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To be or not to be: The identity work of pharmacists as clinicians.

Imelda McDermottJayne AstburySally JacobsSarah WillisAli HindiElizabeth SestonEllen Schafheutle
Published in: Sociology of health & illness (2023)
This study explores how pharmacists legitimise the expansion of their clinical work and considers its impact on pharmacists' professional identity work. In the context of pharmacy in the English NHS, there has been an ongoing policy shift towards pharmacists moving away from 'medicines supply' to patient-facing, clinical work since the 1950s. Pharmacists are continuously engaging in 'identity work' and 'boundary work' to reflect the expansion of their work, which has led to the argument that pharmacists lack a clear professional identity. Drawing insights from linguistics and specifically Van Leeuwen's 'grammar of legitimation', this study explains how the Pharmacy Integration Fund, a nationally funded learning programme, provides the discursive strategies for pharmacists to legitimise their identity work as clinicians.
Keyphrases
  • general practice
  • palliative care
  • clinical trial
  • mental health
  • patient safety