Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care (Apr 2024)

How general practitioners used job crafting strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden

  • Helena Månsson Sandberg,
  • Åsa Tjulin,
  • Emma Brulin,
  • Bodil J. Landstad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2024.2309633
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 2
pp. 276 – 286

Abstract

Read online

AbstractObjective General practitioners (GPs) played a crucial role in limiting the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and many GPs experienced they did not have the prerequisites to provide adequate care. However, GPs developed approaches that helped them to provide care to patients through various job crafting strategies. The aim of this study is to identify how job crafting strategies were deployed by GPs at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden and the significance of the strategies on their work situation.Design A qualitative design with semi-structured interviews. The data was analysed using qualitative content analysis with job crafting as the conceptual framework for the analysis process.Setting Primary healthcare in five healthcare regions in Sweden.Subjects Fourteen GPs participated in individual interviews.Results In their endeavours to organise and provide care, GPs shaped the task, relational and cognitive boundaries of their work. GPs felt proud about finding new ways of working when given room to manoeuvre. Intensified collaboration between healthcare professionals made GPs more confident in their clinical work. GPs expressed that they consequently felt stronger in their professional role through what they accomplished in the organisation of care.Conclusions/Implications The results suggest that the job crafting strategies GPs used were meaningful to them in clinical practice. Knowledge about how GPs’ job crafting strategies were deployed might be useful for healthcare organisations in preparing for future health crises. Taking advantage of GPs’ experiences and strategies is considered important for promoting sustainable working conditions for GPs in the future.

Keywords