Belonging, Placement, and Turfing

The language of “placement” is key in health care organizations’ admissions and discharge planning policies and practices. Where patients are thought to belong has substantial clinical and ethical heft in the everyday operations of the US health services sector. Turfing is generally regarded as an inappropriate reference to patients whose needs and vulnerabilities prompt us to want to make them someone else’s responsibility. Turfing can happen in inpatient settings when one care team looks to divert responsibility for a patient’s care to another team, in outpatient settings when clinicians refuse to take care of, say, patients insured by Medicare or Medicaid, and in discharge planning to rehabilitation or skilled care facilities. This theme issue investigates clinical and ethical criteria for determining what it means to be a person who belongs somewhere under a clinician’s watch in health care.

Volume 25, Number 12: E855-915 Full Issue PDF