2019
DOI: 10.1177/0022146518825379
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Agency and Change in Healthcare Organizations: Workers’ Attempts to Navigate Multiple Logics in Hospice Care

Abstract: There is no doubt that the organization of healthcare is currently shifting, partly in response to changing macrolevel policies. Studies of healthcare policies often do not consider healthcare workers' experiences of policy change, thus limiting our understanding of when and how policies work. This article uses longitudinal qualitative data, including participant observation and semistructured interviews with workers within hospice care as their organizations shifted in response to a Medicare policy change. Pr… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(90 reference statements)
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“…These members of the patient care team bring their own moral, ethical, and legal concerns and cultural perspectives to dementia care, including to proposals that would result in significantly different care plans for some patients with advanced dementia. Research reflecting the perspectives of aides on any topic is extremely limited 26 . In this situation, as in others, the perspectives of professionals with greater power and more limited patient‐care roles should not be substituted for the perspectives of those with day‐to‐day responsibility for patient care.…”
Section: Stopping Eating and Drinking By Advance Directivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These members of the patient care team bring their own moral, ethical, and legal concerns and cultural perspectives to dementia care, including to proposals that would result in significantly different care plans for some patients with advanced dementia. Research reflecting the perspectives of aides on any topic is extremely limited 26 . In this situation, as in others, the perspectives of professionals with greater power and more limited patient‐care roles should not be substituted for the perspectives of those with day‐to‐day responsibility for patient care.…”
Section: Stopping Eating and Drinking By Advance Directivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet in hospice and other areas of health care ranging from intensive care units and other medical wards to nursing homes to community practice, the cultural narrative of the six‐month rule has become institutionalized as a heuristic—a problem‐solving tool—for marking the period when the end of life starts. Once an idea becomes institutionalized in thinking and practice, thinking outside that idea can feel risky, while staying inside that idea feels normal 5 …”
Section: Essaysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once an idea becomes institutionalized in thinking and practice, thinking outside that idea can feel risky, while staying inside that idea feels normal. 5 Too Soon or Too Late? Q uestions about if, how, and whether dementia fits into end-of-life choices and provisions in the United States frequently bump up against the six-month rule as an embedded cultural narrative about how to tell when a person is "really" nearing the end of life.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An example is the care institutional logic which follows a worker's professional values and beliefs. This form of logic may push RAC workers to consider residents' health and safety before their own (50). As competing institutional logics rely upon differing interpretations of reality, their existence may exacerbate solving complex OHS problems (49).…”
Section: Ohs Professionals and Institutional Logicsmentioning
confidence: 99%