Literature DB >> 28543376

The everyday risk work of Dutch child-healthcare professionals: inferring 'safe' and 'good' parenting through trust, as mediated by a lens of gender and class.

Gerlieke Veltkamp1, Patrick Brown1.   

Abstract

Amidst intensifying policy concerns with children's wellbeing and development, healthcare professionals are required not only to assess risk of abuse and neglect, but to manage risk of 'poor parenting' more broadly. Drawing on 15 in-depth interviews and non-participant observations of 61 professional-family interactions, across four preventative public health services for children in the Netherlands, we explored how professionals accomplished such risk work amid intractable uncertainties. Building inferences from brief encounters with families, professionals gauged the extent to which they trusted parents to care 'appropriately'. This trust developed most readily with parents experienced as 'familiar' by the largely middle-class female professionals. Harnessing Schutzian phenomenology, we analyse the related manifestations of social structure within the interactional-dynamics and lifeworlds of risk assessment. We argue that social structures of gender, class and ethnicity can be seen as influential both through the differing potential for 'we-relationships' to be formed and via the generalising and stereotyped knowledge applied in their absence.
© 2017 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Foundation for SHIL.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Schutz; child public health; qualitative methods; risk work; trust

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28543376     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12582

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


  2 in total

1.  Collaboration for Impact: Co-creating a Workforce Development Toolkit Using an Arts-based Approach.

Authors:  Juliet Rayment; Manbinder Sidhu; Polly Wright; Patrick Brown; Sheila Greenfield; Stephen Jeffreys; Nicola Gale
Journal:  Int J Integr Care       Date:  2020-06-09       Impact factor: 5.120

2.  Navigating complexity of child abuse through intuition and evidence-based guidelines: a mix-methods study among child and youth healthcare practitioners.

Authors:  Jetske C Erisman; Kevin de Sabbata; Teun Zuiderent-Jerak; Elena V Syurina
Journal:  BMC Fam Pract       Date:  2020-08-01       Impact factor: 2.497

  2 in total

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