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A discursive sensemaking perspective on project-based work in public healthcare

By: Lunkka, Nina, Pietlainen, Ville, and Suhonen, Marjo.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Project Management Journal Description: 50(6), Dec, 2019: p.657-672.Subject(s): Healthcare, Lived experience, Project actuality, Project-based work, Sensemaking In: Project Management Journal Summary: This study investigates project participants’ sensemaking of lived work experiences during periods of organizational change within Finnish public healthcare. It introduces a discursive sensemaking perspective to investigate lived experiences, that is, reflexive practitioners’ situational thinking. Drawing upon 17 interviews, the study identifies diverse repertoires through which the lived experiences are considered meaningful. These are repertoires of: (1) transformation, (2) realism, (3) politics, (4) individuality, (5) reflexivity, and (6) senselessness. The results show that project-based work in public healthcare differs from project participants’ expectations because projects are perceived to increase rather than decrease bureaucracy and include unsustainable working conditions that have to be endured.- Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
50(6), 2019: p. 657-672 Available AR123314

This study investigates project participants’ sensemaking of lived work experiences during periods of organizational change within Finnish public healthcare. It introduces a discursive sensemaking perspective to investigate lived experiences, that is, reflexive practitioners’ situational thinking. Drawing upon 17 interviews, the study identifies diverse repertoires through which the lived experiences are considered meaningful. These are repertoires of: (1) transformation, (2) realism, (3) politics, (4) individuality, (5) reflexivity, and (6) senselessness. The results show that project-based work in public healthcare differs from project participants’ expectations because projects are perceived to increase rather than decrease bureaucracy and include unsustainable working conditions that have to be endured.- Reproduced

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