Healthcare and Compassion: Towards an Awareness of Intersubjective Vulnerability; Comment on “Why and How Is Compassion Necessary to Provide Good Quality Healthcare?”
How to instill compassion in a healthcare organization? In this article, I respond to Marianna Fotaki’s proposals in her piece, ‘Why and how is compassion necessary to provide good quality healthcare?’ by drawing on insights from organization studies. Following Fotaki, I argue that to instill targets and formal measures for assessing compassion would be problematic. I conclude by drawing on psychoanalytic and feminist theories to introduce alternatives, specifically proposing an approach that is grounded in a shared sense of a common, embodied precarity, which necessitates our commitment to preserving the conditions in which life might flourish.
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Kenny, K. (2015). Healthcare and Compassion: Towards an Awareness of Intersubjective Vulnerability; Comment on “Why and How Is Compassion Necessary to Provide Good Quality Healthcare?”. International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 4(9), 627-629. doi: 10.15171/ijhpm.2015.115
MLA
Kate Kenny. "Healthcare and Compassion: Towards an Awareness of Intersubjective Vulnerability; Comment on “Why and How Is Compassion Necessary to Provide Good Quality Healthcare?”", International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 4, 9, 2015, 627-629. doi: 10.15171/ijhpm.2015.115
HARVARD
Kenny, K. (2015). 'Healthcare and Compassion: Towards an Awareness of Intersubjective Vulnerability; Comment on “Why and How Is Compassion Necessary to Provide Good Quality Healthcare?”', International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 4(9), pp. 627-629. doi: 10.15171/ijhpm.2015.115
VANCOUVER
Kenny, K. Healthcare and Compassion: Towards an Awareness of Intersubjective Vulnerability; Comment on “Why and How Is Compassion Necessary to Provide Good Quality Healthcare?”. International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 2015; 4(9): 627-629. doi: 10.15171/ijhpm.2015.115