Parry2005a

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Parry2005a
BibType ARTICLE
Key Parry2005a
Author(s) Ruth Parry
Title A video analysis of how physiotherapists communicate with patients about errors of performance: Insights for practice and policy
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Medical EMCA, Rehabilitation, Physiotherapy, Conversation Analysis, Medical recommendations
Publisher
Year 2005
Language English
City
Month
Journal Physiotherapy
Volume 91
Number 4
Pages 204–214
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.physio.2005.05.004
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Objectives: To describe and elucidate skilled practices by which physiotherapists communicate with patients about problems of ongoing or recent performance of physical treatment activities; to offer a sociological perspective on this area of practice; to examine relations between actual communication practice and official (Chartered Society of Physiotherapy) recommendations; to explore problems associated with formulating standards pertaining to communication and suggest how these might be addressed.

Design: Video recordings of physiotherapy treatment sessions (n = 74) were analysed using conversation analysis—an observational, inductive, social science methodology.

Setting: Inpatient rehabilitation units in four English hospitals.

Participants: Twenty-one stroke patients aged 52–86 years and 10 senior physiotherapists with 3–23 years of postqualification experience.

Results and conclusions: A variety of practices were identified. Managing shortcomings of performance often involves identifying and/or correcting the problem in a manner that deals sensitively with the negative connotations of physical non-competence. Characteristics of these practices include indirectness and ambiguity. As such, they do not conform to some official recommendations. However, good interactional reasons underlie the observed patterns. It is suggested that official guidance should acknowledge the complexity of communication and its measurement. Recommendations should be based upon a thorough understanding of the interactional tasks and practices entailed in physiotherapy. Recommendations should be explicitly tentative and refer to broad principles. By elucidating specific communication strategies, their consequences and the considerations that underlie them, conversation analytic research into physiotherapy communication has the potential to inform guidelines, and provide resources for developing and teaching communication skills.

Notes