John Wiley & Sons Understanding and Managing Uncertainty in Healthcare Cover Through one theoretical paper and empirical studies of contemporary examples of healthcare related u.. Product #: 978-1-119-76405-2 Regular price: $23.27 $23.27 Auf Lager

Understanding and Managing Uncertainty in Healthcare

Revisiting and Advancing Sociological Contributions

Mackintosh, Nicola / Armstrong, Natalie (Herausgeber)

Sociology of Health and Illness Monographs

Cover

1. Auflage Oktober 2020
168 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-119-76405-2
John Wiley & Sons

Kurzbeschreibung

Through one theoretical paper and empirical studies of contemporary examples of healthcare related uncertainties and their management, this collection discusses the different ways in which uncertainty may be articulated, enacted and experienced.
* Considers the role of 'implicit normativity' in masking and containing potential ethical uncertainty
* Presents core analytical strands: (1) conceptualising uncertainty; (2) intersections of uncertainty with aspects of care; (3) managing uncertainty; and (4) structural constraints, economic austerity and uncertainty work
* Reflects on the methodological and theoretical stances used to think sociologically about uncertainty in healthcare
* Considers the implications of the insights gained for 'synthesising certainty' in practice and for future research in this area

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Through one theoretical paper and empirical studies of contemporary examples of healthcare related uncertainties and their management, this collection discusses the different ways in which uncertainty may be articulated, enacted and experienced.
* Considers the role of 'implicit normativity' in masking and containing potential ethical uncertainty
* Presents core analytical strands: (1) conceptualising uncertainty; (2) intersections of uncertainty with aspects of care; (3) managing uncertainty; and (4) structural constraints, economic austerity and uncertainty work
* Reflects on the methodological and theoretical stances used to think sociologically about uncertainty in healthcare
* Considers the implications of the insights gained for 'synthesising certainty' in practice and for future research in this area

Notes on contributors
1. Understanding and managing uncertainty in healthcare: revisiting and advancing sociological contributions (Nicola Mackintosh and Natalie Armstrong)
2. Managing ethical uncertainty: implicit normativity and the sociology of ethics (Alan Cribb)
3. Diagnosing uncertainty, producing neonatal abstinence syndrome (Amy Chandler, Anne Whittaker, Sarah Cunningham-Burley, Lawrie Elliott, Paula Midgley and Sarah Cooper)
4. 'They don't know themselves, so how can they tell us?': parents navigating uncertainty at the frontiers of neonatal surgery (Lisa Hinton and Natalie Armstrong)
5. Expanding boundaries in psychiatry: uncertainty in the context of diagnosis-seeking and negotiation (Rhiannon Lane)
6. Uncertainty work as ontological negotiation: adjudicating access to therapy in clinical psychology (Martyn Pickersgill)
7. Constructing classifi cation boundaries in the memory clinic: negotiating risk and uncertainty in constituting mild cognitive impairment (Julia Swallow)
8. Overruling uncertainty about preventative medications: the social organisation of healthcare professionals' knowledge and practices (Caroline Cupit, Janet Rankin, Natalie Armstrong and Graham P. Martin)
9. Uncertainty and certain death: the role of clinical trials in terminal cancer care (Dagoberto Cortez and Michael Halpin)
10. Learning to manage uncertainty: supervision, trust and autonomy in residency training (Naike Bochatay and Nadia M. Bajwa)
Index
Nicola Mackintosh is an Associate Professor in Social Science applied to Health at the University of Leicester, UK. Her research interests include the construct of 'rescue' and provider response in managing acute illness, the role of new technologies in shaping patient-provider roles, and risk and uncertainty in pregnancy and childbirth.

Natalie Armstrong is Professor of Healthcare Improvement Research at the University of Leicester, UK. A medical sociologist, her work uses sociological ideas and methods to understand health and illness and to tackle problems in the delivery of high-quality healthcare. She has a particular interest in women's and children's health, and in preventative healthcare.

N. Armstrong, University of Leicester, UK