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Interprofessional role boundaries in diabetes education in Australia

Interprofessional role boundaries in diabetes education in Australia
Interprofessional role boundaries in diabetes education in Australia
Diabetes presents a challenge to healthcare services worldwide. Diabetes educators work with individuals and communities to reduce the impact of diabetes. In Australia, diabetes educators derive from one of several primary qualifications including nursing, medicine or a specified allied health background, and have an accredited postgraduate qualification in diabetes education. The peak professional body, the Australian Diabetes Educators Association (ADEA), promotes equivalence of all diabetes educators in terms of their scope of practice. However, in practice, there is evidence of inequities, particularly between those from nursing and allied health backgrounds. This paper uses a neo-Weberian lens to explore the interprofessional role dynamics of a ‘postprofessional’ group of practitioners, who adopt a common role and title to create a professional identity at post-qualifying level. Data were collected via individual interviews with 19 stakeholders and analysed using an abductive template approach. Differential role boundaries between nurse and allied health diabetes educators were established and reinforced in several ways. Diabetes education is considered a sub-specialty of nursing only; access to education and credentialing has been restricted for allied health; reinforcement of professional stereotypes and perceived professional values; and perceived legislative differences in access to medication management for nurse and allied health diabetes educators.
1446-1242
1-15
King, Olivia
fb0a80ff-08e9-49b6-84d8-8f6f1175f3cf
Nancarrow, Susan
b65c3631-5d59-4d4a-8aee-2f570a4b3b20
Grace, Sandra
3191c250-f71d-4cff-970d-cdb3b85ff7dd
Borthwick, Alan
b4d1fa51-182d-4296-b5fe-5b7c32ef6f9d
King, Olivia
fb0a80ff-08e9-49b6-84d8-8f6f1175f3cf
Nancarrow, Susan
b65c3631-5d59-4d4a-8aee-2f570a4b3b20
Grace, Sandra
3191c250-f71d-4cff-970d-cdb3b85ff7dd
Borthwick, Alan
b4d1fa51-182d-4296-b5fe-5b7c32ef6f9d

King, Olivia, Nancarrow, Susan, Grace, Sandra and Borthwick, Alan (2019) Interprofessional role boundaries in diabetes education in Australia. Health Sociology Review, 1-15. (doi:10.1080/14461242.2019.1600380).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Diabetes presents a challenge to healthcare services worldwide. Diabetes educators work with individuals and communities to reduce the impact of diabetes. In Australia, diabetes educators derive from one of several primary qualifications including nursing, medicine or a specified allied health background, and have an accredited postgraduate qualification in diabetes education. The peak professional body, the Australian Diabetes Educators Association (ADEA), promotes equivalence of all diabetes educators in terms of their scope of practice. However, in practice, there is evidence of inequities, particularly between those from nursing and allied health backgrounds. This paper uses a neo-Weberian lens to explore the interprofessional role dynamics of a ‘postprofessional’ group of practitioners, who adopt a common role and title to create a professional identity at post-qualifying level. Data were collected via individual interviews with 19 stakeholders and analysed using an abductive template approach. Differential role boundaries between nurse and allied health diabetes educators were established and reinforced in several ways. Diabetes education is considered a sub-specialty of nursing only; access to education and credentialing has been restricted for allied health; reinforcement of professional stereotypes and perceived professional values; and perceived legislative differences in access to medication management for nurse and allied health diabetes educators.

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Interprofessional role boundaries in diabetes education in Australia - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 March 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 April 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430976
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430976
ISSN: 1446-1242
PURE UUID: 8be29b0a-d299-4d48-8405-9c6b8d9df9b3

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Date deposited: 20 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:49

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Contributors

Author: Olivia King
Author: Susan Nancarrow
Author: Sandra Grace
Author: Alan Borthwick

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