| Literature DB >> 20839480 |
Kimberly D Fraser1, Carole Estabrooks, Marion Allen, Vicki Strang.
Abstract
We used ethnographic methods in the tradition of Spradley (1979) and constant comparative analysis to explore case manager resource allocation decision making. We interviewed; observed and shadowed 11 case managers within a children's home care program in a regional health authority in western Canada as they went about their daily work over a 5-month period. Our findings provide knowledge about the little-understood set of processes at the micro level of resource allocation. Although the case manager considers many factors, reported elsewhere (Fraser, Estabrooks, Allen, & Strang, 2009), they balance and weigh these factors within a relational context. The purpose of this article is to use Jenna's story as a case example to illustrate how the case manager balances and weighs the factors that influence their resource allocation decisions within this context. Jenna's story demonstrates the complex and multidimensional processes that are embedded in the relational nature of resource allocation decisions. We discuss home care case manager resource allocation decisions as viewed through the lens of relational ethics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20839480 DOI: 10.1891/1521-0987.11.3.151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Care Manag J ISSN: 1938-9019