Abstract

ABSTRACT Recent research of healthcare providers identifies the critical role that professional identity plays in the provision of healthcare, interactions within healthcare teams, and healthcare provider perceptions of their work. However, much remains to be known regarding the role of professional identity in routine interactions for emerging healthcare professionals. This study enriches understandings of this particular issue by exploring pediatric residents’ experiences with a structured hand-off tool at a children’s hospital in the western United States. This study employed qualitative interview methods and iterative interpretive qualitative data analysis. Participants were 20 residents in a children’s hospital. Data analysis indicated that the discourses that disseminate negotiations of face can, and often do, take place during patient hand-off, as the statements exchanged between team members can maintain or threaten face and professional identity. We suggest that shifts in organizational culture and training are necessary to optimize the environment in which residents use structured hand-off. Further, the culture and practice of training emerging physicians should include attention to the important role of hand-off as a critical site of professional identity construction and negotiation.

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