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    Holding services to account

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    Author
    Clegg, Jennifer
    Keyword
    Activities of daily living
    Delivery of health care
    Professional ethics
    Intellectual disability
    Date
    2008
    
    Metadata
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    DOI
    10.1111/j.1365-2788.2008.01068.x
    Publisher's URL
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2788.2008.01068.x/full
    Abstract
    Background: Recently, the frequency of audit inspections of health services for people with intellectual disability (ID) in the UK has increased, from occasional inquiries to a systematic audit of all services. From 2008, a process of continuous audit 'surveillance' of specialist health services is to be introduced. Similar regimes of inspection are in place for social care services. Aim: To explore the conceptual positions which inform audit, through detailed examination of the investigation into the learning disability service at Sutton and Merton. Findings: Audit is distinct from evaluation because it neither provides opportunities for service staff to give an account of their work nor represents a search for knowledge. Audit investigates adherence to government policy. In ID, audits measure aspirations derived from normalisation, despite research showing that some of these aspirations have not been achieved by any service. As audit consumes significant public resource, it is questionable whether the dominant finding of the Healthcare Commission's investigation into Sutton and Merton, that the ID service was chronically under-funded, represents value for money. Discussion and conclusions: While basic checks on minimum standards will always be necessary, service excellence requires not audit but research-driven evaluation. Audits inhibit rather than open-up debate about improving support to people with ID. They impose an ideology, squander resource, and demoralise carers and staff. Evaluations challenge the implicit management-versus-professional binary enacted by audit, and can inform new care systems which make effective use of all those engaged with people with ID. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved) (Source: journal abstract)
    Citation
    Clegg, J. (2008). Holding services to account. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 52 (7), pp.581-587.
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/10598
    Collections
    Intellectual Disabilities

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