Literature DB >> 24331879

Elective surgical patients' narratives of hospitalization: the co-construction of safety.

Carole Doherty1, Mark N K Saunders2.   

Abstract

This research explores how elective surgical patients make sense of their hospitalization experiences. We explore sensemaking using longitudinal narrative interviews (n=72) with 38 patients undergoing elective surgical procedures between June 2010 and February 2011. We consider patients' narratives, the stories they tell of their prior expectations, and subsequent post-surgery experiences of their care in a United Kingdom (UK) hospital. An emergent pre-surgery theme is that of a paradoxical position in which they choose to make themselves vulnerable by agreeing to surgery to enhance their health, this necessitating trust of clinicians (doctors and nurses). To make sense of their situation, patients draw on technical (doctors' expert knowledge and skills), bureaucratic (National Health Service as a revered institution) and ideological (hospitals as places of safety), discourses. Post-operatively, themes of 'chaos' and 'suffering' emerge from the narratives of patients whose pre-surgery expectations (and trust) have been violated. Their stories tell of unmet expectations and of inability to make shared sense of experiences with clinicians who are responsible for their care. We add to knowledge of how patients play a critical part in the co-construction of safety by demonstrating how patient-clinician intersubjectivity contributes to the type of harm that patients describe. Our results suggest that approaches to enhancing patients' safety will be limited if they fail to reflect patients' involvement in the negotiated process of healthcare. We also provide further evidence of the contribution narrative inquiry can make to patient safety.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hospital; Patient safety; Patients' stories; Sensemaking; Trust; UK

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24331879     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.08.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  6 in total

Review 1.  How Effective Are Incident-Reporting Systems for Improving Patient Safety? A Systematic Literature Review.

Authors:  Charitini Stavropoulou; Carole Doherty; Paul Tosey
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 4.911

2.  Trust, temporality and systems: how do patients understand patient safety in primary care? A qualitative study.

Authors:  Penny Rhodes; Stephen Campbell; Caroline Sanders
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2015-02-03       Impact factor: 3.377

3.  Navigating high-risk surgery: protocol for a multisite, stepped wedge, cluster-randomised trial of a question prompt list intervention to empower older adults to ask questions that inform treatment decisions.

Authors:  Lauren J Taylor; Paul J Rathouz; Ana Berlin; Karen J Brasel; Anne C Mosenthal; Emily Finlayson; Zara Cooper; Nicole M Steffens; Nora Jacobson; Anne Buffington; Jennifer L Tucholka; Qianqian Zhao; Margaret L Schwarze
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-05-29       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  The consent process: Enabling or disabling patients' active participation?

Authors:  Carole Doherty; Charitini Stavropoulou; Mark Nk Saunders; Tracey Brown
Journal:  Health (London)       Date:  2016-07-26

5.  A qualitative study of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women seeking pelvic organ prolapse surgery in Alberta, Canada.

Authors:  Erin Knox; Kaylee Ramage; Natalie Scime; Ariel Ducey; Erin Brennand
Journal:  Health Soc Care Community       Date:  2022-09-08

6.  Understanding decision making about major surgery: protocol for a qualitative study of shared decision making by high-risk patients and their clinical teams.

Authors:  Sara Shaw; Gemma Hughes; Tim Stephens; Rupert Pearse; John Prowle; Richard Edmund Ashcroft; Ester Avagliano; James Day; Mark Edsell; Jennifer Edwards; Leslie Everest
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-05-05       Impact factor: 2.692

  6 in total

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