Street-level bureaucracy and policy implementation in community public health nursing : A qualitative study of the experiences of student and novice health visitors

Journal article


Hughes, Alison and Condon, Louise. (2016). Street-level bureaucracy and policy implementation in community public health nursing : A qualitative study of the experiences of student and novice health visitors. Primary Health Care Research and Development. 17(6), pp. 586-598. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1463423616000220
AuthorsHughes, Alison and Condon, Louise
Abstract

Aim
To explore the experiences of student and novice health visitors in implementing health visiting policy reform pre- and post-qualification.

Background
In England, public health nursing has been subject to major policy reform. The Health Visitor Implementation Plan (2011) set out a plan to recruit increasing numbers of nurses and midwives to the profession to deliver an expanded and refocussed health visiting service. Exploring this policy change from the viewpoint of those new to health visiting offers a unique perspective into how a specific policy vision is translated into nursing practice.

Methods
A descriptive qualitative study in which participants were enrolled on a one-year post-graduate health visiting course at a University in South West of England. Qualitative data were collected pre- and post-qualification. A total of 16 interviews and a focus group were conducted with nine participants between September 2012 and March 2013.

Findings
Descriptive data were interpreted using Lipsky’s theoretical framework of street-level bureaucracy. Three themes emerged which relate to this ‘bottom-up’ perspective on policy implementation; readiness to operationalise policy, challenges in delivering the service vision; and using discretion in delivering the vision. Community public health nurses operate as street-level bureaucrats in negotiating the demands of policy and practice, and by this means, attempt to reconcile professional values with institutional constraints. Barriers to policy implementation at a local level mediate the effects of policy reform, ultimately impacting upon outcomes for children and families.

Keywordscommunity public health nursing; health visitor implementation plan; health visitors; Lipsky’s theoretical framework; qualitative research; street-level bureaucracy
Year2016
JournalPrimary Health Care Research and Development
Journal citation17 (6), pp. 586-598
PublisherCambridge University Press
ISSN1463-4236
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1017/S1463423616000220
PubMed ID27487943
Scopus EID2-s2.0-84982943692
Page range586-598
FunderUniversity of the West of England
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online04 Aug 2016
Publication process dates
Accepted22 May 2016
Deposited01 Nov 2023
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