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Towards accountability-centred practices: governance in OSCEs subordinating patient and practitioner clinical experience.

Gráinne P KearneyMichael K CormanJennifer Laura JohnstonNigel David HartGerard J Gormley
Published in: Advances in health sciences education : theory and practice (2023)
New public management ideals and standards have become increasingly adhered to in health professions education; this is particularly apparent in high-stakes assessment, as a gateway to practice. Using an Institutional Ethnographic approach, we looked at the work involved in running high-stakes Objective Structured Clinical Exams (OSCEs) throughout an academic year including use of observations, interviews and textual analysis. In our results, we describe three types of 'work'-standardising work, defensibility work and accountability work-summarising these in the discussion as an Accountability Circuit, which shows the organising role of texts on people's work processes. We show how this form of governance mandates a shift towards accountability-centred practices, away from practices which are person-centred; this lens on accountability-centring during high-stakes assessments invites critique of the often-unquestioned emphasis of new public management in health professions education.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • public health
  • health information
  • case report
  • risk assessment
  • computed tomography
  • emergency department
  • climate change
  • health promotion
  • diffusion weighted imaging