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Evidence based guidelines or collectively constructed
mindlines? Ethnographic study of knowledge management
in primary care
Abstract: Objective To explore in depth how primary care clinicians
(general practitioners and practice nurses) derive their individual
and collective healthcare decisions. Design Ethnographic study using
standard methods (non-participant observation, semistructured interviews.
and documentary review) over two years to collect data, which were
analysed thematically. Setting Two general practices, one in the
south of England and the other in the north of England. Participants
Nine doctors, three nurses, one phlebotomist, and associated medical
staff in one practice provided the initial data; the emerging model
was checked for transferability with general practitioners in the
second practice. Results Clinicians rarely accessed and used explicit
evidence from research or other sources directly, but relied on
mindlines-collectively reinforced, internalised, tacit
guidelines. These were informed by brief reading but mainly by their
own and their colleagues' experience, their interactions with each
other and with opinion leaders, patients, and pharmaceutical representatives,
and other Sources Of largely tacit knowledge. Mediated by organisational
demands and constraints, mindlines were iteratively negotiated with
a variety of key actors, often through a range of informal interactions
in fluid communities of practice, resulting in socially
constructed knowledge in practice. Conclusions These
findings highlight the potential advantage of exploiting existing
formal and informal networking as a key to conveying evidence to
clinicians.
| Author: |
Gabbay, J. & le May, A.
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| Publisher: |
British Medical Journal, vol. 329, no. 7473, pp. 1013-1016A.
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| Date: |
2004 |
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