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New forms of expertise and their implications for the system of professions in healthcare: the case of the patient safety specialist role in the English NHS

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posted on 2025-10-27, 16:25 authored by GP Martin, R Pralat, J Waring, Mohammad Farhad PeerallyMohammad Farhad Peerally
Contemporary societal shifts are disrupting established professional divisions of labour in healthcare. Some have argued that professionalism itself is being transformed, with professions characterised less by claims to exclusive jurisdiction and more by connectivity and complementarity. This article puts these arguments to the test in a domain traditionally characterised as one of professional conflict: patient safety. Informed by the sociology of expertise, we consider the case of a new role—the patient safety specialist—constructed by some as a profession in the making. Drawing on three qualitative datasets comprising interview and focus group contributions from 71 participants, we find that patient safety specialists struggled to establish the legitimacy of their expertise in organisational environments that were often hostile. By forging alignments with the interests of clinical professionals, however, some advanced their roles in ways that served mutual interests, in line with recent theses on the changing nature of professionalism and the need for expertise that connects increasingly interdependent jurisdictions. The extent to which this advancement offered a solid and durable foundation for a claim to professional status, however, seemed more questionable.<p></p>

Funding

The patient safety specialist and patient safety partner programmes: a national evaluation

National Institute for Health Research

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History

Author affiliation

University of Leicester College of Life Sciences Medical Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Social Science and Medicine

Volume

385

Pagination

118562

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0277-9536

eissn

1873-5347

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-10-27

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

Deposited by

Mrs Lou Thompson

Deposit date

2025-10-13

Data Access Statement

The authors do not have permission to share data.

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