L’outil d’évaluation multi-clientèle comme mécanisme de contrôle des soins à domicile : une analyse poststructuraliste
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUNDIn Quebec (Canada), the Multi-clientele Assessment Tool (Outil d'évaluation multi-clientèle, OEMC) profoundly transformed the practice of home care professionals (HCP), including nurses. Since 2015, all home care patients with a completed OEMC have been counted to ass...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Recherche en soins infirmiers 2021-01, Vol.146 (3), p.7-18 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | fre |
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Zusammenfassung: | INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUNDIn Quebec (Canada), the Multi-clientele Assessment Tool (Outil d'évaluation multi-clientèle, OEMC) profoundly transformed the practice of home care professionals (HCP), including nurses. Since 2015, all home care patients with a completed OEMC have been counted to assess the performance of services. If performance targets are not reached, funding renewal is threatened, exerting pressure on HCPs. OBJECTIVEThe objective of this article is to review the OEMC's implementation in order to understand its political nature and its impacts on the practice of HCPs and patients' lives. MATERIAL AND METHODDrawing on the works of Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, we propose a poststructuralist analysis of OEMC documents. RESULTSShifting from disciplinary societies to societies of control, the OEMC insidiously contributes to the regulation of home care services as well as patients' lives. The will of HCPs to apply their field of expertise is in opposition with the OEMC's purposes. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONTo not complete the OEMC when it is deemed unnecessary would require a negotiation by HCPs. However, HCPs' autonomy is compromised by discourses repressing all forms of resistance. |
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ISSN: | 0297-2964 |
DOI: | 10.3917/rsi.146.0007 |