TY - CHAP
T1 - Homologies between sets of healthcare professionals’ collaborative working practices in hospitals
AU - Hindhede, Anette Lykke
AU - Andersen, Vibeke Harms
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Over the past few decades, health policymakers around the globe have highlighted the decisive role of interprofessional collaboration in improving healthcare systems and outcomes. This is said to have resulted in changes in public hospital healthcare practice and in an increasing demand from hospital management for adaptive and collaborative capacity that highlights the need to rethink the way these institutions are organised and led. However, managerial striving towards a reorientation of professional workflows may challenge legitimate work practices with their highly specialised actors in these physical spaces. In this chapter, we discuss the homologies of social space by considering potential affinities between three differently positioned hospitals in Denmark. We do this by focusing on position-takings towards professional collaboration, drawing on interviews with chief physicians and chief nurses. Our findings demonstrate that the new, collaborative norm for care delivery both reproduces and is dissident in regard to existing hierarchies dependent on the relative prestige of the involved hospitals, their specialties, and the interpersonal relationships between the involved healthcare professionals. In some cases, these relationships transform the effect of objective relationships
AB - Over the past few decades, health policymakers around the globe have highlighted the decisive role of interprofessional collaboration in improving healthcare systems and outcomes. This is said to have resulted in changes in public hospital healthcare practice and in an increasing demand from hospital management for adaptive and collaborative capacity that highlights the need to rethink the way these institutions are organised and led. However, managerial striving towards a reorientation of professional workflows may challenge legitimate work practices with their highly specialised actors in these physical spaces. In this chapter, we discuss the homologies of social space by considering potential affinities between three differently positioned hospitals in Denmark. We do this by focusing on position-takings towards professional collaboration, drawing on interviews with chief physicians and chief nurses. Our findings demonstrate that the new, collaborative norm for care delivery both reproduces and is dissident in regard to existing hierarchies dependent on the relative prestige of the involved hospitals, their specialties, and the interpersonal relationships between the involved healthcare professionals. In some cases, these relationships transform the effect of objective relationships
U2 - 10.4324/9781003022510-13
DO - 10.4324/9781003022510-13
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 978- 0- 367- 89335- 4
SN - 978- 1- 032- 10750- 9
T3 - Routledge Studies in Management, Organizations and Society
SP - 176
EP - 194
BT - Pierre Bourdieu in Studies of Organization and Management
A2 - Robinson, Sarah
A2 - Ernst, Jette
A2 - Larsen, Kristian
A2 - Thomassen, Ole Jacob
PB - Routledge
CY - New York, N.Y.
ER -