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The rhetoric of patient and family centred care: an institutional ethnography into what actually happens
Author(s) -
Rankin Janet M.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.12575
Subject(s) - ethnography , work (physics) , rhetoric , ideology , sociology , health care , nursing , public relations , qualitative research , psychology , medicine , political science , social science , politics , law , mechanical engineering , linguistics , philosophy , anthropology , engineering
Aims This paper uses Dorothy Smith's institutional ethnography to examine technological advances designed to improve nurses’ work. The analysis interrogates how nurses’ work is coordinated, in disquieting ways, in an apparent commitment to ‘patient and family centred care’. Background The discussion is part of a larger programme of research that focuses ethnographic attention on nurses’ activating technological managerial improvement strategies. Design This discussion paper describes suboptimal hospital experiences to show how they were organized. The institutional ethnographic analysis addresses discrepancies that arise between the different organizational standpoints. Overall the discussion focuses on how institutional ethnographers enquire into people's everyday activities to discover and make understandable, in the material world, what actually happens that shapes them. Data sources Data include observations and interviews with nurses, nurse managers, patients and families. It also includes screenshots of computer fields and other documents being used by nurses. Implications for nursing Nursing work is methodically being oriented to interests that undermine nurses’ capacity to contribute their knowledgeable activity to intervene in people's health and well‐being. Conclusion Nurses’ work is overwhelmed with the imperative to discharge patients. This happens with an ideological construction of patient centred care that obscures what is actually happening.