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Return-to-Work Coordinators’ Perceptions of Their...
Journal article

Return-to-Work Coordinators’ Perceptions of Their Roles Relative to Workers: A Discourse Analysis

Abstract

PurposeThis paper describes how Canadian Return to Work coordinators (RTWC) framed their job roles relative to workers in ways that went beyond the usual professional norms of helping worker recovery.MethodsIn-depth interviews were conducted with 47 RTWCs across Canada in 2018–2019. We used critical discourse analysis to analyze the way coordinators viewed workers in the complex, multi-stakeholder system of RTW.ResultsWe identified four ways that RTWCs positioned themselves relative to workers: as trust builders, experts, detectives and motivators. These roles reflected RTWCs position within the system; however, their discourse also contributed to the construction of a moral hierarchy that valued worker motivation and framed some workers as attempting to exploit the RTW system.ConclusionsRTWCs’ positions of power in the coordination process warrant further investigation of how they exercise judgement and discretion, particularly when the process depends on their ability to weigh evidence and manage cases in what might be seen as an objective and fair manner.

Authors

Hopwood P; MacEachen E; Crouch M; Neiterman E; McKnight E; Malachowski C

Journal

Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation, Vol. 34, No. 4, pp. 783–792

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 1, 2024

DOI

10.1007/s10926-023-10167-7

ISSN

1053-0487

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