Literature DB >> 24770958

The Potential of the Imitation Game Method in Exploring Healthcare Professionals' Understanding of the Lived Experiences and Practical Challenges of Chronically Ill Patients.

Rik Wehrens1.   

Abstract

This paper explores the potential and relevance of an innovative sociological research method known as the Imitation Game for research in health care. Whilst this method and its potential have until recently only been explored within sociology, there are many interesting and promising facets that may render this approach fruitful within the health care field, most notably to questions about the experiential knowledge or 'expertise' of chronically ill patients (and the extent to which different health care professionals are able to understand this experiential knowledge). The Imitation Game can be especially useful because it provides a way to map this experiential knowledge more systematically, without falling in the dual trap of either over-relying on in-depth, but highly specific phenomenological 'insider'-approaches that are hard to generalize, or, alternatively, problematically reducing the rich life-worlds of patients to a set of indicators in a questionnaire. The main focus of this paper is theoretical and conceptual: explaining the Imitation Game method, discussing its usefulness in the health care domain, and exploring the ways in which the approach can be utilized for chronic illness care. The paper presents both a conceptual and empirical exploration of how the Imitation Game method and its underlying theoretical concepts of 'contributory expertise' and 'interactional expertise' can be transferred from the sociological realm to the field of health care, what kinds of insights can be gained from the method, which methodological issues it may raise, and what potentially fruitful research routes can be explored. I argue that the Imitation Game can be thought of as a 'social learning experiment' that simultaneously enables the participants to learn from each other's perspectives, allows researchers to explore exciting new possibilities, and also offers the tools to intervene in the practice that is being studied.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 24770958     DOI: 10.1007/s10728-014-0273-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Anal        ISSN: 1065-3058


  22 in total

Review 1.  Patient-provider communication in chronic illness: a health promotion window of opportunity.

Authors:  Sally Thorne
Journal:  Fam Community Health       Date:  2006 Jan-Mar

Review 2.  Belief, knowledge and expertise: the emergence of the lay expert in medical sociology.

Authors:  Lindsay Prior
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2003

3.  The experiential knowledge of patients: a new resource for biomedical research?

Authors:  J Francisca Caron-Flinterman; Jacqueline E W Broerse; Joske F G Bunders
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2004-12-21       Impact factor: 4.634

4.  Qualitative research on chronic illness: a commentary on method and conceptual development.

Authors:  P Conrad
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 4.634

5.  The expert patient: Illness as practice.

Authors:  Andrew Edgar
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2005

6.  My death nearing its future: a Heideggerian hermeneutical analysis of the lived experience of persons with chronic illness.

Authors:  C Gullickson
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  1993-09       Impact factor: 3.187

7.  Attitudes toward patient expertise in chronic illness.

Authors:  S E Thorne; K Ternulf Nyhlin; B L Paterson
Journal:  Int J Nurs Stud       Date:  2000-08       Impact factor: 5.837

8.  The context of health care communication in chronic illness.

Authors:  Sally E Thorne; Susan R Harris; Karen Mahoney; Andrea Con; Liza McGuinness
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2004-09

9.  Illness careers: the chronic illness experience.

Authors:  B Price
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 3.187

10.  Patient and public involvement in chronic illness: beyond the expert patient.

Authors:  Trisha Greenhalgh
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2009-02-17
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  2 in total

1.  Perils of Professionalization: Chronicling a Crisis and Renewing the Potential of Healthcare Management.

Authors:  Nathan Gerard
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2019-12

2.  Understanding each other in the medical encounter: Exploring therapists' and patients' understanding of each other's experiential knowledge through the Imitation Game.

Authors:  Rik Wehrens; Bethany Hipple Walters
Journal:  Health (London)       Date:  2017-08-03
  2 in total

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