‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system

Reconfiguration of the healthcare division of labour is becoming increasingly attractive in the context of increased patient demand and resource constraints. One example is the introduction of extended roles for pharmacists to provide patients additional support to manage their medicines, while also...

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Main Authors: Latif, Asam, Waring, Justin, Watmough, Deborah, Boyd, Matthew J., Elliott, Rachel A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51276/
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author Latif, Asam
Waring, Justin
Watmough, Deborah
Boyd, Matthew J.
Elliott, Rachel A.
author_facet Latif, Asam
Waring, Justin
Watmough, Deborah
Boyd, Matthew J.
Elliott, Rachel A.
author_sort Latif, Asam
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Reconfiguration of the healthcare division of labour is becoming increasingly attractive in the context of increased patient demand and resource constraints. One example is the introduction of extended roles for pharmacists to provide patients additional support to manage their medicines, while also reducing work pressures experienced by other health professionals. Understanding how such policies are framed by those delivering and receiving care has been under‐theorised. Using Goffman's frame theory, we examine one newly introduced community pharmacy service (New Medicines Service (NMS)) to illustrate how a policy intended to support patient medicine‐taking through the extended roles of pharmacists is framed and where this deviates from its proposed aims. Three themes emerged: (i) the spatial‐material artefacts; (ii) existing discursive culture and practice around medicine‐taking; and (iii) the NMS interactions that shape and govern framing and subsequent interpretation of the NMS. Our study offers an explanatory and dynamic view of the framing process with important lessons for reconfiguring medicine management policy and practice. As well as illustrating framing as being variegated, complementary or conflicting, it also shows how this plurality and fragility had consequences for patient engagement and sense‐making. The consequences for engagement and recommendations for implementing future initiatives are discussed.
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spelling nottingham-512762020-05-08T09:15:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51276/ ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system Latif, Asam Waring, Justin Watmough, Deborah Boyd, Matthew J. Elliott, Rachel A. Reconfiguration of the healthcare division of labour is becoming increasingly attractive in the context of increased patient demand and resource constraints. One example is the introduction of extended roles for pharmacists to provide patients additional support to manage their medicines, while also reducing work pressures experienced by other health professionals. Understanding how such policies are framed by those delivering and receiving care has been under‐theorised. Using Goffman's frame theory, we examine one newly introduced community pharmacy service (New Medicines Service (NMS)) to illustrate how a policy intended to support patient medicine‐taking through the extended roles of pharmacists is framed and where this deviates from its proposed aims. Three themes emerged: (i) the spatial‐material artefacts; (ii) existing discursive culture and practice around medicine‐taking; and (iii) the NMS interactions that shape and govern framing and subsequent interpretation of the NMS. Our study offers an explanatory and dynamic view of the framing process with important lessons for reconfiguring medicine management policy and practice. As well as illustrating framing as being variegated, complementary or conflicting, it also shows how this plurality and fragility had consequences for patient engagement and sense‐making. The consequences for engagement and recommendations for implementing future initiatives are discussed. Blackwell Publishing 2018-04-19 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by_nc_nd https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51276/1/1467-9566.12739.pdf Latif, Asam, Waring, Justin, Watmough, Deborah, Boyd, Matthew J. and Elliott, Rachel A. (2018) ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system. Sociology of Health and Illness . ISSN 0141-9889 https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12739 doi:10.1111/1467-9566.12739 doi:10.1111/1467-9566.12739
spellingShingle Latif, Asam
Waring, Justin
Watmough, Deborah
Boyd, Matthew J.
Elliott, Rachel A.
‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system
title ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system
title_full ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system
title_fullStr ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system
title_full_unstemmed ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system
title_short ‘I expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the English healthcare system
title_sort ‘i expected just to walk in, get my tablets and then walk out’: on framing new community pharmacy services in the english healthcare system
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51276/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51276/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51276/