Literature DB >> 24565149

Selling patients and other metaphors: a discourse analysis of the interpretive frames that shape emergency department admission handoffs.

Brian Hilligoss1.   

Abstract

This paper reports a discourse analysis of the language doctors used as they talked about and engaged in patient handoffs between the emergency department (ED) and various inpatient services at one highly specialized academic tertiary teaching and referral hospital in the Midwest United States. Although interest in handoff improvement has grown considerably in recent years, progress has been hampered, perhaps in part, because of a widely used but limiting conceptual model of handoff as an information transmission. The purpose of the study reported here is to analyze the way doctors make sense of handoff interactions, including uncovering the interpretive frames they use, in order to provide empirical findings to expand conceptual models of handoff. All data reported were drawn from a two-year ethnographic study (2009-2011) and include semi-structured interviews (n = 48), non-participant observations (349 h), and recorded telephone handoff conversations (n = 48). A total of eighty-six individuals participated, including resident and attending doctors from the ED, internal medicine and surgical services, as well as hospital administrators. Findings are organized around four metaphors doctors used: sales, sports and games, packaging, and teamwork. Each metaphor, in turn, reveals an underlying interpretive frame that appears to be influenced by organizational and social structures and to shape the possibilities for action that doctors perceive. The four underlying interpretive frames are: handoff as persuasion, handoff as competition, handoff as expectation matching, and handoff as collaboration. Taken together, these interpretive frames highlight the complex, socially interactive nature of handoff and provide an empirical basis for grounding and enriching the conceptual model of handoff that guides research and practice improvement efforts.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Discourse analysis; Ethnography; Interpretive frames; Transitions of care; United States

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24565149     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.11.034

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


  5 in total

1.  Implementing standardized, inter-unit communication in an international setting: handoff of patients from emergency medicine to internal medicine.

Authors:  Kamna S Balhara; Susan M Peterson; Mohamed Moheb Elabd; Linda Regan; Xavier Anton; Basil Ali Al-Natour; Yu-Hsiang Hsieh; James Scheulen; Sarah A Stewart de Ramirez
Journal:  Intern Emerg Med       Date:  2017-02-03       Impact factor: 3.397

2.  Keeping out and getting in: reframing emergency department gatekeeping as structural competence.

Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2017-04-19

3.  Medication transitions: Vulnerable periods of change in need of human factors and ergonomics.

Authors:  Richard J Holden; Ephrem Abebe
Journal:  Appl Ergon       Date:  2020-10-10       Impact factor: 3.661

4.  Uncertainty, Case Complexity and the Content of Verbal Handoffs at the Emergency Department.

Authors:  Jan Horsky; Edward H Suh; Osman Sayan; Vimla Patel
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2015-11-05

5.  Listening and question-asking behaviors in resident and nurse handoff conversations: a prospective observational study.

Authors:  Thomas Kannampallil; Joanna Abraham
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2020-03-06       Impact factor: 4.497

  5 in total

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