Health care practices, professions and perspectives: A case study in intensive care

被引:17
|
作者
Carmel, S [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Lewisham, London, England
关键词
UK; intensive care; nursing; theory of practice; division of labour;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.08.062
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
This paper makes the case for bringing empirical analysis to the heart of conceptual work about health care Drawing on ethnographic observations in intensive care units in the UK, it identifies and analyses a mismatch between the practice of a particular health care specialty and its associated professional and academic discourse. As a result, two claims in academic nursing discourse are criticised: first, that nursing practice is (or should be) focused on individual patient care; and second, that nursing is (or should be) radically distinct from medicine. By raising the analytical profile of situated practice, health care workers (in particular, but not exclusively, nurses) are shown to undertake important caring work with patients' relatives. Their work includes caring not only for an individual patient's social self, but also for patients' social contexts. The paper also argues that theoretical emphases on nursing's unique perspective and on differences between medicine and nursing are exaggerated in clinical practice, for example there are many similarities between what nurses and doctors actually do. Reasons for the persistence of these claims in academic nursing discourse are put forward-nursing seems to be quite unusual in needing an explicit theory of practice, and the paper speculates on why this is the case. The general lesson of the paper is that analytical evidence about the context and content of practice needs to be afforded a more fundamental role in the development of theories about practice-based disciplines. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2079 / 2090
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Commitment to care: a qualitative study of intensive care nurses' perspectives of end-of-life care in an Islamic context
    Borhani, F.
    Hosseini, S. H.
    Abbaszadeh, A.
    INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW, 2014, 61 (01) : 140 - 147
  • [2] Care practices for patient safety in an intensive care unit
    Barbosa, Tais Pagliuco
    Arantes de Oliveira, Graziella Artuzi
    de Araujo Lopes, Mariana Neves
    Aparecida Poletti, Nadia Antonia
    Beccaria, Lucia Marinilza
    ACTA PAULISTA DE ENFERMAGEM, 2014, 27 (03) : 243 - 248
  • [3] Intensive Care in India: The Indian Intensive Care Case Mix and Practice Patterns Study
    Divatia, Jigeeshu V.
    Amin, Pravin R.
    Ramakrishnan, Nagarajan
    Kapadia, Farhad N.
    Todi, Subhash
    Sahu, Samir
    Govil, Deepak
    Chawla, Rajesh
    Kulkarni, Atul P.
    Samavedam, Srinivas
    Jani, Charu K.
    Rungta, Narendra
    Samaddar, Devi Prasad
    Mehta, Sujata
    Venkataraman, Ramesh
    Hegde, Ashit
    Bande, B. D.
    Dhanuka, Sanjay
    Singh, Virendra
    Tewari, Reshma
    Zirpe, Kapil
    Sathe, Prachee
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2016, 20 (04) : 216 - 225
  • [4] End-of-life care in the intensive care setting: A descriptive exploratory qualitative study of nurses' beliefs and practices
    Ranse, Kristen
    Yates, Patsy
    Coyer, Fiona
    AUSTRALIAN CRITICAL CARE, 2012, 25 (01) : 4 - 12
  • [5] Health Care Professionals' and Parents' Perspectives on the Use of AI for Pain Monitoring in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: Multisite Qualitative Study
    Racine, Nicole
    Chow, Cheryl
    Hamwi, Lojain
    Bucsea, Oana
    Cheng, Carol
    Du, Hang
    Fabrizi, Lorenzo
    Jasim, Sara
    Johannsson, Lesley
    Jones, Laura
    Laudiano-Dray, Maria Pureza
    Meek, Judith
    Mistry, Neelum
    Shah, Vibhuti
    Stedman, Ian
    Wang, Xiaogang
    Riddell, Rebecca Pillai
    JMIR AI, 2024, 3
  • [6] Dying in intensive care: An analysis of the perspectives of families and clinicians on end-of-life care
    Lovell, Tania
    Mitchell, Marion
    Powell, Madeleine
    Tonge, Angela
    Strube, Petra
    O'Neill, Kylie
    Dunstan, Elspeth
    Bonnin-Trickett, Amity
    Miller, Elizabeth
    Suliman, Adam
    Ownsworth, Tamara
    Ranse, Kristen
    AUSTRALIAN CRITICAL CARE, 2023, 36 (04) : 595 - 603
  • [7] Digital Skills to Improve Levels of Care and Renew Health Care Professions
    De Martinis, Massimo
    Ginaldi, Lia
    JMIR MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2024, 10
  • [8] Geriatric intensive care patients. Perspectives and limits of geriatric intensive care medicine
    Mueller-Werdan, U.
    Heppner, H. -J.
    Michels, G.
    MEDIZINISCHE KLINIK-INTENSIVMEDIZIN UND NOTFALLMEDIZIN, 2018, 113 (04) : 256 - 259
  • [9] Health care providers' perceptions of family participation in essential care in the intensive care unit: A qualitative study
    Dijkstra, Boukje M.
    Schoonhoven, Lisette
    Felten-Barentsz, Karin M.
    van Der Valk, Margriet J. M.
    van Der Hoeven, Johannes G.
    Vloet, Lilian C. M.
    NURSING IN CRITICAL CARE, 2024,
  • [10] The evolving role of intensive care in health care and society
    Warrillow, Stephen
    Raper, Raymond
    MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 2019, 211 (07) : 294 - +