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Effective practice in the NHS and the contribution from public health: a qualitative study

Kate Melvin (Kate Melvin is Research Associate at the Nuffield Institute of Health, University of Leeds, UK.)
John Wright (John Wright is Consultant in Epidemiology and Public Health at Bradford Hospitals NHS Trust, Bradford Royal Infirmary, Bradford, UK)
Stephen R. Harrison (Stephen R. Harrison is Professor in Health Policy at the Nuffield Institute of Health, University of Leeds, UK)
Mike Robinson (Mike Robinson is Senior Lecturer in Public Health Medicine at the Nuffield Institute of Health, University of Leeds, UK)
Jim Connelly (Jim Connelly is MPH A Course Director at the Nuffield Institute of Health, University of Leeds, UK)
D.R. Rhys Williams (D.R. Rhys Williams is Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at the Nuffield Institute of Health, University of Leeds, UK)

British Journal of Clinical Governance

ISSN: 1466-4100

Article publication date: 1 September 1999

603

Abstract

Reports on a study which explored the views of key stakeholders regarding the meaning and implementation of effective health care and clinical governance in NHS Trusts, and the role for public health professionals. The authors used a national questionnaire survey to derive a sample for qualitative telephone interviews and two area case studies. The authors found that the meaning of effective health care and the means employed for implementation varied. Mergers were seen as hindrances to gaining organisational engagement whilst others, such as the White Paper on quality and the notion of clinical governance, were seen as facilitating. A widespread aspiration was a more integrated and corporate quality culture where quality was central, not marginal. The authors conclude that there is widespread concern among Trusts to change their culture and assert effective health care as a central value. Public health skills, rather than the discipline itself, are seen as important for such culture change.

Keywords

Citation

Melvin, K., Wright, J., Harrison, S.R., Robinson, M., Connelly, J. and Rhys Williams, D.R. (1999), "Effective practice in the NHS and the contribution from public health: a qualitative study", British Journal of Clinical Governance, Vol. 4 No. 3, pp. 88-98. https://doi.org/10.1108/14664109910309638

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited

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