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Instrumentalisation of the health system: An examination of the impact on nursing practice and patient autonomy.

Molina-Mula JesúsElizabeth PeterJulia Gallo-EstradaCatalina Perelló-Campaner
Published in: Nursing inquiry (2017)
Most current management systems of healthcare institutions correspond to a model of market ethics with its demands of competitiveness. This approach has been called managerialism and is couched in terms of much-needed efficiencies and effective management of budgetary constraints. The aim of this study was to analyse the decision-making of nurses through the impact of health institution management models on clinical practice. Based on Foucault's ethical theory, a qualitative study was conducted through a discourse analysis of the nursing records in a hospital unit. The results revealed that the health institution standardises health care practice, which has an impact on professional and patient autonomy as it pertains to decision-making. The results of this research indicate that resistance strategies in the internal structures of health organisations can replace the normalisation and instrumentalisation of professional practice aimed at promoting patient self-determination.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • decision making
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  • mental health
  • clinical practice
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