Literature DB >> 28349619

Bridging the discursive gap between lay and medical discourse in care coordination.

Rod Sheaff1, Joyce Halliday1, Richard Byng2, John Øvretveit3, Mark Exworthy4, Stephen Peckham5, Sheena Asthana1.   

Abstract

For older people with multiple chronic co-morbidities, strategies to coordinate care depend heavily on information exchange. We analyse the information-sharing difficulties arising from differences between patients' oral narratives and medical sense-making; and whether a modified form of 'narrative medicine' might mitigate them. We systematically compared 66 general practice patients' own narratives of their health problems and care with the contents of their clinical records. Data were collected in England during 2012-13. Patients' narratives differed from the accounts in their medical record, especially the summary, regarding mobility, falls, mental health, physical frailty and its consequences for accessing care. Parts of patients' viewpoints were never formally encoded, parts were lost when clinicians de-coded it, parts supplemented, and sometimes the whole narrative was re-framed. These discrepancies appeared to restrict the patient record's utility even for GPs for the purposes of risk stratification, case management, knowing what other care-givers were doing, and coordinating care. The findings suggest combining the encoding/decoding theory of communication with inter-subjectivity and intentionality theories as sequential, complementary elements of an explanation of how patients communicate with clinicians. A revised form of narrative medicine might mitigate the discursive gap and its consequences for care coordination.
© 2017 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Foundation for SHIL.

Entities:  

Keywords:  England; care coordination; electronic patient record; general practice; informational continuity of care; narrative medicine; patient discourse

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28349619     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12553

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  8 in total

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6.  Older multimorbid patients' experiences on integration of services: a systematic review.

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7.  Unwelcome memento mori or best clinical practice? Community end of life anticipatory medication prescribing practice: A mixed methods observational study.

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Review 8.  What does integrated care mean from an older person's perspective? A scoping review.

Authors:  Michael T Lawless; Amy Marshall; Manasi Murthy Mittinty; Gillian Harvey
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  8 in total

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