The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital

This thesis explores reactions to changing occupational roles and identities precipitated by a Business Process Re-engineering management change programme within a National Health Service setting. The thesis offers further understanding of the changing nature of professional roles and occupational i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yvonne Leverment
Format: Default Thesis
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/6774
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id rr-article-9496664
record_format Figshare
spelling rr-article-94966642002-01-01T00:00:00Z The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital Yvonne Leverment (7197077) Other commerce, management, tourism and services not elsewhere classified National Health Service Occupational identity Role of practice Scope of practice Health services Community care services Medical care profession Business and Management not elsewhere classified This thesis explores reactions to changing occupational roles and identities precipitated by a Business Process Re-engineering management change programme within a National Health Service setting. The thesis offers further understanding of the changing nature of professional roles and occupational identities within health care. Taking a qualitative approach, through the use of interviews and focus groups, the empirical core of the PhD examines professional employees' responses to changes in their own working practices. The main thrust of the argument is that work reorganisation that changes the role and scope of practice impacts on occupational identities. The empirical work demonstrates how the effects of change in working practice create a situation whereby there are clearly defined winners and losers within and between professions. This thesis links such a recognition with the multiplicity of interests and the complexities of professional occupational identities within health care. An added dimension is the extent to which disciplinary knowledge creates these professional roles and occupational identities. If health care professionalism is to be redefined there is a requirement for an agenda which addresses the issue of how knowledge and expertise are acquired. 2002-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Thesis 2134/6774 https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/The_implications_for_professional_roles_and_occupational_identities_of_an_organisational_change_process_in_an_NHS_trust_hospital/9496664 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
institution Loughborough University
collection Figshare
topic Other commerce, management, tourism and services not elsewhere classified
National Health Service
Occupational identity
Role of practice
Scope of practice
Health services
Community care services
Medical care profession
Business and Management not elsewhere classified
spellingShingle Other commerce, management, tourism and services not elsewhere classified
National Health Service
Occupational identity
Role of practice
Scope of practice
Health services
Community care services
Medical care profession
Business and Management not elsewhere classified
Yvonne Leverment
The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital
description This thesis explores reactions to changing occupational roles and identities precipitated by a Business Process Re-engineering management change programme within a National Health Service setting. The thesis offers further understanding of the changing nature of professional roles and occupational identities within health care. Taking a qualitative approach, through the use of interviews and focus groups, the empirical core of the PhD examines professional employees' responses to changes in their own working practices. The main thrust of the argument is that work reorganisation that changes the role and scope of practice impacts on occupational identities. The empirical work demonstrates how the effects of change in working practice create a situation whereby there are clearly defined winners and losers within and between professions. This thesis links such a recognition with the multiplicity of interests and the complexities of professional occupational identities within health care. An added dimension is the extent to which disciplinary knowledge creates these professional roles and occupational identities. If health care professionalism is to be redefined there is a requirement for an agenda which addresses the issue of how knowledge and expertise are acquired.
format Default
Thesis
author Yvonne Leverment
author_facet Yvonne Leverment
author_sort Yvonne Leverment (7197077)
title The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital
title_short The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital
title_full The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital
title_fullStr The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital
title_full_unstemmed The implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an NHS trust hospital
title_sort implications for professional roles and occupational identities of an organisational change process in an nhs trust hospital
publishDate 2002
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/6774
_version_ 1797288265067266048