Perakyla1998

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Perakyla1998
BibType ARTICLE
Key Perakyla1998
Author(s) Anssi Peräkylä
Title Authority and accountability: the delivery of diagnosis in primary health care
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Medical EMCA, Conversation Analysis, Authority, Accountability, Diagnosis
Publisher
Year 1998
Language English
City
Month
Journal Social Psychology Quarterly
Volume 61
Number 4
Pages 301–320
URL Link
DOI 10.2307/2787032
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Drawing on a database of more than 100 videotaped and transcribed medical consultations, this paper analyzes the balance between authority and accountability in delivering diagnostic news in interactions between doctors and patients in Finnish primary health care. Three designs of diagnostic turns are identified: (1) In plain assertions, the doctor states the name of the illness in a classical proposition format: "It is X." (2) In diagnostic turns incorporating inexplicit references to the evidence, the doctor usually uses evidential verb constructions, such as "It seems to be X." (3) In turns that explicate the evidence, the doctor describes specific observations as evidence for the diagnostic statement. Through the coordination of the design and placement of their diagnostic turns, the doctors treat themselves as accountable for the evidential basis of the diagnosis, and thereby do not claim unconditional authority in relation to the patients. The observations reported here make it possible to specify Parsons' and Freidson's classical formulations concerning doctors' authority.

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