Lindfors2005

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Lindfors2005
BibType ARTICLE
Key Lindfors2005
Author(s) Pirjo Lindfors, Liisa Raevaara
Title Discussing patients' drinking and eating habits in medical and homeopathic consultations
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Medical EMCA, Medical consultations, Eating Habits
Publisher
Year 2005
Language
City
Month
Journal Communication & Medicine
Volume 2
Number 2
Pages 137–150
URL Link
DOI 10.1515/come.2005.2.2.137
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

We explore the variety of practices professionals and patients use whilst discussing patients’ eating and drinking habits in general practice and in homeopathic consultations. Our aim is to show how the interaction is shaped, on the one hand, by the professionals’ theories and goals and, on the other hand, by the participants’ orientations to other contextual features. In these two fields of medicine the discussions on the patients’ lifestyle have a different role in the healing process: in general practice, drinking is considered a possible health risk, but in homeopathy, information concerning patients’ eating and drinking habits is needed for defining the patients’ idiosyncratic characteristics. This difference is indicated in the ways in which the professionals deliver their questions about patients’ lifestyles and in the ways in which the patients design their responses and the discussion develops. However, the practices used by the participants also reflect their orientation to the institution-related tasks, such as maintaining professional neutrality and being a good patient, as well as to the wider cultural norms and discourses concerning socially appropriate behavior outside the institution. We also discuss the extent to which these different orientations are consistent or inconsistent with the professionals’ theories and goals.

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