Timmermans2024

From emcawiki
Revision as of 13:32, 10 June 2024 by KeithCox (talk | contribs) (BibTeX auto import 2024-06-10 02:32:28)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Timmermans2024
BibType ARTICLE
Key Timmermans2024
Author(s) Stefan Timmermans, Tanya Stivers, Keith Cox, Amanda McArthur
Title Patients in pain: How treatment plan formulations shape patient response
Editor(s)
Tag(s) Medical EMCA, conversation analysis, doctor-patient communication, opioids, social interaction, treatment negotiation
Publisher
Year 2024
Language
City
Month
Journal Communication and Medicine
Volume 19
Number 2
Pages 137–151
URL Link
DOI 10.1558/cam.22881
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

Communication research on medical interaction has made inroads into how patients shape treatment outcomes as well as how physician presentation of treatment can shape patient acceptance or resistance. Pain is the number one reason patients visit primary care physicians. The overprescription of opioids for chronic pain remains a major public health problem in the US and constitutes a risk factor for opioid addiction. In this study, we investigated how primary care physicians communicate recommendations for alternatives to opioid treatments for patients with self-reported moderate to serious chronic musculoskeletal pain and examined the relationship between communication strategies and patient resistance to non-opioid treatment recommendations. We relied on a convenience sample of 35 video recorded visits in which musculoskeletal pain was reported as moderate to severe (or over 5 on the pain scale). Using a combined approach of abductive analysis, conversation analysis and descriptive statistics, we show that physicians are less likely to face patient resistance when they frame their non-opioid pain treatment recommendation as novel and present the treatment as concrete and tailored to the patient’s problem.

Notes