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Ascertaining patients’ understandings of their condition: a conversation analysis of contradictory norms in cancer specialist consultations
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posted on 2020-07-22, 02:52 authored by Kevin DewKevin Dew, J Barton, J Stairmand, D Sarfati, L Signal© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Patient-centred care requires patients to be active participants in decision-making in consultations. Decision-making participation requires patients to understand their condition and to be able to convey their health literacy to medical specialists they encounter. Based on conversation analysis of 18 audio-recorded consultations between cancer patients and a range of cancer care specialists, this article analyses the ways cancer specialists attempt to ascertain their patient’s understanding of their disease. Cancer specialists routinely enquire about their patient’s understanding. In doing so, they phrase enquiries in different ways, resulting in different patient responses. How questions are phrased can require patients to deal with contradictory norms in the consultation, such as the patient being competent but not assuming medical expertise, and potentially hinder patient participation. Alternatively, questions can allow patients to draw on their own experience and so facilitate greater patient involvement. Questions aimed directly at the patient’s medical understanding result in minimal or negative responses. In contrast, questions directed at what the patient has been told or has experienced, elicit longer and more in-depth responses from the patient. This analysis illuminates the co-construction of cancer specialist consultations and suggests simple ways in which patient involvement in the consultation can be facilitated.
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Dew, K., Barton, J., Stairmand, J., Sarfati, D. & Signal, L. (2019). Ascertaining patients’ understandings of their condition: a conversation analysis of contradictory norms in cancer specialist consultations. Health Sociology Review, 28(3), 229-244. https://doi.org/10.1080/14461242.2019.1633945Publisher DOI
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Health Sociology ReviewVolume
28Issue
3Publication date
2019-09-02Pagination
229-244Publisher
Informa UK LimitedPublication status
PublishedOnline publication date
2019-07-29ISSN
1446-1242eISSN
1839-3551Language
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