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Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing

Over the past decades, professional boundaries in health care have come under pressure, and the expansion of prescriptive authority to include nurses touches on issues of professional domains and interprofessional competition. Knowledge claims play an important role in achieving jurisdictional contr...

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Autores principales: Kroezen, Marieke, van Dijk, Liset, Groenewegen, Peter P., Francke, Anneke L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3790745/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24124613
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077279
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author Kroezen, Marieke
van Dijk, Liset
Groenewegen, Peter P.
Francke, Anneke L.
author_facet Kroezen, Marieke
van Dijk, Liset
Groenewegen, Peter P.
Francke, Anneke L.
author_sort Kroezen, Marieke
collection PubMed
description Over the past decades, professional boundaries in health care have come under pressure, and the expansion of prescriptive authority to include nurses touches on issues of professional domains and interprofessional competition. Knowledge claims play an important role in achieving jurisdictional control. Knowledge can take on multiple forms, ranging from indeterminate to technical (I/T ratio) and from everyday to exclusive knowledge. To investigate the interrelatedness of jurisdiction, knowledge claims and professional status, we examine which knowledge claims were made by the medical and nursing professions in the Netherlands to secure or obtain, respectively, jurisdictional control over prescribing, and which form this knowledge took. The study is based on thirteen semi-structured stakeholder interviews and an extensive document analysis. We found that the nursing profession in its knowledge claims strongly emphasized the technicality and everyday knowledge character of the prescribing task, by asserting that nurses were already prescribing medicines, albeit on an illegal basis. Their second claim focused on the indeterminate knowledge skills of nurses and stated that nurse prescribing would do justice to nurses’ skills and expertise. This is a strong claim in a quest for (higher) professional status. Results showed that the medical profession initially proclaimed that prescribing should be reserved for doctors as it is a task requiring medical knowledge, i.e. indeterminate knowledge. Gradually, however, the medical profession adjusted its claims and tried to reduce nurse prescribing to a task almost exclusively based on technicality knowledge, among others by stating that nurses could prescribe in routine cases, which would generate little professional status. By investigating the form that professional knowledge claims took, this study was able to show the interconnectedness of jurisdictional control, knowledge claims and professional status. Knowledge claims are not mere rhetoric, but actively influence the everyday realities of professional status, interprofessional competition and jurisdictional division between professions.
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spelling pubmed-37907452013-10-11 Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing Kroezen, Marieke van Dijk, Liset Groenewegen, Peter P. Francke, Anneke L. PLoS One Research Article Over the past decades, professional boundaries in health care have come under pressure, and the expansion of prescriptive authority to include nurses touches on issues of professional domains and interprofessional competition. Knowledge claims play an important role in achieving jurisdictional control. Knowledge can take on multiple forms, ranging from indeterminate to technical (I/T ratio) and from everyday to exclusive knowledge. To investigate the interrelatedness of jurisdiction, knowledge claims and professional status, we examine which knowledge claims were made by the medical and nursing professions in the Netherlands to secure or obtain, respectively, jurisdictional control over prescribing, and which form this knowledge took. The study is based on thirteen semi-structured stakeholder interviews and an extensive document analysis. We found that the nursing profession in its knowledge claims strongly emphasized the technicality and everyday knowledge character of the prescribing task, by asserting that nurses were already prescribing medicines, albeit on an illegal basis. Their second claim focused on the indeterminate knowledge skills of nurses and stated that nurse prescribing would do justice to nurses’ skills and expertise. This is a strong claim in a quest for (higher) professional status. Results showed that the medical profession initially proclaimed that prescribing should be reserved for doctors as it is a task requiring medical knowledge, i.e. indeterminate knowledge. Gradually, however, the medical profession adjusted its claims and tried to reduce nurse prescribing to a task almost exclusively based on technicality knowledge, among others by stating that nurses could prescribe in routine cases, which would generate little professional status. By investigating the form that professional knowledge claims took, this study was able to show the interconnectedness of jurisdictional control, knowledge claims and professional status. Knowledge claims are not mere rhetoric, but actively influence the everyday realities of professional status, interprofessional competition and jurisdictional division between professions. Public Library of Science 2013-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3790745/ /pubmed/24124613 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077279 Text en © 2013 Kroezen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kroezen, Marieke
van Dijk, Liset
Groenewegen, Peter P.
Francke, Anneke L.
Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing
title Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing
title_full Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing
title_fullStr Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing
title_short Knowledge Claims, Jurisdictional Control and Professional Status: The Case of Nurse Prescribing
title_sort knowledge claims, jurisdictional control and professional status: the case of nurse prescribing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3790745/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24124613
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077279
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