NANCARROW, S. A. and BORTHWICK, A. M. (2005). Dynamic professional boundaries in the healthcare workforce. Sociology of health and illness, 27 (7), 897-919. [Article]
Abstract
The healthcare professions have never been static in terms of their
own disciplinary boundaries, nor in their role or status in society.
Healthcare provision has been defined by changing societal
expectations and beliefs, new ways of perceiving health and illness,
the introduction of a range of technologies and, more recently, the
formal recognition of particular groups through the introduction
of education and regulation. It has also been shaped by both interprofessional
and profession-state relationships forged over time.
A number of factors have converged that place new pressures on
workforce boundaries, including an unmet demand for some
healthcare services; neo-liberal management philosophies and a
greater emphasis on consumer preferences than professional-led
services. To date, however, there has been little analysis of the
evolution of the workforce as a whole. The discussion of workforce
change that has taken place has largely been from the perspective
of individual disciplines. Yet the dynamic boundaries of each
discipline mean that there is an interrelationship between the
components of the workforce that cannot be ignored. The purpose
of this paper is to describe four directions in which the existing
workforce can change: diversification; specialisation and vertical
and horizontal substitution, and to discuss the implications of
these changes for the workforce.
More Information
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
Actions (login required)
View Item |