781
Views
11
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Article

An ethnographic investigation of junior doctors’ capacities to practice interprofessionally in three teaching hospitals

, &
Pages 347-353 | Received 07 Nov 2013, Accepted 31 Dec 2014, Published online: 03 Feb 2015

References

  • Atkinson, P. (1992). The ethnography of a medical setting: Reading, writing, and rhetoric. Qualitative Health Research, 2, 451–474
  • Barraclough, B.H. & Birch, J. (2006). The Safety and Quality Of Health Care: Where are we now? Health care safety and quality: Where have we been and where are we going? The Medical Journal of Australia, 184, S48–S50
  • Blumenthal, D. (1994). The vital role of professionalism in health care reform. Health Affairs, 13, 252–256
  • Bosk, C. (1985). The fieldworker as watcher and witness. The Hastings Center Report, 15, 10–14
  • Braithwaite, J., Clay-Williams, R., Nugus, P., & Plumb, J. (2013a). Health care as a complex adaptive system. In E. Hollnagel, J. Braithwaite, & R.L. Wears (Eds.), Resilient health care (pp. 57–73). London: Ashgate
  • Braithwaite, J., Iedema, R., & Jorm, C. (2007a). Trust, communication, theory of mind and the social brain hypothesis: Deep explanations for what goes wrong in health care. Journal of Health Organization and Management, 21, 353–367
  • Braithwaite, J., & Travaglia, J. (2005). Inter-professional learning and clinical education: An overview of the literature (pp. 1–59). Canberra: ACT Health Department
  • Braithwaite, J., & Travaglia, J. (2006). A framework for inter-professional learning and clinical education for ACT Health (pp. 1–18). Canberra: ACT Health Department
  • Braithwaite, J., Westbrook, J., Foxwell, A., Boyce, R., Devinney, T., Budge, M., Murphy, K., et al. (2007b). An action research protocol to strengthen system-wide inter-professional learning and practice [LP0775514]. BMC Health Services Research, 7, 144
  • Braithwaite, J., Westbrook, M., Nugus, P., Greenfield, D., Travaglia, J., Runciman, W., Foxwell, A., et al. (2013b). Continuing differences between health professions' attitudes: The saga of accomplishing systems-wide interprofessionalism. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 25, 8–15
  • Cameron, A. (2011). Impermeable boundaries? Developments in professional and inter-professional practice. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 25, 53–58
  • Carlisle, C., Cooper, H., & Watkins, C. (2004). “Do none of you talk to each other?”: The challenges facing the implementation of interprofessional education*. Medical Teacher, 26, 545–552
  • Creswick, N., Westbrook, J., & Braithwaite, J. (2009). Understanding communication networks in the emergency department. BMC Health Services Research, 9, 247
  • Day, R., & Day, J.V. (1977). A review of the current state of negotiated order theory: An appreciation and a critique. The Sociological Quarterly, 18, 126–142
  • Denzin, N., & Lincoln, Y. (2002). The qualitative inquiry reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc
  • Georgiou, A., Westbrook, J., Braithwaite, J., Iedema, R., Ray, S., Forsyth, R., Germanos, T. (2007). When requests become orders – A formative investigation into the impact of a computerized physician order entry system on a pathology laboratory service. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 76, 583–591
  • Gittell, J., Godfrey, M., & Thistlewaite, J. (2013). Interprofessional collaborative practice and relational coordination: Improving healthcare through relationships. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 27, 210–213
  • Gleason, A., Daly, J., & Blackham, R. (2007). Prevocational medical training and the Australian Curriculum Framework for Junior Doctors: A junior doctor perspective. Medical Journal of Australia, 186, 114
  • Goulding, L., Adamson, J., Watt, I., & Wright, J. (2012). Patient safety in patients who occupy beds on clinically inappropriate wards: A qualitative interview study with NHS staff. BMJ Quality & Safety, 21, 218–224
  • Gozu, A., Kern, D., & Wright, S. (2009). Similarities and differences between international medical graduates and US medical graduates at six Maryland community-based internal medicine residency training programs. Academic Medicine, 84, 385–390
  • Greenfield, D., Nugus, P., Travaglia, J., & Braithwaite, J. (2011). Interprofessional learning and practice can make a difference. The Medical Journal of Australia, 194, 364–365
  • Hall, P. (2005). Interprofessional teamwork: Professional cultures as barriers. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 19, 188–196
  • Hamilton, J. (2011). Two birds with one stone: Addressing interprofessional education aims and objectives in health profession curricula through interdisciplinary cultural competency training. Medical Teacher, 33, 199–203
  • Handwerker, P.W. (2001). Quick ethnography: A guide to rapid multi-method research. Rowman: Altamira
  • Hunter, D. (1996). The changing roles of health care personnel in health and health care management. Social Science & Medicine, 43, 799–808
  • Ibrahim, J., Jeffcott, S., Davis, M., & Chadwick, L. (2013). Recognizing junior doctors’ potential contribution to patient safety and health care quality improvement. Journal of Health Organization and Management, 27, 273–286
  • Interprofessional Education Collaborative Expert Panel. (2011). Interprofessional Education Collaborative Expert Panel. Core competencies for interprofessional collaborative practice Report of an expert panel. Washington, DC: Interprofessional Education Collaborative
  • Interprofessional Education Collaborative Expert Panel. (2012). Core competencies for interprofessional collaborative practice: Report of an Expert Panel, 2011. Washington, DC: Interprofessional Education Collaborative
  • Lewin, S., & Reeves, S. (2011). Enacting ‘team’ and ‘teamwork’: Using Goffman’s theory of impression management to illuminate interprofessional practice on hospital wards. Social Science & Medicine, 72, 1595–1602
  • MacMillan, K.M. (2012). The challenge of achieving interprofessional collaboration: Should we blame Nightingale? Journal of Interprofessional Care, 26, 410–415
  • Mays, N., & Pope, C. (2000). Assessing quality in qualitative research. British Medical Journal, 320, 50–52
  • Miles, M., & Huberman, A. (1984). Qualitative data analysis: A source book of new methods. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage
  • Millen, D.R. (2000). Rapid ethnography: time deepening strategies for HCI field research. Paper presented at the Proceedings of the third conference on designing interactive systems: processes, practices, methods, and techniques
  • Milne, J. (2012). Junior doctors’ understanding and enactment of interprofessional learning and practice. (PhD Research, University of New South Wales, Kensington)
  • Nardi, R., Scanelli, G., Corrao, S., Iori, I., Mathieu, G., & Cataldi Amatrian, R. (2007). Co-morbidity does not reflect complexity in internal medicine patients. European Journal of Internal Medicine, 18, 359–368
  • Newbury-Birch, D., & Kamali, F. (2001). Psychological stress, anxiety, depression, job satisfaction, and personality characteristics in preregistration house officers. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 77, 109–111
  • Nugus, P., Greenfield, D., Travaglia, J., Westbrook, J., & Braithwaite, J. (2010). How and where clinicians exercise power: Interprofessional relations in health care. Social Science & Medicine, 71, 898–909
  • Opdam, H. (2006). Medical emergency teams in teaching hospitals. In M. DeVita, K. Hillman, & R. Bellomo (Eds.), Medical emergency teams (pp. 152–162). New York: Springer
  • Piterman, L., Newton, J.M., & Canny, B.J. (2010). Interprofessional education for interprofessional practice: Does it make a difference? The Medical Journal of Australia, 193, 92–93
  • Plsek, P., & Greenhalgh, T. (2001). The challenge of complexity in health care. British Medical Journal, 323, 625–628
  • Polkinghorne, D. (1995). Narrative configuration in qualitative analysis. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 8, 5–23
  • Powell, A.E., & Davies, H.T.O. (2012). The struggle to improve patient care in the face of professional boundaries. Social Science & Medicine, 75, 807–814
  • Pownall, M. (2009). Complex working environment, not poor training, blamed for drug errors. British Medical Journal, 339, b5328
  • Reeves, S., & Lewin, S. (2004). Interprofessional collaboration in the hospital: Strategies and meanings. Journal of Health Services Research and Policy, 9, 218–225
  • Reeves, S., Rice, K., Conn, L.G., Miller, K.-L., Kenaszchuk, C., & Zwarenstein, M. (2009). Interprofessional interaction, negotiation and non-negotiation on general internal medicine wards. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 23, 633–645
  • Reeves, S., Zwarenstein, M., Goldman, J., Barr, H., Freeth, D., Koppel, I., & Hammick, M. (2010). The effectiveness of interprofessional education: Key findings from a new systematic review. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 24, 230
  • Rice, K., Zwarenstein, M., Gotlib Conn, L.G., Kenaszchuk, C., Russell, A., & Reeves, S. (2010). An intervention to improve interprofessional collaboration and communications: A comparative qualitative study. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 24, 350–361
  • Ross, S., Ryan, C., Duncan, E., Francis, J., Johnston, M., Ker, J., Lee, A., et al. (2013). Perceived causes of prescribing errors by junior doctors in hospital inpatients: A study from the PROTECT programme. BMJ Quality & Safety, 22, 97–102
  • Scholes, J., & Vaughan, B. (2002). Cross-boundary working: Implications for the multiprofessional team. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 11, 399–408
  • Spradley, J.P. (1980). Participant observation. New York: Holt, Reinhart and Winston
  • Strauss, A.L. (1978). Negotiations: Varieties, contexts, processes, and social order: SciELO Brasil. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
  • Strauss, A.L., Schatzman, L., Ehrlich, D., Bucher, R., & Sabshin, M. (1963). The hospital and its negotiated order. The Hospital in Modern Society, 147, 169
  • Sturmberg, J.P., & Martin, C.M. (2013). Handbook of systems and complexity in health. Dordrecht: Springer
  • Svensson, R. (1996). The interplay between doctors and nurses – A negotiated order perspective. Sociology of Health & Illness, 18, 379–398
  • Thistlethwaite, J.E. (2008). Guest editorial: Interprofessional education. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 17, 425–426
  • Wachter, R. (2004). The end of the beginning: Patient safety five years after “To Err Is Human”. Health Affairs, 23, 534–545
  • Westbrook, J., Ampt, A., Kearney, L., & Rob, M. (2008). All in a day's work: An observational study to quantify how and with whom doctors on hospital wards spend their time. Medical Journal of Australia, 188, 506–509
  • Whitehead, C. (2007). The doctor dilemma in interprofessional education and care: How and why will physicians collaborate? Medical Education, 41, 1010–1016
  • World Health Organization Department of Human Resources for Health. (2010). Framework for action on interprofessional education & collaborative practice. Geneva: WHO
  • Zwarenstein, M., & Reeves, S. (2002). Working together but apart: Barriers and routes to nurse – Physician collaboration. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 28, 242–247

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.