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Regime change in Australian maternity hospitals

journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by Karen Lane, K Reiger
Contemporary attempts to ‘organise’ risk and manage uncertainty are remaking many ‘industrial-era’ institutions – including maternity hospitals. Health policies are encouraging a shift away from hierarchical, medically dominated structures towards new governance systems and ‘women-centred’ care, often led by midwives. To understand the resulting contestation, in this article we argue for a wider conceptual frame than a focus on neo-liberal state regulation of the professions. We utilise theories of the ‘second modernity’, in particular those concerning socio-cultural changes associated with shifts in risk regimes, to interpret findings from qualitative research studies undertaken in Australian maternity hospitals. Whereas analysis confined to macro or institutional levels emphasises stability and hegemony, we demonstrate that when cultural and interactional levels are examined, considerable fluidity and uncertainty in the identification and negotiation of risk is evident, resulting in new work practices with inevitable shifts in professional identities and allegiances.

History

Journal

Social Theory & Health

Volume

11

Issue

4

Pagination

407 - 427

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Location

Hants, UK

ISSN

1477-8211

eISSN

1477-822X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, Palgrave MacMillan