Difference between revisions of "Robinson2003"

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{{BibEntry
 
{{BibEntry
 +
|BibType=ARTICLE
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|Author(s)=Jeffrey D. Robinson
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|Title=An interactional structure of medical activities during acute visits and its implications for patients' participation.
 +
|Keyword(s)=California;Communication;Family Practice;Humans;Medical EMCA;Office Visits;Patient Participation;Physician-Patient Relations;Sociometric Techniques;Tape Recording
 
|Key=Robinson2003
 
|Key=Robinson2003
|Title=An interactional structure of medical activities during acute visits and its implications for patients' participation.
 
|Author(s)=Jeffrey D. Robinson
 
|Keyword(s)=California,Communication,Family Practice,Humans,Medical EMCA,Office Visits,Patient Participation,Physician-Patient Relations,Sociometric Techniques,Tape Recording
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
 
|Year=2003
 
|Year=2003
 
|Month=Jan
 
|Month=Jan

Revision as of 07:53, 7 July 2014

Robinson2003
BibType ARTICLE
Key Robinson2003
Author(s) Jeffrey D. Robinson
Title An interactional structure of medical activities during acute visits and its implications for patients' participation.
Editor(s)
Tag(s)
Publisher
Year 2003
Language
City
Month Jan
Journal Health communication
Volume 15
Number 1
Pages 27–57
URL Link
DOI 10.1207/S15327027HC1501_2
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Within the context of primary-care, physician-patient visits, researchers have documented both patients' low levels of communicative participation (e.g., question asking) and the advantages of such participation to healthcare (e.g., improved physical health and satisfaction). Prior research has offered a variety of partial, non-exclusive explanations for patients' low levels of participation. This article investigates one underdeveloped source of explanation: the organization of interaction itself. This article argues that the establishment of new medical problems in acute visits makes relevant an organized structure of social action that is composed of an ordered series of medical activities: establishing the reason for the visit, physicians gathering additional information (i.e., history taking and physical examination), physicians delivering diagnoses, and physicians providing treatment recommendations. This project of medical activity shapes physicians' and patients' understanding and production of communicative behavior. Using the method of conversation analysis, and analyzing transcribed audio- and videotape data of actual acute visits, this article describes and grounds this project and discusses its implications for research, theory, and improvement on patient participation.

Notes