Medical Audit: The Views of Junior Doctors
Abstract
Reports exploratory research into the reasons why many junior doctors are critical of medical audit; the extent to which consultants are aware of juniors′ views; and what might be done to make audit more acceptable to juniors – using structured interviews amongst staff (28 consultants and 34 juniors) in four district general hospitals in South‐East England. Junior doctors were critical of audit for five main reasons: the additional work involved; the audit cycle being longer than their job contracts; the topics reflecting their consultants′ interests and not theirs; doubt about the effectiveness of audit; and audit meetings being boring, intimidating and even incriminatory. Some consultants were well aware of these problems, but others were not. To increase the support of juniors, audit needs to: involve them more and be more participatory; be organized better; be less of a trial and more supportive; recognize the extra demands on juniors′ time. Offers suggestions for the successful implementation of medical audit.
Keywords
Citation
Black, N.A. and Thompson, E.M. (1993), "Medical Audit: The Views of Junior Doctors", Journal of Management in Medicine, Vol. 7 No. 2, pp. 33-42. https://doi.org/10.1108/02689239310036936
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1993, MCB UP Limited