| Literature DB >> 23550963 |
Merran Toerien1, Rebecca Shaw, Markus Reuber.
Abstract
This article compares two practices for initiating treatment decision-making, evident in audio-recorded consultations between a neurologist and 13 patients in two hospital clinics in the UK. We call these 'recommending' and 'option-listing'. The former entails making a proposal to do something; the latter entails the construction of a list of options. Using conversation analysis (CA), we illustrate each, showing that the distinction between these two practices matters to participants. Our analysis centres on two distinctions between the practices: epistemic differences and differences in the slots each creates for the patient's response. Considering the implications of our findings for understanding medical authority, we argue that option-listing - relative to recommending - is a practice whereby clinicians work to relinquish a little of their authority. This article contributes, then, to a growing body of CA work that offers a more nuanced, tempered account of medical authority than is typically portrayed in the sociological literature. We argue that future CA studies should map out the range of ways - in addition to recommending - in which treatment decision-making is initiated by clinicians. This will allow for further evidence-based contributions to debates on the related concepts of patient participation, choice, shared decision-making and medical authority.Entities:
Keywords: conversation analysis; decision-making; doctor-patient interaction; medical authority; treatment recommendations
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23550963 DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sociol Health Illn ISSN: 0141-9889