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On structures in medical interactions : a conversation analytic study of general practice consultationsCampion, Peter David January 1994 (has links)
This thesis addresses from within the research paradigm of Conversation Analysis (CA) the question "How are interactions between patients and general practitioners organised? ". CA is a relatively recent tradition within the "interpretative paradigm" of sociology, growing out of the ethnomethodology of Garfinkel. The thesis first reviews the relevant literature of CA and medical interactions, and critically discusses the methodology. The empirical analysis used naturally occurring consultations in British general practice, video-recorded in five practices, involving 14 doctors, and about 50 hours of recording, made between 1987 and 1992. Recordings were observed first in an unmotivated way, to note occurrences of interesting interactional phenomena. Objects for further study were copied onto secondary "collection" tapes, which were then examined in depth, and transcribed in detail using conventions developed within CA. The analyses described here are: the use of time in the consultation; the impact of medical records on the interaction; prescribing and associated talk; the phenomenon of "facilitation", how doctors appear to enable patients to talk; patient-initiated questions, and rejection of patients' ideas by doctors; and finally the use of the word "we". The aim was to describe and explore, but not necessarily to explain, although in describing the mechanism of interaction in these areas of activity, empirical evidence is advanced for particular explanations. The phenomenon of patients raising new topics at the end of consultations is described, with its interactional implications: the "by-the-way" phenomenon is explored and documented. Case-notes are seen to contribute to consultations in a complex way, and like talk, are both context-dependent and context-forming. Utterances such as "right", "uhuh", "mmhm" which appear on the face of it to be facilitatory, can be the reverse. The phenomenon of dispreference for disagreements by patients is re-examined, and contexts in which patients do disagree are explored. Doctors' rejections of patients' ideas are described, and implications for teaching about the consultation are drawn. Finally the various ways in which the word "we" is used by doctors are described and critically appraised, in the context of a philosophical understanding of "intersubjectivity". The study adds to the body of transcribed interactions drawn from general practice, and sheds some light on ways in which general practitioners and patients structure their consultations. It has implications for the way medical students learn how to consult, and for how research on the consultation can be conducted. Conversation analysis is shown to be a powerful qualitative analytic methodology, relevant to the study of medical interactions.
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Plurality and synthesis in contemporary Chinese medicineScheid, Volker January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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The child, first and always? Aspects of children's health care interestsVaughan-Thomas, Non January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Mathematical models for progression of breast cancer and evaluation of breast cancer screeningChen, Hsiu-Hsi January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Health and hospital service use in the population aged 75 and over : a longitudinal study of a community sample in Cambridge cityChi, Lin-Yang January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Controlling psychiatric inpatients : the response of staff to inpatient misdemeanourCrichton, John Hugh McDiarmid January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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The evaluation of aspects of neonatal paediatric servicesCampbell, D. M. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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The geography of HIV infection and AIDS in England and Wales : implications for health service planningKennelly, Joanne Maria January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Implicit religion and health careGrainger, Roger January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Haven of change : the history of a secure psychiatric hospitalWatson, William January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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