Discussing care decisions at the internal medicine outpatient clinic: a conversation analysis

Publication date

2022-07

Authors

Briedé, Saskia
Charldorp, Tessa CyrinaISNI 0000000392327045
Kaasjager, H.A.H.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Abstract Objective Explore how often, when and how care decisions are discussed during consultations at an internal medicine outpatient clinic, and what we can learn from these observations. Methods Qualitative analysis of 150 video-taped consultations. Consultations involving a discussion of care decisions were analyzed using conversation analysis. Results 1) Only 21 of the 150 consultations involved a discussion of care decisions; 2) As there is no destined phase for the introduction of the topic of care decisions, the topic is most often introduced at the end of the phase ‘treatment and course of the disease’; 3) A lot of interactional effort is needed to create common ground and make relevance clear with extensive justification. Hesitation markers, repairs and hypothetical talk show the precariousness of the topic. Conclusions Three dilemma’s need to be addressed: 1) a slot has to be created to introduce the topic of care decisions; 2) common ground has to be created, possibly over time; 3) the paradox of framing the topic as relevant ‘in the future’ but ‘needs to be discussed now’ needs to be attended to. Practice implications We recommend that physician training should address the three dilemmas. Future research should focus on how to do so.

Keywords

physician-patient communication, conversation analysis, care decisions, treatment limitations, outpatient clinic, communication training, patient education

Citation

Briedé, S, Charldorp, T C & Kaasjager, H A H 2022, 'Discussing care decisions at the internal medicine outpatient clinic: a conversation analysis', Patient Education and Counseling, vol. 105, no. 7, pp. 2045-2052. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2021.11.029