Difference between revisions of "Izumi2014"

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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|Author(s)=Hiroaki Izumi
 
|Author(s)=Hiroaki Izumi
|Title=Local Division of Labor in Rehabilitation Team Conferences
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|Title=Local division of labor in rehabilitation team conferences
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Membership Categorization Analysis; Conversation analysis; Ethnography; Deviant case analysis; Japanese;
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Membership Categorization Analysis; Conversation Analysis; Ethnography; Deviant case analysis; Japanese;
 
|Key=Izumi2014
 
|Key=Izumi2014
 
|Year=2014
 
|Year=2014

Latest revision as of 08:42, 11 December 2019

Izumi2014
BibType ARTICLE
Key Izumi2014
Author(s) Hiroaki Izumi
Title Local division of labor in rehabilitation team conferences
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Ethnomethodology, Membership Categorization Analysis, Conversation Analysis, Ethnography, Deviant case analysis, Japanese
Publisher
Year 2014
Language
City
Month
Journal Human Studies
Volume 37
Number 3
Pages 393–430
URL Link
DOI 10.1007/s10746-014-9315-3
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This study investigates rehabilitation team members’ interactive accomplishments of their domains of work and responsibility in rehabilitation team conferences in Japan. A combination of membership categorization analysis and sequential analysis is adopted to systematically illustrate the situated productions of professional sense-making practices. Analysis focuses on the segment in which a physician asks a series of questions regarding a patient’s functional status and disability coded in the functional assessment record (FAR). A close examination of data shows that a physician does not always choose a respondent with his or her gaze when asking a question because s/he is continuously reading the FAR displayed on a computer screen. Despite this, a physician’s mention of a topic generates a professional’s domain of work and responsibility in a local division of labor which is used by members to assume who the relevant categorial respondent is. Further, members demonstrate these assumptions by shifting their gazes toward the computer screen, back to the document on the desk, and turning toward co-participants, thus embodying professional roles and responsibilities in situ. This study utilizes the analyst’s ethnographic understanding of the routines and division of labor at the rehabilitation ward as a resource to explicate professional sense-making practices, thus utilizing Garfinkel’s ethnomethodological studies of work. Together with sequential and categorial resources offered by Sacks, this study elucidates inferences and normative expectations which rehabilitation team members bring together to reproduce the endogenous logic of rehabilitation culture in actual occasions of the institutional life.

Notes