Publication | Closed Access
"Sweeping Up After the Parade": Professional, Ethical, and Patient Care Implications of "Turfing"
12
Citations
33
References
2007
Year
Humanity And MedicineFamily MedicinePractice ManagementClinical SpecialtiesEducationMedicolegal IssueHealth LawEthical PracticePrimary CareMedical HistoryMedical AnthropologyHealthcare EthicProfessional CulturePractice TypePatient Care ImplicationsNursingMedical EthicsPatient TransferPatient-centered OutcomeMedicalizationMedicine
"Turfing" denotes a patient transfer or triage from one physician to another when the care of that patient feels more troublesome than it is worth. A widespread phenomenon in medical training programs, turfing appears to allocate patient care to meet physicians' rather than patients' needs. Although turfing reportedly causes inter-physician discord and inter-specialty stereotyping, its deeper consequences are poorly understood. Turfing is an interpersonal conflict masquerading as a medical issue. After examining turfing alongside other patient-related slang, I analyze the distinction between "the turf," a person, and "to turf," a practice. Several explanatory models from medical practice are explored in order to illuminate turfing's implications for medical professionalism, ethics, and patient care. I suggest that a physician's medical specialty or practice type--that is, professional culture--may link to that physician's degree of altruism. If so, then what it means fundamentally to be a physician might vary across medical specialties. Such a link calls for a new notion of cultural competence, one that physicians may apply not to patients but to each other.
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