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1.
Health Place ; 13(4): 865-76, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17452117

ABSTRACT

Flexibility in the design and enactment of spaces of healthcare is important in how providers respond to variations in patient expectations and experience. Health geographers have contributed to a wide body of literature concerning the therapeutic qualities of landscapes and the material, social and symbolic orderings of place and their uniqueness for individuals. In this paper, we draw upon these findings and a 'culture of place' approach to consider the complexities of maternity care and issues of pain relief. Given that pain is widely held to be a subjective experience and one that, in an era of patient decision making, increasingly demands discretionary approaches to its relief, we consider how medical professionals help to construct flexibility in healthcare and how this affects therapeutic landscapes. Drawing on analysis of four focus groups involving parent educators, midwives, health visitors, anaesthetists and obstetricians in the NE of England, we explore the material and discursive construction of flexible therapeutic landscapes and pain relief. Our findings suggest that flexibility is constrained and fashioned in association with health care professional's sense of place as already constituted. We propose that providing maternity care professionals with an explicit awareness of how places are relationally constructed, may help in expanding the therapeutic qualities of particular settings, and support a (more) flexible approach.


Subject(s)
Environment Design , Labor Pain/psychology , Labor Pain/therapy , Women's Health , Decision Making , England , Female , Focus Groups , Hospital Design and Construction , Humans , Midwifery , Pregnancy , Sociology, Medical
2.
Commun Dis Public Health ; 4(4): 268-72, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12109393

ABSTRACT

Improving the quality of health services is central to current attempts to reform the National Health Service. The main approaches to quality improvement in communicable disease control to date have been the development of practice guidelines and audit projects. Descriptions of the impact of quality initiatives in public health generally and communicable disease in particular have been limited, objective measures of quality are rare and few reports outline improvements that have been achieved in practice. We describe a project to develop a set of quality indicators for meningococcal disease control. A set of candidate indicators was developed and screened using standard approaches based on local consensus. We outline how they could be further tested and used to promote quality improvement.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/standards , Meningococcal Infections/prevention & control , Quality Indicators, Health Care , State Medicine/standards , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Medical Audit , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Total Quality Management , United Kingdom
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