Through an ethnographic study of nurses? experiences of work intensification, this article shows
how nurses respond to and act upon neoliberal transformations of work. The article identifies
and explores those transformations considered by the informants, nurses working in public sector
hospital wards, as central to changing conditions of work and experiences of work intensifications.
It further analyzes nurses? responses toward these transformations and locates these responses
within a particular form of femininity evolving from rationalities of care, nurses? conditions within
the organization, and classed and gendered experiences of care work. The article illustrates that in
times of neoliberal change and public sector resource depletion, nurses respond to women?s traditional
caring responsibilities as well as to professional commitments and cover for the organization.
Maintaining the level of frontline service is contingent on increased exploitation and performance
control of ward nurses, and their ability and willingness to sacrifice their own time and health for
the sake of their patients. The article argues that in the case of ward nurses in the Swedish public
sector, work intensification is a multilayered process propelled by three intersecting forces: austerity
ideology linked to the neoliberal transformation of the welfare state and public sector retrenchment;
explicit care rationalities impelled by aspirations of the nursing profession to establish, render
visible, and expand the nursing field both in relation to the medical profession and in relation to
so-called unskilled care work performed by assistant nurses and auxiliaries; and the progressive
aspect of New Public Management, which challenges the power and authority of the professions
and contributes to strengthening the positions of clients and patients.
Author Biography
Rebecca Selberg, Department of Gender Studies, Lund University