(Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage

This article provides a critical response to the growing ‘professionalisation’ of the Dutch care sector. The author comments upon an article by Van Ewijk en Lammersen (Sociale Interventie 15(2)), concerning the nature of the profession and the professional attitude of care workers. Based on personal...

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Main Author: Conny Bellemakers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Applied Sciences Rotterdam 2007-09-01
Series:Journal of Social Intervention: Theory and Practice
Online Access:http://www.journalsi.org/articles/10.18352/jsi.106/
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spelling doaj-838df6a5838d4cd58fedf12c49f844a82020-11-25T03:00:05ZengUniversity of Applied Sciences RotterdamJournal of Social Intervention: Theory and Practice1876-88302007-09-01163394710.18352/jsi.106101(Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrageConny BellemakersThis article provides a critical response to the growing ‘professionalisation’ of the Dutch care sector. The author comments upon an article by Van Ewijk en Lammersen (Sociale Interventie 15(2)), concerning the nature of the profession and the professional attitude of care workers. Based on personal experiences as a client in the care sector and studies on care for disabled people, the author formulates a few lessons regarding ‘professionalisation’ of the care sector and her workers. She claims that most of the time, professional care does not meet the needs of clients. Furthermore, she argues that clients and their families are confronted with a lot of ‘disability management’: to receive the care they are entitled to, they have to develop diverse abilities, like collect and distribute information, negotiate with care workers, confront stigmatization, etcetera. The author therefore concludes that disabled people need care workers who support their empowerment and who are willing to be an ‘ally’ in this empowerment.http://www.journalsi.org/articles/10.18352/jsi.106/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Conny Bellemakers
spellingShingle Conny Bellemakers
(Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
Journal of Social Intervention: Theory and Practice
author_facet Conny Bellemakers
author_sort Conny Bellemakers
title (Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
title_short (Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
title_full (Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
title_fullStr (Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
title_full_unstemmed (Nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
title_sort (nieuwe) professionals in de zorg welkom, als bondgenoot in empowerment – discussiebijdrage
publisher University of Applied Sciences Rotterdam
series Journal of Social Intervention: Theory and Practice
issn 1876-8830
publishDate 2007-09-01
description This article provides a critical response to the growing ‘professionalisation’ of the Dutch care sector. The author comments upon an article by Van Ewijk en Lammersen (Sociale Interventie 15(2)), concerning the nature of the profession and the professional attitude of care workers. Based on personal experiences as a client in the care sector and studies on care for disabled people, the author formulates a few lessons regarding ‘professionalisation’ of the care sector and her workers. She claims that most of the time, professional care does not meet the needs of clients. Furthermore, she argues that clients and their families are confronted with a lot of ‘disability management’: to receive the care they are entitled to, they have to develop diverse abilities, like collect and distribute information, negotiate with care workers, confront stigmatization, etcetera. The author therefore concludes that disabled people need care workers who support their empowerment and who are willing to be an ‘ally’ in this empowerment.
url http://www.journalsi.org/articles/10.18352/jsi.106/
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