ABSTRACT

Primary Care Trusts are a flagship initiative of government policy for modernising the NHS. The new requirement for frontline healthcare professionals to work together stretches across both community care and public health, and as a result traditional boundaries are being blurred and new local roles and resources are emerging right across the primary care sector. This book draws practical lessons for Primary Care Trusts from applied research and development programmes in other parts of the NHS, other parts of the public sector, parallel developments in the private sector and relevant international experience. With contributions from the Health Management Group and its associates, this book provides a comprehensive approach and practical guidance. It includes new specific models for local development on clinical governance, evidence-based medicine, use of applied health services research, social services collaboration, new organisational partnerships, public health alliances, community hospital usage and managed care. Trust in Experience will enable readers to create PCTs as their own organisations and not simply as local agents of central policy, and perceive changes as positive opportunities whilst recognising the risks involved.

part 1|46 pages

Policy into practice

chapter 1|14 pages

Transferable learning

chapter 2|17 pages

Traumas and turning points

chapter 3|11 pages

Rhetoric, resources and realities

part 2|170 pages

Practice into policy

chapter 8|12 pages

Balancing bigger budgets

chapter 14|10 pages

Realising research can be relevant

part 3|22 pages

Looking ahead