Exploring the interplay of discourses, jurisdictions and restratification in medicine and the implications for intraprofessional collaboration

This study builds on calls to explore the tensions and dynamics of intraprofessional collaboration and boundary work. It reaches beyond the literature describing the micro-level strategies deployed by physician subgroups to establish legitimacy and defend jurisdictions in the face of health care re-...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSSM. Qualitative research in health Vol. 5; p. 100411
Main Authors Wong, René, Whitehead, Cynthia R., Kitto, Simon
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2024
Elsevier
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Summary:This study builds on calls to explore the tensions and dynamics of intraprofessional collaboration and boundary work. It reaches beyond the literature describing the micro-level strategies deployed by physician subgroups to establish legitimacy and defend jurisdictions in the face of health care re-organization. Specifically, it offers a view of how macrosocial imperatives shape intraprofessional boundaries, relations, and the possibilities for collaboration. Drawing on empirical data from a case study of intraprofessional collaboration in caring for patients with diabetes - a clinical context in which patients commonly receive care from family physicians (FPs) and specialist physicians (SPs) – Foucault's concept of governmentality and the sociology of the professions are employed to make visible the sociohistorical construction of intraprofessional collaboration within discourses of evidence-based medicine, and its implications for the [re-]negotiation of professional jurisdictions and restratification of the medical profession. This analysis contributes to the intraprofessional literature through two analytical moves. First, it outlines the discursive mechanisms through which the meso-level deployment of the referral-consultation process provides an arena for SPs to maintain and reinforce their position of influence at both the micro-level of daily clinical work and across broader health care delivery. Second, it provides an understanding of how the transmission of governmental rationality in diabetes occurs through the social relations between SPs and FPs, making the restratification of medicine possible without tension or conflict. •Discourses of evidence-based medicine shape boundaries between specialist and family physicians.•The consultation and referral process enables specialists to maintain influence.•Family physicians accept a lower status to make intraprofessional collaboration possible.•Professional restratification in medicine can be enacted without conflict.
ISSN:2667-3215
2667-3215
DOI:10.1016/j.ssmqr.2024.100411