The micro-politics of caring: Tinkering with person-centered rehabilitation

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Date
2019-04-12
Open Access Location
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Publisher
Taylor and Francis Group
Rights
(c) The author/s
CC BY-NC-ND
Abstract
Purpose: In this paper, we critically investigate the implementation of person-centered care with the purpose of advancing philosophical debates regarding the overarching aims and delivery of rehabilitation. While general agreement exists regarding person centered care’s core principles, how practitioners reconcile the implementation of these principles with competing practice demands remains an open question. Materials and methods: For the paper, we drew on post-qualitative methods to engage in a process of “diffractive” analysis wherein we analyzed the micro-doings of person-centered care in everyday rehabilitation work. Working from our team members’ diverse experiences, traditions, and epistemological commitments, we engaged with data from nine “care events” generated in previous research to interrogate the multiple forces that co-produce care practices. Results: We map our analyses under three categories: scripts mediate practice, securing compliance through “benevolent manipulations”, and care(ful) tinkering. In the latter, we explore the notion of tinkering as a useful concept for approaching person centered care. Uncertainty, humility, and doubt in one’s expertise are inherent to tinkering, which involves a continual questioning of what to do, what is best, and what is person centered care within each moment of care. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications for rehabilitation and person-centered care.
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Keywords
Professional–patient relations, ethics, postmodernism, critical thinking, qualitative research
Citation
Gibson BE, Terry G, Setchell J, Bright FAS, Cummins C, Kayes NM. (2019). The micro-politics of caring: Tinkering with person-centered rehabilitation. Disability and Rehabilitation. 42. 11. (pp. 1529-1538).
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