| Literature DB >> 29127541 |
Assaf Givati1, Chris Markham2, Ken Street2.
Abstract
Over the past 2 decades, as part of reforms to the National Health Service and with it organizational changes to ambulance work in the UK, paramedic education has undergone a process of academisation and a shift from in-house, apprenticeship weeks-long occupational training, to university-based undergraduate programs. While the professional regulation and standardization of Allied Health Professionals' education in high-income countries has captured scholarly attention, the study of paramedic practice is still in its infancy and there is a need to explore its evolvement in relation to the fluid societal-political circumstances affecting its provision and demand. Based on interviews with front-line paramedics, paramedic educators and paramedic science students in the South of England, this article examines how the reforms to paramedic education have impacted the professionalization of paramedics and their discourse of professionalism. Framed within to the 'new' sociology of professions, the case of British paramedics demonstrates the complex nature of the relationship between the university and professional practice. It appears that universities, the providers of paramedic education, are caught between two opposing discourses of professionalism: on the one hand, that of providing a platform for students' socialization and engagement with professionalism 'from within' practice which is based on students' common goals and mutual experiences, and, on the other hand, serving as a conduit for managerial/organizational strategies of professionalism which appear to undermine the role of university socialization.Entities:
Keywords: Higher education; Paramedic science; Professionalism; Professionalization; Qualitative
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29127541 PMCID: PMC5882635 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-017-9802-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
A summary of participants' perceived professional related influences of paramedic university education
| Front-line paramedics | Enhanced public health roles and with it enhanced accountability and public trust |
| Paramedic students | Formal education, certificates, enhanced societal status |
| The ambulance service | Injection of university-trained, knowledgeable workforce equipped with enhanced medical knowledge and skills |
| The host university | Struggle to locate itself between academic and professional requirements |