The distribution of work, knowledge, and responsibilities between doctors and nurses is a longstanding object of interest for medical sociologists. Whereas the strategies through which nurses and doctors construct their professional boundary have been thoroughly examined, little is known about why the regulation of the medical-nursing boundary varies across care settings. In the article, I argue that this gap in knowledge can be attributed to insufficient examination of the 'negotiation context', namely the features of the social and organisational environment that directly affect doctor-nurse boundary negotiations. Adopting a negotiated order perspective, and drawing data from a hospital ethnography, the article describes the different way...
This paper examines how managers struggled to implement the mandated separation of a unit from its p...
Recent research suggests that the notion of boundary work can improve our understanding of interprof...
From boundary object to boundary subject; the role of 1 the patient in coordination across complex s...
In a recent paper in Sociology of Health and Illness, Svensson (1996) makes the case for adopting th...
This article contributes to our understanding of how boundary work is practiced in healthcare settin...
The care of patients with many illnesses often appears fragmented by many boundaries in the health c...
The professional boundaries between medical practitioners and midwives have traditionally been chara...
Abstract Prior research on professional boundary work emphasises the importance of subtle interacti...
Noncommunicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, are the leading cause of death globally. This pap...
Delivery of interdisciplinary integrated care is central to contemporary health policy. Hospitals wo...
This article examines how nurse managers attempted to accomplish the formal boundaries of clinical n...
Much of the literature claims that professional identities are largely crystalised, bounded, static ...
This thesis is about how health professionals at hospitals collaborate across professional boundarie...
Introduction: Nursing care takes place within nurse–patient relationships that can be demanding. In ...
A case study of twenty-nine midwives and nine obstetricians working in a regional, public sector Aus...
This paper examines how managers struggled to implement the mandated separation of a unit from its p...
Recent research suggests that the notion of boundary work can improve our understanding of interprof...
From boundary object to boundary subject; the role of 1 the patient in coordination across complex s...
In a recent paper in Sociology of Health and Illness, Svensson (1996) makes the case for adopting th...
This article contributes to our understanding of how boundary work is practiced in healthcare settin...
The care of patients with many illnesses often appears fragmented by many boundaries in the health c...
The professional boundaries between medical practitioners and midwives have traditionally been chara...
Abstract Prior research on professional boundary work emphasises the importance of subtle interacti...
Noncommunicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, are the leading cause of death globally. This pap...
Delivery of interdisciplinary integrated care is central to contemporary health policy. Hospitals wo...
This article examines how nurse managers attempted to accomplish the formal boundaries of clinical n...
Much of the literature claims that professional identities are largely crystalised, bounded, static ...
This thesis is about how health professionals at hospitals collaborate across professional boundarie...
Introduction: Nursing care takes place within nurse–patient relationships that can be demanding. In ...
A case study of twenty-nine midwives and nine obstetricians working in a regional, public sector Aus...
This paper examines how managers struggled to implement the mandated separation of a unit from its p...
Recent research suggests that the notion of boundary work can improve our understanding of interprof...
From boundary object to boundary subject; the role of 1 the patient in coordination across complex s...