Following Dutch healthcare professionals’ experiences during COVID-19: Tensions in everyday practices and policies amid shifting uncertainties

Author:

van der Molen Maartje1,Brown Patrick1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

Abstract

While the limits of rational-calculative approaches for healthcare decision-making, alongside institutional forms of ritual, routines and hope employed to deal with these limits, were already described in the 1950s, healthcare professionals’ syncretism of rational and non-rational approaches in their everyday work remains a neglected topic in Northern Europe. Using COVID-19 as an urgent problem for healthcare policy and practice, and a natural ‘breaching experiment’ which disrupts everyday work in ways which help professionals to critically reflect, this article explores how a small, purposive sample of young healthcare professionals in the Netherlands dealt with the uncertainties and risks posed by continued healthcare work amid the pandemic. Analysing qualitative data, collected via longitudinal online interviews among healthcare professionals, the analysis pays particular attention to: concerns, anxieties and risks faced by professionals; understandings and ways of working with(out) protocols; different logics for handling uncertainty in different situations; how different logics (rational, non-rational and ‘in between’ rationalities) are combined in different aspects of their work. A key feature of the analysis is the tensions which emerged within these combined strategies and how these relate to broader tensions in terms of the limits of rationality, economic scarcity, work-life experiences, and evidence versus emotions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. ‘The air is a little too dangerous’: how children navigate between rules and risks in times of COVID-19;Health, Risk & Society;2023-07-05

2. Hoping in a COVID-19 World;The Emerald Handbook of the Sociology of Emotions for a Post-Pandemic World;2023-04-14

3. Whose uncertainty? Learning disability research in a time of COVID-19;International Journal of Social Research Methodology;2023-02-06

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