McDonald Ruth, Rogers Anne, Macdonald Wendy
National Primary Care Research and Development Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
J Health Organ Manag. 2008;22(3):294-308. doi: 10.1108/14777260810883558.
This paper aims to explore the ways in which practice nurses engage in identity work in the context of chronic disease management in primary care and assess the extent to which this is compatible with the identities promoted in government policy.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The paper draws on qualitative interviews with nurses applying the concepts of "identity threat" and Hegel's Master-Slave dialectic to explore the implications of nurse-patient interdependence for identity in a policy context which aims to promote self-management and patient empowerment.
The nurses in the study showed little sign of adapting their identities in line with government policies intended to empower health care "consumers". Instead, various aspects of identity work were identified which can be seen as helping to defend against identity threat and maintain and reproduce the traditional order.
The paper provides information on barriers to self-management that are likely to inhibit the implementation of government policy.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE: Whilst much has been written on the extent to which patients are dependent on health professionals, the issue of professional dependence on patients has received much less attention. The paper hightlights how viewing the nurse-patient relationship in the context of a struggle for mastery related to identity represents a departure from traditional approaches and sheds light on hitherto unexplored barriers to self-management.
本文旨在探讨执业护士在初级保健慢性病管理背景下进行身份认同工作的方式,并评估其与政府政策所倡导的身份认同的契合程度。
设计/方法/途径:本文借鉴了对护士的定性访谈,运用“身份威胁”概念和黑格尔的主奴辩证法,在旨在促进自我管理和患者赋权的政策背景下,探讨护患相互依存对身份认同的影响。
研究中的护士几乎没有迹象表明会根据旨在赋予医疗“消费者”权力的政府政策来调整自己的身份认同。相反,研究确定了身份认同工作的各个方面,这些方面可被视为有助于抵御身份威胁、维护和重现传统秩序。
本文提供了有关可能阻碍政府政策实施的自我管理障碍的信息。
原创性/价值:虽然关于患者在多大程度上依赖医疗专业人员已有很多论述,但专业人员对患者的依赖问题却很少受到关注。本文强调,在与身份认同相关的主导权争夺背景下看待护患关系,代表了对传统方法的背离,并揭示了迄今为止未被探索的自我管理障碍。