Narratives and gatekeeping: making sense of triage nurses’ practice

It is well documented that emergency service staff consider some patients to be ‘inappropriate attenders’. A central example is ‘trivia’, denoting patients with medical problems considered too ‘trivial’ to warrant attention. Although research has repeatedly shown that frontline staff violate guideli...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sociology of health & illness 2018-06, Vol.40 (5), p.892-906
1. Verfasser: Johannessen, Lars E.F.
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description It is well documented that emergency service staff consider some patients to be ‘inappropriate attenders’. A central example is ‘trivia’, denoting patients with medical problems considered too ‘trivial’ to warrant attention. Although research has repeatedly shown that frontline staff violate guidelines in turning away ‘trivial’ patients, existing research has paid insufficient attention to why staff are willing to engage in guideline‐violating gatekeeping, which may put both themselves and ‘trivial’ patients at risk. To address this issue, the present article explores nurses’ narratives about ‘trivial’ patients – referred to in this context as ‘GP patients’ – drawing on fieldwork data from a Norwegian emergency service. The article reconstructs three narrative clusters, showing that nurses’ gatekeeping is motivated by concerns for the patient being turned away, for nurses and more critically ill patients, and for the service they work for. Some of the issues embedded in these narratives have been under‐analysed in previous research – most importantly, the role of identity and emotion in nurses’ gatekeeping, and how patient narratives can function as ‘social prognoses’ in nurses’ assessments. Analysis of these narratives also reveals an antagonistic relationship between nurses and ‘trivial’ patients that contradicts nurses’ ethical guidelines and indicates a need for healthcare reform.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Access via Wiley Online Library; Wiley Online Library (Open Access Collection)
subjects Attention
Family physicians
gatekeeping
guidelines
Health care
Health services
inappropriate attenders
Inappropriateness
Medicine
Narratives
Nurses
Patients
rationing
Reforms
Roles
Social function
Triage
title Narratives and gatekeeping: making sense of triage nurses’ practice
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