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Everyday resistance in the UK’s National Health Service

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-07, 08:57 authored by Ryan Essex, Jess Dillard-Wright, Guy AitchisonGuy Aitchison, Hil Aked

Resistance is a concept understudied in the context of health and healthcare. This is in part because visible forms of social protest are sometimes understood as incongruent with professional identity, leading healthcare workers to separate their visible actions from their working life. Resistance takes many forms, however, and focusing exclusively on the visible means more subtle forms of everyday resistance are likely to be missed. The overarching aim of this study was to explore how resistance was enacted within the workplace amongst a sample of 11 healthcare workers, based in the UK; exploring the forms that such action took and how this intersected with health and healthcare. In depth-interviews were conducted and results were analysed utilising Lilja’s framework (2022). Our findings suggest that resistance took a number of forms, from more direct confrontational acts, to those which sought to avoid power or which sought to create alternative or prefigurative practices or norms. These findings speak to the complexities, ambiguities and contradictions of resistance, as carried out by healthcare workers in the workplace. While many acts had clear political motives, with issues like climate change in mind for example, participants also described how the act of providing care itself could be an act of resistance. While saying something about our participants, this also said something about the healthcare systems in which they worked. These findings also raise a range of normative issues. Perhaps needless to say, there appears to be substantial scope to expand and interrogate our findings and apply the idea of resistance to health and healthcare.

History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Department

  • International Relations, Politics and History

Published in

Journal of Bioethical Inquiry

Publisher

Springer

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publisher statement

This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review (when applicable) and is subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use, but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/[insert DOI]

Acceptance date

2023-02-04

ISSN

1176-7529

eISSN

1872-4353

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Guy Aitchison. Deposit date: 6 February 2023

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