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- Title
Returning to work or working on one's rehabilitation: Social identities invoked by impaired workers and professionals in health care and employment services.
- Authors
Andreassen, Tone Alm; Solvang, Per Koren
- Abstract
For persons with a long‐term illness or impairment, return‐to‐work decisions involve considerations about work capacity, opportunities in the labour market, the impact of injuries, further treatment requirements, physical and cognitive rehabilitation, and mental health recovery. These considerations are undertaken by the affected individuals as well as by professionals in health care and employment services. Drawing upon institutional theories of organisations, especially the understanding that institutional logics provide different social identities to injured individuals, we study rehabilitation processes following multi‐trauma or traumatic brain injury (TBI) within the Scandinavian welfare model. We identify which social identities are activated in professionals' considerations and in the stories of the injured individuals. The aim is to understand how professionals' reasoning about the clients' problems influences return‐to‐work processes. Our primary finding is that the wageworker identity, invoked by the injured individuals themselves, is subordinated by the professionals to the logic of profession and the associated patient identity. Consequently, not only is impaired people's anti‐discrimination right to reasonably adjusted work ignored, ignored is also a possible resource in the rehabilitation process. Additionally, individuals who view themselves as wageworkers tend to be left unserved.
- Subjects
SCANDINAVIA; EMPLOYEE attitudes; ATTITUDE (Psychology); ORGANIZATIONAL structure; MATHEMATICAL models; GROUP identity; BLUE collar workers; MEDICAL personnel; THEORY; PSYCHOSOCIAL factors; WOUNDS &; injuries; EMPLOYMENT reentry; REHABILITATION for brain injury patients; INDUSTRIAL relations
- Publication
Sociology of Health & Illness, 2021, Vol 43, Issue 3, p575
- ISSN
0141-9889
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1467-9566.13241