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  5. Modes of rationality in nursing documentation: biology, biography and the 'voice of nursing'
 
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Modes of rationality in nursing documentation: biology, biography and the 'voice of nursing'

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Author(s)
Hyde, Abbey 
Treacy, Margaret P. 
Scott, Anne P. 
Butler, Michelle 
Drennan, Jonathan 
Irving, Kate 
Byrne, Anne 
MacNeela, Padraig 
Hanrahan, Marian 
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/4185
Date Issued
June 2005
Date Available
14T17:11:05Z March 2013
Abstract
This article is based on a discourse analysis of the complete nursing records of 45 patients, and concerns the modes of rationality that mediated text-based accounts relating to patient care that nurses recorded. The analysis draws on the work of the critical theorist, Jurgen Habermas, who conceptualised rationality in the context of modernity according to two types: purposive rationality based on an instrumental logic, and value rationality based on ethical considerations and moral reasoning. Our analysis revealed that purposive rationality dominated the content of nursing documentation, as evidenced by a particularly bio-centric and modernist construction of the workings of the body within the texts. There was little reference in the documentation to central themes of contemporary nursing discourses, such as notions of partnership, autonomy, and self-determination, which are associated with value rationality. Drawing on Habermas, we argue that this nursing documentation depicted the colonisation of the sociocultural lifeworld by the bio-technocratic system. Where nurses recorded disagreements that patients had with medical regimes, the central struggle inherent in the project of modernity became transparent--the tension between the rational and instrumental control of people through scientific regulation and the autonomy of the subject. The article concludes by problematising communicative action within the context of nursing practice
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Blackwell
Journal
Nursing inquiry
Volume
12
Issue
2
Start Page
66
End Page
77
Copyright (Published Version)
2005, Blackwell Publishing
Keywords
  • Critical theory

  • Discourse analysis

  • Ireland

  • Nursing documentation...

DOI
10.1111/j.1440-1800.2005.00260.x
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
Owning collection
Nursing, Midwifery & Health Systems Research Collection
Scopus© citations
37
Acquisition Date
Jan 27, 2023
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1814
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