untitled

(Marcin) #1

PART TWO:


Applications of

Marilyn Ray’s

Theory of

Bureaucratic

Caring

Marian C. Turkel


Current Context of Health-Care
Organizations

Review of the Literature: Political
and Economic Constraints of
Nursing Practice

Economic Implications of Bureau-
cratic Caring Theory: Research in
Current Atmosphere of Health-Care
Reform

Economic/Political Implications
of Bureaucratic Caring

Summary

References

Ray (1989, p. 31) warned that the “transforma-
tion of America and other health care systems to
corporate enterprises emphasizing competitive
management and economic gain seriously chal-
lenges nursing’s humanistic philosophies and theo-
ries, and nursing’s administrative and clinical
policies.” Approximately 15 years later, in the cur-
rent managed care environment, there is an intense
focus on operating costs and the bottom line, and


caring is often not valued within the organizational
culture. However, nurse researchers, nurse admin-
istrators, and nurses in practice can use the politi-
cal and/or economic dimensions of the Theory of
Bureaucratic Caring as a framework to guide prac-
tice and decision making. Use of these dimensions
of the theory integrates the constructs of politics,
economics, and caring within the health-care
organization.
The purpose of this chapter is to illuminate the
notion of political/economic caring in the current
health-care environment. Ray’s (1989) original
Theory of Bureaucratic Caring included political
and economic entities as separate and distinct
structural caring categories. The revised Theory
of Bureaucratic Caring, however, is represented
as a complex holographic theory. Given this philo-
sophical framework, the political and economic
dimensions of bureaucratic caring as portrayed
in this chapter are illuminated as interrelated
constructs.
The political and economic dimensions of bu-
reaucratic caring encompass not only health-care
reform at the national level, but also refer to the po-
litical and economic impact of these changes at the
organizational level. Through sections on the cur-
rent context of health-care organizations, review of
the literature related to the political and economic
constraints of nursing practice, economic caring
research, political and economic implications of
bureaucratic caring, and visions for the future, we
learn how the Theory of Bureaucratic Caring
applies.

Current Context of
Health-Care Organizations

In the wake of the controversial health-care reform
process that is currently being debated in the
United States, the central thesis in today’s economic
health-care milieu in both the for-profit and not-
for-profit sectors is managed care (Williams &
Torrens, 2002). Managed care is an economic con-
cept based on the premise that purchasers of care,
both public and private, are unwilling to tolerate
the substantial growth of the last several years in
health-care costs. Managed care involves managed
competition and is based on the assumption that
health-care prices will fall if hospitals and providers
are forced to compete on the basis of cost and qual-
ity, like other industries (Williams & Torrens,

CHAPTER 23 Applications of Marilyn Ray’s Theory of Bureaucratic Caring 369
Free download pdf