2001
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.00239
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How ‘we’ are different from ‘them’: occupational boundary maintenance in the treatment of musculo‐skeletal problems

Abstract: Strategies of occupational control at the macro-level have been described by many sociologists. This paper draws on a study of the division of labour in the treatment of musculo-skeletal problems in New Zealand to look at micro-level strategies of occupational control. These are rhetorical strategies used by individual practitioners to establish and maintain occupational boundaries. Practitioners used these strategies to distinguish their occupation from others, creating a sense of professional identity and en… Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(94 citation statements)
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“…Norris's (2001) analysis of the jurisdictional narratives of competing musculo-skeletal treatment providers emphasised three main themes: limitation (of others), holism (of one's own techniques), and prevention (through the treatment of causes rather than symptoms). Sanders and Harrison (2008) identified various professional "legitimation discourses", including: reference to the scientific basis of work; identification of particular skills and expertise; the holistic and patient-centred nature of practice; the provision of care and emotional support; organisational efficiency and accountability; and claims to competence.…”
Section: Professional Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Norris's (2001) analysis of the jurisdictional narratives of competing musculo-skeletal treatment providers emphasised three main themes: limitation (of others), holism (of one's own techniques), and prevention (through the treatment of causes rather than symptoms). Sanders and Harrison (2008) identified various professional "legitimation discourses", including: reference to the scientific basis of work; identification of particular skills and expertise; the holistic and patient-centred nature of practice; the provision of care and emotional support; organisational efficiency and accountability; and claims to competence.…”
Section: Professional Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, invoking the jurisdictional rhetoric of limitation (Norris, 2001), a number of interviewees described younger sport-specialists as inferior due to their restricted scope of practice: "Physiotherapists are specialising far too early in sports. A lot of very nice, young physiotherapists who have got more qualifications …but they have not got that background experience".…”
Section: Sports Physiotherapistsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Interaction in health care encounters is also influenced by funding available for treatments, guidelines, potential profit, the desire to maintain a profession or specialty (Norris, 2001;Mizrachi et al, 2005) and custom and practice in the local situation (Joyce et al, 1967). There is evidence that the influence of non-patient factors on doctor behaviour may be increasing (Butler et al, 2009).…”
Section: A C C E P T E D Accepted Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%