Much care work in hospitals is done by people who are not qualified or registered. Why does this happen and what are the consequences

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Much care work in hospitals is done by people who are not qualified or registered. Why does this happen and what are the consequences

The kind of activities carried out by unqualified staff (UQS) can be very broad.

UQS include care assistants, domestic staff, porters, voluntary workers.

The tasks they undertake may differ depending on what ward or at what time of day they are working.

Lizz Hart, an anthropologist, spent time working in a hospital as one of the domestic members of staff (1991, p16). She highlights the many areas in which the domestic staff are giving care, i.e. fetching things, tidying around, helping patients to drink and sometimes lifting. Lifting is very much a nurse’s duty. If a nurse is unavailable, a UQS can offer support. This is an example of how UQS can help the running of a ward.

Domestic staff recognise that they do more than is required by their job description. Through Lizz Harts observations and conversations with domestic staff (DS) she observes the time DS spend around the patients (1991, p16). Although DS are not supposed to talk to patients, the time spent around them naturally leads to relationships being made - joking with the patients or spending time listening to them. This is acknowledged by nursing staff to be useful and even therapeutic.

This example illustrates how these two categories of staff, nurses and DS duties overlap , but in a hospital there are many categories of staff, either working permanently on the wards, or visiting the hospital in a professional capacity ie social workers, health visitors.

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There appears to be a clear hierarchy of staff in a hospital of doctors, nurses, care assistants and domestic staff (I haven’t included the whole myriad of staff this is a very basic example). When looking at their daily routines their jobs overlap. Nurses being trained in more technical areas, having more responsibility in the treatment of patients, care assistants taking on nurses duties.

Mackay (1993, p99) talks of a big divide in attitude between doctors and nurses and I believe this seems to ripple down the hierarchy.

Doctors are fundamentally taught that health is approached through a ...

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