TY - JOUR
T1 - Multi-professional healthcare teams, medical dominance, and institutional epistemic injustice
AU - Bueter, Anke
AU - Jukola, Saana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/1/23
Y1 - 2025/1/23
N2 - Multi-professional teams have become increasingly common in healthcare. Collaboration within such teams aims to enable knowledge amalgamation across specializations and to thereby improve standards of care for patients with complex health issues. However, multi-professional teamwork comes with certain challenges, as it requires successful communication across disciplinary and professional frameworks. In addition, work in multi-professional teams is often characterized by medical dominance, i.e., the perspective of physicians is prioritized over those of nurses, social workers, or other professionals. We argue that medical dominance in multi-professional teams can lead to institutional epistemic injustice, which affects both providers and patients negatively. Firstly, it codifies and promotes a systematic and unfair credibility deflation of the perspectives of professionals other than physicians. Secondly, it indirectly promotes epistemic injustice towards patients via leading to institutional opacity; i.e., via creating an intransparent system of credibility norms that is difficult to navigate. To overcome these problems, multi-professional teamwork requires institutional settings that promote epistemic equity of team members.
AB - Multi-professional teams have become increasingly common in healthcare. Collaboration within such teams aims to enable knowledge amalgamation across specializations and to thereby improve standards of care for patients with complex health issues. However, multi-professional teamwork comes with certain challenges, as it requires successful communication across disciplinary and professional frameworks. In addition, work in multi-professional teams is often characterized by medical dominance, i.e., the perspective of physicians is prioritized over those of nurses, social workers, or other professionals. We argue that medical dominance in multi-professional teams can lead to institutional epistemic injustice, which affects both providers and patients negatively. Firstly, it codifies and promotes a systematic and unfair credibility deflation of the perspectives of professionals other than physicians. Secondly, it indirectly promotes epistemic injustice towards patients via leading to institutional opacity; i.e., via creating an intransparent system of credibility norms that is difficult to navigate. To overcome these problems, multi-professional teamwork requires institutional settings that promote epistemic equity of team members.
KW - Epistemic injustice
KW - Medical dominance
KW - Multi-professional teams
KW - Philosophy of medicine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217411099&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11019-025-10252-z
DO - 10.1007/s11019-025-10252-z
M3 - Article
SN - 1386-7423
JO - Medicine, health care and philosophy
JF - Medicine, health care and philosophy
ER -