctor to the head of the ward).


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Desiree Castillo ◽  
Amarilis Guerra

Summary: Bioethics is the systematic and extensive study of humanbehavior in the field of life and health sciences, in view of the values and moral principles.Bioethical reflexion has a great importance in the formation of the dentist, both in theappropriation of values and in creating consciousness on the implementation of biosafety standards.In Colombia, in 1989 a Code of Ethics was created and ruled for dental profession by Law 35, whichestablished standards, principles and ethical obligations to govern the professional exercise fordentists. In dental practice, there is a high possibility of infection because the mouth is thenormal habitat of numerous different species of microorganisms that are present when the dentistscarry out their treatments. Dentistry is not a medium, but it is a goal. This means that we help tothe realization of the other, by reestablishing a proper smile and listening and guiding ourpatients. The transcendent value of the profession of dentistry is to understand that each personhas a single and particular project of life. Our responsibility is to contribute with this projectgiving an adequate Oral Health Care and helping our patients to achieve a happy life. Bioethics isuseful to create consciousness that any dental practice can positively or negatively affect thepatient. Key words: Bioethics. Odontolgy. Axiollogy and values.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Javanparast ◽  
Toby Freeman ◽  
Fran Baum ◽  
Ronald Labonté ◽  
Anna Ziersch ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document