Literature DB >> 16509951

Boundaries obscured and boundaries reinforced: incorporation as a strategy of occupational enhancement for intensive care.

Simon Carmel1.   

Abstract

Medical dominance is a recurring theme in sociological analyses of healthcare work. One example of a theoretical framework by which the medical profession is said to dominate other healthcare occupations is Turner's (1995: 138) enumeration of the modes of subordination, limitation and exclusion. As Elston (1991) has noted, however, such frameworks tend to be rather speculative and there is not a great deal of evidence on how these strategies are exercised, for example, at a micro-level. There is also a tendency to portray healthcare occupations as monolithic entities, without acknowledging differences within healthcare occupations, and the relationships between them, which can arise in different clinical locales. Through a micro-level analysis of the practice of intensive care, using ethnographic data collected on three intensive care units (ICUs) in England, this paper proposes a hitherto unidentified strategy -incorporation- for medical dominance at a micro-level. Paradoxically, an enhanced position for both intensive care medicine and intensive care nursing arises, relative to proximal healthcare groups. The argument of this paper is that within the ICU an occupational boundary (doctor-nurse) is obscured, while an organisational boundary which differentiates the ICU from the wider hospital is reinforced. Overall, the power relationship between medicine and nursing in intensive care is not 'zero-sum': the influence of both groups in the wider hospital is increased by this strategy of incorporation.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16509951     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2006.00486.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  5 in total

1.  'Who does this patient belong to?' boundary work and the re/making of (NSTEMI) heart attack patients.

Authors:  Helen Cramer; Jacki Hughes; Rachel Johnson; Maggie Evans; Christi Deaton; Adam Timmis; Harry Hemingway; Gene Feder; Katie Featherstone
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2018-06-28

2.  Exploring the space for task shifting to support nursing on neonatal wards in Kenyan public hospitals.

Authors:  Jacinta Nzinga; Jacob McKnight; Joyline Jepkosgei; Mike English
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2019-03-06

Review 3.  The changing landscape of professional practice in podiatry, lessons to be learned from other professions about the barriers to change - a narrative review.

Authors:  Michael Harrison-Blount; Christopher Nester; Anita Williams
Journal:  J Foot Ankle Res       Date:  2019-04-16       Impact factor: 2.303

4.  Association of nurse staffing grade and 30-day mortality in intensive care units among cardiovascular disease patients.

Authors:  Jae-Hyun Kim
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2018-10       Impact factor: 1.817

5.  Renegotiating inter-professional boundaries in maternity care: implementing a clinical pathway for normal labour.

Authors:  Billie Hunter; Jeremy Segrott
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2014-03-19
  5 in total

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