Abstract
Social, educational and health related equality is an ideal in the Nordic welfare states. However studies have shown that well-positioned patients achieve better treatment and more services, for example time and examinations, than others do. This article examines how patients and relatives mobilise resources in decision-making in a stroke unit. In particular, it focuses on the challenges in optimising the rehabilitation process faced by patients and relatives, and the strategies they use. Data were generated using participant observation and semi-structured interviews. Qualitative content analysis was applied to investigate the patients’ and relatives’ experiences of decision-making. We present a field-specific form of capital: An individual or a family’s resources that are valued in the field of rehabilitation as physical, behavioural and cognitively embedded attitudes and practices. Rehabilitation capital consists of four closely interrelated components: Performative Participation (Cognitively Embedded Performance and Self-initiating Activities), Bodily Progression, Institutional Acceptance and Institutional Potential. It is a resource potentially benefitting patients and relatives during inpatient rehabilitation. Deploying field-specific capital can facilitate better attention from healthcare professionals, thus potentially mitigating inequality.
| Bidragets oversatte titel | Rehabiliterings kapital: En felt-specifik kapital form |
|---|---|
| Originalsprog | Engelsk |
| Tidsskrift | Health Sociology Review |
| Vol/bind | 27 |
| Udgave nummer | 2 |
| Sider (fra-til) | 199-213 |
| ISSN | 1446-1242 |
| DOI | |
| Status | Udgivet - 2018 |
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