TY - JOUR
T1 - It's all about presence
T2 - Health professionals' experience of interprofessional collaboration when mobilizing patients with hip fractures
AU - Assafi, Lone
AU - Evaristi, Dorte
AU - Trevino, Cathrine Selnes
AU - Larsen, TrineSchifter
PY - 2021/10/26
Y1 - 2021/10/26
N2 - Mobilization is an interprofessional task in the evidence-based care pathway 'Enhanced Recovery After Surgery'; multiple health professionals collaborate when mobilizing patients with hip fractures. Drawing on the theory of relational coordination, and focusing on relationships and communication, we set out to explore how health professionals experience and describe interprofessional collaboration when mobilizing patients with hip fractures treated according to Enhanced Recovery After Surgery. Two rounds of interviews were conducted with 27 participants from 11 different professional groups, and the data were analyzed thematically. The main findings were that functional goals characterize the collaboration on mobilization due to undefined roles and responsibilities, and that specialized knowledge leads to a need for physical presence and formalization of work procedures in the collaboration. We argue that the hospital as a workplace can be characterized by logics of production and belonging. These logics create care work managed by quality, efficacy and scales of fairness that install power relations that must be recognized when engaging in interprofessional collaboration. We conclude that a primary focus on relationships and communication, as suggested by relational coordination, cannot solve the challenges of interprofessional collaboration, as the context in which health professionals work must also be considered.
AB - Mobilization is an interprofessional task in the evidence-based care pathway 'Enhanced Recovery After Surgery'; multiple health professionals collaborate when mobilizing patients with hip fractures. Drawing on the theory of relational coordination, and focusing on relationships and communication, we set out to explore how health professionals experience and describe interprofessional collaboration when mobilizing patients with hip fractures treated according to Enhanced Recovery After Surgery. Two rounds of interviews were conducted with 27 participants from 11 different professional groups, and the data were analyzed thematically. The main findings were that functional goals characterize the collaboration on mobilization due to undefined roles and responsibilities, and that specialized knowledge leads to a need for physical presence and formalization of work procedures in the collaboration. We argue that the hospital as a workplace can be characterized by logics of production and belonging. These logics create care work managed by quality, efficacy and scales of fairness that install power relations that must be recognized when engaging in interprofessional collaboration. We conclude that a primary focus on relationships and communication, as suggested by relational coordination, cannot solve the challenges of interprofessional collaboration, as the context in which health professionals work must also be considered.
KW - Enhanced recovery after surgery
KW - fairness
KW - interprofessional collaboration
KW - logics of care production
KW - qualitative method
KW - relational coordination
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118295870&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13561820.2021.1956444
DO - 10.1080/13561820.2021.1956444
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 34702114
SN - 1356-1820
VL - 36
SP - 483
EP - 491
JO - Journal of Interprofessional Care
JF - Journal of Interprofessional Care
IS - 4
M1 - 1956444
ER -