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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
This collection of stories from two practising GPs describes the reality of working within a failing and highly bureaucratic system, where there is a balancing act: regulation versus relationships; autonomy versus standard practice; algorithm versus individual attention. We aren’t suggesting a return to a ‘better’ time. We don’t object to being bureaucrats, embedded within and accountable to the systems we are in. But we do want to consider how and with what the gap left by the old-fashioned GP has been filled. We use stories based on our experience to describe the effect of different facets of bureaucracy on our ability to maintain a nuanced, individualised approach to each patient and encounter; and to question the prominence and effect of protocol. We are interested in the way professional relationships are influenced by protocol: between and within organisations; and most importantly with patients/clients/service users.. We are accustomed nowadays to automated telephone lines, chatbots, website FAQs- the frustration of being unable to connect with another human being who will listen to our particular question and give us something other than a generic answer. The same issues that are facing society at large have changed the way in which we work as GPs and the care we give. Introduction – an analysis of the different aspects of bureaucracy and regulation which influence decision making in general practice. Poppets and Parcels – healthcare systems are not designed to meet the needs of everyone. This chapter is about a fundamental but undocumented component of general practice - the ‘holding work’ required for patients whose problems can’t be solved in the usual ways, the ones for whom there isn’t a simple answer. Waiting to Connect – In this chapter, the stories are about flow – the flow of patients through a turbulent, over-stretched system in which access and response are often controlled by algorithm. Taking Liberties -this chapter examines the role of GPs as agents of social control in the restriction of civil liberties - in the context of the mental health act and of safeguarding. Guidelines, Tramlines, Mindlines -how guidelines are developed and the difficulties of applying them in the messy world of general practice. The Elephant in the Room -the stories in this chapter are about biography and biology; about medical categorisation and its effects and shortcomings. The Bureaucracy of Death - In the realm of death, protocol -which has become the bedrock of clinical practice- is less useful, because the right decisions and the right timing are so individual and nuanced. These stories are about death and bureaucracy. Conclusion and Afterword A Labour of Love -a few stories to end, of healthcare enacted with love
Analysis and design of structures was done manually in earlier times, as no facilities were available for quick solution of lengthy problems. Invention of computers and specially computer languages has brought a large revolution not only in software field but also in its implementation for Civil Engineering applications. Based on the above idea, an attempt has been made to develop interactive software for the self-supported mild steel chimney in this book. The present book is a generalized program divided in various modules in order to reduce errors during the design calculations. The various modules included in the book includes input, analysis, design, and output (both in terms of results and drawings) etc. It has been observed in general that the major amount of time and efforts of a Structural Engineer is diverted in checking/verification of the working-execution drawings/details prepared by the draftsmen in the design offices. The "Drafting module" presented in this book generates the execution drawings in AutoCAD automatically. Therefore, it is anticipated that the module will be useful for the practicing Structural Engineers in a long way.
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