Nurses' Voices

In this paper we analyse aspects of the qualitative data from open-ended questions included in the RN Survey 2002. We discuss the changes wrought by New Public Management (NPM) in the Australian and WA health sectors. We argue that the requisites of NPM and managerialism are not necessarily consiste...

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Main Authors: Nowak, Margaret, Bickley, Maureen
Format: Journal Article
Published: National Institute of Labour Studies 2005
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5105
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author Nowak, Margaret
Bickley, Maureen
author_facet Nowak, Margaret
Bickley, Maureen
author_sort Nowak, Margaret
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In this paper we analyse aspects of the qualitative data from open-ended questions included in the RN Survey 2002. We discuss the changes wrought by New Public Management (NPM) in the Australian and WA health sectors. We argue that the requisites of NPM and managerialism are not necessarily consistent with the historical role of professionalism in the delivery of health care and of nursing as a health profession. In analysing the nurses' qualitative responses, we use the framework from NPM and managerialism as a means to develop understanding of the issues and concerns expressed by nurses. The paper identifies three areas of dissonance: professional dissonance, career choice dissonance and ideological dissonance. It argues that, as a result, nurses emotionally and professionally resist what has been termed 'the instrumental motivations of managerialism'.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2005
publisher National Institute of Labour Studies
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-51052017-01-30T10:43:57Z Nurses' Voices Nowak, Margaret Bickley, Maureen In this paper we analyse aspects of the qualitative data from open-ended questions included in the RN Survey 2002. We discuss the changes wrought by New Public Management (NPM) in the Australian and WA health sectors. We argue that the requisites of NPM and managerialism are not necessarily consistent with the historical role of professionalism in the delivery of health care and of nursing as a health profession. In analysing the nurses' qualitative responses, we use the framework from NPM and managerialism as a means to develop understanding of the issues and concerns expressed by nurses. The paper identifies three areas of dissonance: professional dissonance, career choice dissonance and ideological dissonance. It argues that, as a result, nurses emotionally and professionally resist what has been termed 'the instrumental motivations of managerialism'. 2005 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5105 National Institute of Labour Studies restricted
spellingShingle Nowak, Margaret
Bickley, Maureen
Nurses' Voices
title Nurses' Voices
title_full Nurses' Voices
title_fullStr Nurses' Voices
title_full_unstemmed Nurses' Voices
title_short Nurses' Voices
title_sort nurses' voices
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5105