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Scholar Results 1 - 10 of about 18 citing Checkland: Re-thinking accountability: trust versus confidence in medical practice. (0.17 sec) 

Quality of primary care in England with the introduction of pay for performance

- qualitymed.org.il [PDF] 
S Campbell, D Reeves, E Kontopantelis, E … - New England Journal of Medicine, 2007 - content.nejm.org
In 2004, the United Kingdom committed £1.8 bil- lion ($3.2 billion) to a new
pay-for-performance contract for family practitioners. 1 During the first year,
the levels of achievement exceeded those an- ticipated by the government, ...
Cited by 127 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions

Financial incentives to improve the quality of primary care in the UK: predicting the …


M Roland, S Campbell, N Bailey, D Whalley, … - Primary Health Care Research and Development, 2006 - Cambridge Univ Press
In April 2004, general practitioners (GPs) in the UK entered into a contract
with the government in which up to 20% of their pay relates to the qual- ity of
care they provide.Points are awarded against a complex set of 136 quality ...
Cited by 20 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions

Trustworthy doctors in confidence building systems

- bmj.com [PDF] 
MR Dibben, HTO Davies - British Medical Journal, 2004 - qshc.bmj.com
T he role of trust in public services has received increasing attention over the
past decade. 1 In the UK, for the most part, attention has only been focused on
public trust in the wake of serious service failings—failings that have ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions

Quality based social insurance coverage and payment of the application of a high cost …


N Beersen, WK Redekop, JHB de Bruijn, PJ … - Health policy, 2005 - Elsevier
This article describes a project in which a national continuous quality
improvement system and a payment scheme were explicitly linked, while
introducing an expensive treatment (Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS)) in the ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 12 versions

Regulation and the social licence for medical research


M Dixon-Woods, RE Ashcroft - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, 2008 - Springer
Abstract Regulationandgovernanceofmedical researchis frequently criticised by
researchers. In this paper, we draw on Everett Hughes' concepts of professional
licence and pro- fessional mandate, and on contemporary sociological theory ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 2 versions

[PDF] La percepción del riesgo: del paciente informado al paciente consecuente


CA Remón - Monografías humanitas, 2004 - eutanasia.ws
El riesgo se define en el Diccionario de la Real Academia Española como la
contingen- cia o proximidad de un daño. En el campo de la asistencia sanitaria
y de la salud pública el término riesgo está ligado a la asociación ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 4 versions

A bed too far The implementation of freedom of choice policy in the NHS


J García-Lacalle - Health policy, 2007 - Elsevier
Freedom of hospital choice has become a popular policy among the European public
health services to ensure better patient rights, reduce waiting times and
improve efficiency and quality in public hospitals. The English National ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - All 8 versions

Publish, or not publish? More regulation or better motivation? The enemy is apathy


H Thornton - International Journal of Surgery, 2007 - Elsevier
The request for publication in the lay press of surgeons' mortality rates came
from two newspaper journalists, one from the Sunday Times, a second from The
Scotsman. National Services Scotland (NSS), the Common Service Agency for ...
Related articles - All 9 versions

[CITATION] Regulating primary care: regulation as the guardian of quality.


AN Siriwardena - Quality in primary care, 2008 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
1: Qual Prim Care. 2008;16(4):223-4. Regulating primary care: regulation
as the guardian of quality. Siriwardena AN. Publication ...
Related articles - All 2 versions

[PDF] Is the traditional family doctor an anachronism?


G Wong, N Bentzen, L Wang, K Messages - londonjournalofprimarycare.org.uk
In many developed countries, the traditional family doctor has acted as a point
of first contact for medical matters (the 'medical home' or 'regular source of
care'); provided continuity of care (sometimes 'from cradle to grave'); and ...
Related articles - View as HTML - All 2 versions


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