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Cocooning nurse autonomy in Türkiye: navigating a path to professionalism that does not challenge medical dominance

Zuleyha Inceoz, David Hughes

Sociology of Health & Illness, Volume: 48, Issue: 4, Start page: e70194

Swansea University Author: David Hughes

Abstract

Nursing work in several Western countries has been affected by evolving discourses of managerialism and professionalism. Interdisciplinary working has given nurses more prominence in high-level teams and created hybrid management roles that have affected understandings of professionalism. Such chang...

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Published in: Sociology of Health & Illness
ISSN: 0141-9889 1467-9566
Published: UK Wiley 2026
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa71813
Abstract: Nursing work in several Western countries has been affected by evolving discourses of managerialism and professionalism. Interdisciplinary working has given nurses more prominence in high-level teams and created hybrid management roles that have affected understandings of professionalism. Such changes generally followed broader new public management (NPM) reforms that shifted power from senior doctors to executive managers. Yet, although there is an extensive literature on the global spread of NPM reforms, less is known about the influence of associated discourses concerning nurse management and professionalism. This paper addresses that gap by presenting qualitative data on the evolving situation of hospital nursing in Türkiye, a country that implemented NPM-type reforms in the early 2000s. Based on 40 in-depth interviews completed in 2021/22, it describes the uneven impact of these reforms on medicine and nursing, the continuing reality of medical dominance and the development of a professionalising project among Turkish hospital nurses that avoids directly challenging medical power. This emphasises continuing professional education, practice guideline development and a curtailed form of teamwork away from doctors. Nurses exercised greatest autonomy in specialised wards, intensive care units and emergency departments, where a stable staff group could operate at a distance from oversight by senior doctors.
Item Description: Published Gold Open Access
Keywords: Nursing management, Turkiye, Professionalism, healthcare reform, medical dominance
College: Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Funders: Swansea University
Issue: 4
Start Page: e70194