Practicings of person-centred care in physiotherapy

Louise Søgaard Hansen, Christina Cummins, Joanna Fadyl, Nicola Kayes, Gareth Terry

Research output: Contribution to conference without a publisher/journalAbstractResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Introduction: Our study examined how person-centred care is produced in physiotherapist-led rehabilitation practice—not as a practice of individual therapists according to predefined and standardized procedures—but as contextually, socially, and governmentally situated.
Study design: This secondary analysis drew data from three qualitative studies: conducted in Denmark1 and New Zealand2. We used post-structural- and Science and Technology Studies (STS)-inspired approaches to apply (a) the concept of ‘practisings’ and (b) the concept of ‘care’ to investigate how person-centredness was produced through interacting and co-constituent forces, and how ‘care’ emerged through these relations.
Results: Our analytic framing made visible a striving for care-through-government. For this presentation, we examine constructions of practice and patient potentials, and their intersections with discourses of person-centred practice, physiotherapist ‘identity’ framings, and the institutional logics that govern healthcare. Effects of these forces on possibilities for action produced situated enactments of ‘person-centred care’—within affordances and constraints.
Discussion: Studies examining health professional practices in relation to ‘care’ or person-centredness, particularly those that apply a critical lens, will often articulate conclusions that critique professionals for an apparent lack of adherence to agreed standards and best practices. However, when their subjectivity within governmental practices is folded into an analysis, it creates a different picture of possible action. While power relations are present, they are dynamic and complex. Because of this, we need to examine the subject positions and resulting actions that are made possible at the intersection of health professions, institutions, and governmental systems. If we continually identify both the productive and the exclusionary effects of these constructs, we can see and discuss what is going on and consider mechanisms and directions of change.
Keywords: person-centred care; physiotherapy; poststructuralism; science and technology studies
Original languageEnglish
Publication date14 Feb 2024
Publication statusPublished - 14 Feb 2024
Externally publishedYes
Event8th international In Sickness & In Health Conference
: Diagnosis • destruction • voice • assemblage
- Auckland, New Zealand
Duration: 13 Feb 202415 Feb 2024
Conference number: 8

Conference

Conference8th international In Sickness & In Health Conference
Number8
Country/TerritoryNew Zealand
CityAuckland
Period13/02/2415/02/24
OtherThe themes for ISIH 2024 are diagnosis • destruction • voice • assemblage.<br/><br/>Firstly, these reflect the four main research interests of our keynote speakers. But they also represent four powerful motifs of contemporary healthcare.<br/><br/>They s...

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