| Literature DB >> 33660573 |
Olaug S Lian1, Sarah Nettleton2, Åge Wifstad1, Christopher Dowrick3.
Abstract
In this article, we qualitatively explore the manner and style in which medical encounters between patients and general practitioners (GPs) are mutually conducted, as exhibited in situ in 10 consultations sourced from the One in a Million: Primary Care Consultations Archive in England. Our main objectives are to identify interactional modes, to develop a classification of these modes, and to uncover how modes emerge and shift both within and between consultations. Deploying an interactional perspective and a thematic and narrative analysis of consultation transcripts, we identified five distinctive interactional modes: question and answer (Q&A) mode, lecture mode, probabilistic mode, competition mode, and narrative mode. Most modes are GP-led. Mode shifts within consultations generally map on to the chronology of the medical encounter. Patient-led narrative modes are initiated by patients themselves, which demonstrates agency. Our classification of modes derives from complete naturally occurring consultations, covering a wide range of symptoms, and may have general applicability.Entities:
Keywords: England; doctor–patient interaction; medical encounter; narrative analysis; sociology; uncertainty
Year: 2021 PMID: 33660573 PMCID: PMC8114434 DOI: 10.1177/1049732321993790
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Health Res ISSN: 1049-7323
“One in a Million” Data Archive (Barnes, 2017; Jepson et al., 2017).
| Type of study | A prospective observational study containing an initial data set, collected for future research and teaching purposes, and archived at the data repository of the University of Bristol, UK ( |
| Data material | 327 film- or audio-recorded and verbatim transcribed naturally occurring GP consultations collected between 2014 and 2015 in 12 general practices in and around the City of Bristol. Consultations take place between adult patients (aged 18–96) consulting with 23 different GPs. A total of 300 patients (90%) consented to data access by “other researchers, subject to specific ethical approval”. The data set also includes patient records (from current and subsequent related consultations, collected three months after the consultation), longitudinal patient pre- and postconsultation survey data (self-administered immediately before and after the consultation), sociodemographic data of patients and GPs, and GP practice data. |
| Funding | The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) School for Primary Care Research (208) and the South West GP Trust. |
| Ethics | Ethically approved by South West–Central Bristol Research Ethics Committee (REC reference: 14/SW/0112). |
Note. GP = general practitioner.
Direct Questions Raised by GPs to Patients (n = 212).
| GPs Ask Patients Direct Questions About Current Symptoms by | Total Number of Questions |
|---|---|
| | 1,040 |
| | 508 |
| | 436 |
Note. GP = general practitioner.
Direct Questions Raised by Patients to General Practitioners (n = 212).
| Patients Ask GPs Direct Questions About | Total Number of Questions |
|---|---|
| What is wrong with them, or what the cause of their illness might be | 50 |
| What the best treatment would be | 41 |
Total Number of Uncertainty and Certainty Words Used by GPs and Patients (n = 212).
| Markers of Uncertainty and Certainty | GPs | Patients |
|---|---|---|
| 2,396 | 1,475 | |
| 188 | 189 |
Note. GP = general practitioner.
Total Number of Explicit Expressions of Skepticism From GPs and Patients (n = 212).
| Explicit Skepticism Expressed in Relation to Each Other’s Views on | GPs | Patients |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis | 1 | 1 |
| Etiological explanations | 13 | 2 |
| Suggestions of medical treatment | 37 | 113 |
Note. GP = general practitioner.
Patient Utterances (n = 212).
| Patients | Total Number of Utterances |
|---|---|
| – Describe social issues related to work, family life, and social networks | 911 |
| – Describe actions taken to manage their illness, including lifestyle | 2,341 |
| – Express worries | 160 |
| – Suggest interpretations of their condition, including causal explanations | 121 |
| – Suggest medical treatment | 121 |
Modes of Interaction.
| Mode | Main Characteristics | Presence | Agenda-Setting |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Q&A mode | Questions and answers, particularly GPs asking patient to concretize their symptoms during the initial phase, and during physical examinations but also in relation to medical treatment | All 10 consultations | GP-led |
| 2. Lecture mode | Communication of information, most pronounced when GPs elucidate results of technological tests and physical examinations, explain etiological issues, and present treatment options | All 10 consultations | GP-led |
| 3. Probabilistic mode | Medical uncertainty expressed through probabilistic talk, mainly in relation to etiology, treatment options, and prognosis | All 10 consultations | GP-led |
| 4. Competition mode | Patients try to set the agenda or express their views, but meet competition, appears unsystematically for all consultation aspects | Half of the consultations | Mixed |
| 5. Narrative mode | Patients describe problems and their implications for life at work and home, and in relation to treatment options, in long stretches | Two consultations | Patient-led |
Note. GP = general practitioner.