University of Leicester
Browse
- No file added yet -

Patients as team members: opportunities, challenges and paradoxes of including patients in multi-professional healthcare teams

Download (274.85 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-18, 15:44 authored by Graham P. Martin, Rachael Finn
Current healthcare policy emphasises the need for more collaborative, team-based approaches to providing care, and for a greater voice for service users in the management and delivery of care. Increasingly, policy encourages ‘partnerships’ between users and professionals so that users, too, effectively become team members. In examining this phenomenon, this paper draws on insights from the organisational-sociological literature on team work, which highlights the challenges of bringing together diverse professional groups, but which has not, to date, been applied in contexts where users, too, are included in teams. Using data from a qualitative study of five pilot cancer-genetics projects, in which service users were included in teams responsible for managing and developing new services, it highlights the difficulties involved in making teams of such heterogeneous members—and the paradoxes that arise when this task is achieved. It reveals how the tension between integration and specialisation of team members, highlighted in the literature on teams in general, is especially acute for service users, the distinctiveness of whose contribution is more fragile, and open to blurring.

History

Citation

Sociology of Health and Illness, 2011, 33 (7), pp. 1050-1065

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Sociology of Health and Illness

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

issn

0141-9889

eissn

1467-9566

Copyright date

2011

Available date

2012-06-10

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-9566.2011.01356.x/abstract

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC