Time to talk, time to see: changing microeconomies of professional practice among nurses and doctors in Australian general practice

2007 
In Australia, more nurses are entering general practice, and nurses– work is being funded in increasingly complex ways through Medicare. Little research has explored the ways doctors and nurses realign their priorities and activities when working together in general practice. We undertook rapid, intensive multimethod studies of 25 general practices to explore the ways in which the labour of nurses and doctors was structured, and the implicit decisions made by both professions about the values placed on different ways of working and on their time. Data collected included photographs, floor-plans, interviews with 37 nurses, 24 doctors and 22 practice managers, and 50 hours of structured observation.Nursing time was constructed by both nurses and doctors as being fluid and non-contingent; they were regarded as being ‘available’ to patients in a way that doctors were not. Compared to medical time, nursing time could be disposed more flexibly, underpinning a valorized attribute of nursing: deep clinical and pe...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    18
    References
    21
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []