Interfacing legitimacy - health and social care integration in Scotland

被引:0
|
作者
Mulherin, Tamara [1 ]
机构
[1] Northumbria Univ, Newcastle Business Sch, Ellison Pl, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 8ST, England
关键词
Healthcare; social-care; integration; documents; sociomateriality; Scotland; DOCUMENTS; POLICY; POLITICS; UK; ETHNOGRAPHY; BOUNDARY; HALF;
D O I
10.1080/13648470.2024.2372164
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
As people, particularly those ageing and living with disabilities, struggle with how care is enacted, integrated care has gained policy purchase in the United Kingdom. Despite integration's apparent popularity, its contribution to improved care for people has been questioned, exposing uncertainties about its associated benefits. Nonetheless, over decades a remarkably consistent approach to integrated care has advanced partnerships between the NHS and local government. Accordingly, in 2014 the Scottish Government mandated Health and Social Care Integration (HSCI) via the Scottish Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act. Emerging from an interorganisational ethnography of the implementation of a Health and Social Care Partnership in 2016, in a place I call 'Kintra', I interrogated what happened when NHS Kintra and Kintra Council endeavoured to implement HSCI according to the precepts of 'the Act'. Immersed in the everyday arrangements in the spaces of governance, I attended to how these policy actors worked to both (re)configure and held things together behind care frontiers, and away from the bodywork of direct care. I charted their efforts to comply with regulations, plan, and build governance apparatuses through documents. In following documents, I show the ways in which HSCI was materialised through documentation. I reveal how, in the mundane mattering of document manufacturing, possibilities for (re)forming the carescape emerged. I deploy a posthuman practice stance to show not only the way in which 'papery' partnerships between the NHS and local government 'enact' care, but also how they make worlds through a sociomaterial politics of anticipation.
引用
收藏
页码:69 / 88
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Interprofessional collaboration and integration as experienced by social workers in health care
    Glaser, Brooklyn
    Suter, Esther
    SOCIAL WORK IN HEALTH CARE, 2016, 55 (05) : 395 - 408
  • [42] Interdisciplinary education and research as a basis for the integration of social and health care
    Tuominen, Miia
    Lehtonen, Jussi
    Korja, Riikka
    Suominen, Sakari
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE, 2019, 19
  • [43] The efficiency of health an social care service integration and the importance of the caregivers
    Figa, Josep
    Miras, Alba
    Raset, Marta
    Vazquez, Montserrat
    Castillo, Caridad
    Caparros, Gemma
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE, 2015, 15
  • [44] A system approach to health and social care integration: a theoretical proposal
    Alvarez-Rosete, Arturo
    Molina, Emilio Herrera
    Librada-Flores, Silvia
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE, 2014, 14
  • [45] Care Provision, Empowerment, and Market Forces: The Art of Establishing Legitimacy for Work Integration Social Enterprises (WISEs)
    Kuosmanen, Jari
    VOLUNTAS, 2014, 25 (01): : 248 - 269
  • [46] Care Provision, Empowerment, and Market Forces: The Art of Establishing Legitimacy for Work Integration Social Enterprises (WISEs)
    Jari Kuosmanen
    VOLUNTAS: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations, 2014, 25 : 248 - 269
  • [47] Health department chooses 14 projects as exemplars of integration of health and social care
    Hawkes, Nigel
    BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2013, 347
  • [48] Social assistance in palliative care: constructing legitimacy
    Soudant-Roquette, Annick
    MEDECINE PALLIATIVE, 2006, 5 (03): : 162 - 165
  • [49] What a journey! - A short history of the Finnish health care and social service reform and administrative integration of health care and social services
    Tynkkynen, Liina-Kaisa
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2023, 33
  • [50] A task-shifting mental health program: integration of primary health care and social care on depression
    Pham, O. T.
    Nguyen, C. T.
    Vu, N. C.
    Pham, D.
    Tran, L. T.
    Nguyen, T. H.
    To, D.
    Nguyen, H. V.
    Goldner, E. M.
    Murphy, J.
    Nguyen, C. K.
    TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 2017, 22 : 285 - 285