Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters

Database
Country/Region as subject
Language
Affiliation country
Publication year range
2.
Soc Sci Med ; 272: 113713, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33540149

ABSTRACT

The link between workers with sickle cell disorder (SCD) and employment has until now been seen through the lens of the person's disease, not their relationship to work (paid and unpaid). Using SCD as a case study, we foreground relations of employment, setting sickle cell and work into ecological context. In 2018, two focus group discussions and 47 depth-interviews were conducted with black disabled workers living with SCD across England. The relational concepts of Anna Tsing (2015) - salvage accumulation, entanglement and precarity - were used as an analytical framework to assess the reported experiences. To understand the experiences of those with SCD and employment, it is necessary to apprehend the whole ecology of their bonds to their bodies; their social relationships of kin and family; and their wider social relations to communities. Paid employment breaks bonds crucial to those living with SCD. First, employers can only extract sufficient productive value from workers if they disregard the necessary self-care of a precarious body. Secondly, reproducing labour though child-care, housework and care work is a taken-for-granted salvage central to capitalism. Thirdly, voluntary and community work are salvaged for free by employers towards their accumulation of profits. People with SCD find bond-making activities that create the commons life-affirming, thereby reconfiguring our understanding of connections between disability and work. Tsing, AL (2015) The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell , Disabled Persons , Black or African American , Capitalism , Child , England , Humans
3.
Soc Sci Med ; 69(2): 147-53, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19297064

ABSTRACT

This paper explores the continuities and discontinuities in recent policy on the extension of palliative care to people with heart failure in the UK. It focuses on how professionals in cardiology and specialist palliative care negotiate their disciplinary boundaries within the context of these policy moves. It draws out the semantic, historical and practical tensions between the core values of cardiology, with its focus on 'living with heart failure', and specialist palliative medicine, with its focus on 'dying with heart failure'. A focus on negotiation of interdisciplinary boundaries reveals different engagements with notions of dying and palliation rather than simply different disease trajectories. Further, uncertainty about prognosis and the probability of sudden death pose a challenge to two core principles of specialist palliative care: 'open awareness' and 'good death'. We are not suggesting that these differences are insurmountable. Rather, in highlighting these tensions, our aim is to problematise the relationship between policy and practice, as being mediated by negotiations of disciplinary values (culture) within a local context. We conclude by recommending a wider discussion on notions of 'open awareness' and how professionals within different medical disciplines engage with alternate ways of dealing with uncertainty and sudden death as part of human condition. The arguments presented here are based on data and analysis from a larger qualitative study conducted during 2004-2005 in north and central England.


Subject(s)
Cardiology , Health Policy , Heart Failure/therapy , Interdisciplinary Communication , Palliative Care , Humans , Terminal Care , United Kingdom
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL