28 May 2020

Situating Boundary Work: Chronic Disease Prevention in Danish Hospitals

Associate Professor Inge Kryger Pedersen, the Department of Sociology, has contributed to the journal ‘Professions and Professionalism’ with the peer-reviewed article ‘Situating Boundary Work: Chronic Disease Prevention in Danish Hospitals’.

Non-communicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, are the leading cause of death globally. The paper focuses on the boundary work among health professions involved in lifestyle-related preventive measures at Danish hospitals.

Drawing on documents, qualitative in-depth interviews and extended conversations conducted with health professionals about goals, dilemmas, and practices related to lifestyle disease prevention, as well as site visits at Danish hospitals, it is identified which professional groups have claimed responsibility for the tasks, how they are defined, and through what kinds of interactions and infighting.

The analysis grounds Abbott’s framework of jurisdictions and his meso-level vocabulary in a situated account of professional boundary work and follow the way nurses in particular create, and sometimes stabilize or standardize techniques for prevention of lifestyle-related diseases. It is demonstrated by different forms of boundary work how nurses work to extend, defend or refashion established work boundaries when handling these new tasks.

There is open access to the article.