Negotiating uncertainty in clinical encounters: A narrative exploration of naturally occurring primary care consultations

Based on a narrative analysis of 20 naturally occurring clinical consultations between general practitioners and patients in England, sourced from the One in a million data archive, we explore how they conceptualize and negotiate medical and existential uncertainty. To capture the interactional elem...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2021-12, Vol.291, p.114467-114467, Article 114467
Hauptverfasser: Lian, Olaug S., Nettleton, Sarah, Wifstad, Åge, Dowrick, Christopher
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container_title Social science & medicine (1982)
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creator Lian, Olaug S.
Nettleton, Sarah
Wifstad, Åge
Dowrick, Christopher
description Based on a narrative analysis of 20 naturally occurring clinical consultations between general practitioners and patients in England, sourced from the One in a million data archive, we explore how they conceptualize and negotiate medical and existential uncertainty. To capture the interactional element, which is often overlooked, three consultations receive special attention. While exploring the ongoing dynamics of the moment-to-moment realization of negotiations, we relate their actions to the institutionalized positions of doctor and patient. Situating their negotiations in the sociocultural context in which their interaction is embedded reveals how consultations unfold as a result of communication between two different positions in a normatively structured system. When uncertainty prevails, both patients and GPs mainly conceptualize uncertainty indirectly. By conceptualizing uncertainty indirectly and in a depersonalized manner, GPs manage to safeguard against clinical errors without compromising their authority and credibility. Contrary to medical uncertainty, which is continuously discussed, existential uncertainty usually recedes in the background. However, as our consultations unfold it becomes evident that medical and existential dimensions of uncertainty are inextricably linked. By acknowledging that clinical uncertainty is not only an epistemic concern but also an existential one, existential aspects may usefully rise to the surface. •During clinical consultations, medical and existential uncertainty intersect.•Medical uncertainty is continuously discussed, existential uncertainty rarely so.•Both patients and GPs mainly conceptualize uncertainty indirectly.•GPs often present indirect expressions of uncertainty in a depersonalized manner.•Patients deviate more from traditional doctor-patient roles than GPs.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114467
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source MEDLINE; NORA - Norwegian Open Research Archives; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Clinical consultations
Clinical Decision-Making
Communication
Concept formation
Credibility
Critical incidents
Doctor-patient interaction
Family physicians
General practice
General Practitioners
Humans
Medical culture
Medicine
Narrative analysis
Narratives
Negotiating
Negotiation
Patients
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Primary care
Primary Health Care
Referral and Consultation
Role of patient and doctor
Samfunnsvitenskap: 200
Social sciences: 200
Sociocultural factors
Sociology
Sociology: 220
Sosiologi: 220
Uncertainty
Usikkerhet / Uncertainty
VDP
title Negotiating uncertainty in clinical encounters: A narrative exploration of naturally occurring primary care consultations
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