Reconciling duty: a theory and typology of professionalism.

IF 2.5 Q2 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
Andrew Trathen, Sasha Scambler, Jennifer E Gallagher
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Professionalism is expected of health professionals and advocated by professional regulators in the United Kingdom (UK). Concepts of professionalism have evolved in sociological discourse and its meaning for dentistry is unclear. It is, none-the-less, considered a core domain of dental education and professional practice by the United Kingdom regulator, the General Dental Council. This paper reports the sense-making process, or social process, of professionalism in practice within England.

Aim: To explore the research question 'What does dental professionalism mean in practice?

Methods: Taking a constructivist grounded theory approach, involving purposive and theoretical sampling, 24 dental professionals were recruited to participate in this qualitative study. In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted by one interviewer (AT). Interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed leading to the development of a theory grounded in the data.

Results: A focus on the social-professional constructs used by participants to make sense of their experiences, resulted in a grounded theory where Reconciling Duty emerged as the core category. This represents a process of meeting professional duties to different parties that are often mutually exclusive. It is comprised of three supporting categories: Applying order to the system, where individuals attempt to identify what constitutes professional attitudes and behaviours, Rationalising what is fair, where individuals make judgements on how the conflict between duties should be resolved, and finally Responding to the System, where individuals attempt to actualise these desired resolutions in the context of the complex social system in which they practice. Three dentist archetypes (typologies) emerged, which involved a personal (Type 1), patient (Type 2), or a societal (Type 3) compromise.

Conclusion: Professionalism can be conceptualised as process of reconciling multiple, competing, legitimate duties to different parties, in seeking a fair solution. Once this has been identified, individuals need to work within the complex system of dentistry to make their identified outcome a reality. The findings suggest that using the theory of Reconciling Duty helps us to engage with the meaning that the participants drew from the term 'professionalism', and anchors it in the lived, everyday professional experiences and challenges faced. A novel typology is proposed, commensurate with calls for a systems approach to the topic.

Abstract Image

调和责任:专业主义的理论与类型。
背景:专业精神是对卫生专业人员的期望,也是英国专业监管机构所提倡的。专业主义的概念已经在社会学话语中发展,其对牙科的意义尚不清楚。尽管如此,它还是被英国监管机构牙科总委员会认为是牙科教育和专业实践的核心领域。本文报道了专业主义在英国实践中的意义形成过程或社会过程。目的:探讨“牙科专业精神在实践中的意义”这一研究问题。方法:采用建构主义扎根理论方法,采用目的性抽样和理论抽样的方法,对24名牙科专业人员进行定性研究。深度、半结构化访谈由一位采访者(AT)进行。采访被记录下来,逐字抄录,并进行分析,从而形成基于数据的理论。结果:对参与者用来理解他们的经历的社会专业结构的关注,产生了一个扎根的理论,其中调和责任成为核心类别。这代表了一个履行专业职责的过程,而这些职责往往是相互排斥的。它由三个支持类别组成:将秩序应用于系统,个人试图确定什么构成专业态度和行为;合理化什么是公平的,个人对如何解决职责之间的冲突做出判断;最后对系统做出反应,个人试图在他们实践的复杂社会系统中实现这些期望的解决方案。出现了三种牙医原型(类型学),涉及个人(类型1),患者(类型2)或社会(类型3)妥协。结论:职业化可以被定义为在寻求公平解决方案的过程中,协调对不同当事人的多种、相互竞争的、合法的责任。一旦确定了这一点,个人需要在复杂的牙科系统内工作,使他们确定的结果成为现实。研究结果表明,使用调和责任理论有助于我们理解参与者从“专业”一词中汲取的含义,并将其锚定在生活中,日常的专业经验和面临的挑战中。提出了一种新的类型学,与对该主题的系统方法的要求相称。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BDJ Open
BDJ Open Dentistry-Dentistry (all)
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
3.30%
发文量
34
审稿时长
30 weeks
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