Literature DB >> 22643763

Reconsidering detached concern: the case of intensive-care nurses.

Wendy Cadge1, Clare Hammonds.   

Abstract

The concept of detached concern, as proposed by Renée Fox in Experiment Perilous (1959), is often used in the literature today in a way she did not intend. Rather than viewing detachment and concern as dualities, scholars frequently conceive of them as dichotomous, emphasizing detachment over concern. We reconsider detached concern here through the stories 37 intensive-care nurses told about their most memorable patients. While many described efforts to keep emotionally distant from patients, they also expressed concern for patients they felt connected to, especially those who were a first for them, who were long-term primary patients, who surprised them, or who died. The care nurses provide for these patients is shaped sociologically by their training and institutional contexts and is not an aberration or indicative of their losing control of their feelings. Instead, it is evidence of the dual nature of detached concern and of the importance of viewing the concept as describing more than emotional detachment.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22643763     DOI: 10.1353/pbm.2012.0021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Perspect Biol Med        ISSN: 0031-5982            Impact factor:   1.416


  8 in total

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7.  Exhausted through client interaction-Detached concern profiles as an emotional resource over time?

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-05-06       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Encountering the social determinants of health on a COVID-19 ICU: Frontline providers' perspectives on inequality in a time of pandemic.

Authors:  Sara Shostak; Julia Bandini; Wendy Cadge; Vivian Donahue; Mariah Lewis; Katelyn Grone; Sophie Trachtenberg; Robert Kacmarek; Laura Lux; Cristina Matthews; Mary Elizabeth McAuley; Frederic Romain; Colleen Snydeman; Tara Tehan; Ellen Robinson
Journal:  SSM Qual Res Health       Date:  2021-08-23
  8 in total

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