Being Heard, Exerting Influence, or Knowing How to Play the Game? Expectations of Client Involvement among Social and Health Care Professionals and Clients

Contemporary social and health care services exhibit a significant movement toward increasing client involvement in their own care and in the development of services. This major cultural change represents a marked shift in the client's role from a passive patient to an active empowered agent. W...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2020-08, Vol.17 (16), p.5653
Hauptverfasser: Weiste, Elina, Käpykangas, Sari, Uusitalo, Lise-Lotte, Stevanovic, Melisa
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container_issue 16
container_start_page 5653
container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Weiste, Elina
Käpykangas, Sari
Uusitalo, Lise-Lotte
Stevanovic, Melisa
description Contemporary social and health care services exhibit a significant movement toward increasing client involvement in their own care and in the development of services. This major cultural change represents a marked shift in the client's role from a passive patient to an active empowered agent. We draw on interaction-oriented focus group research and conversation analysis to study workshop conversations in which social and health care clients and professionals discussed "client involvement". Our analysis focuses on the participants' mutually congruent or discrepant views on the topic. The professionals and clients both saw client involvement as an ideal that should be promoted. Although both participant groups considered the clients' experience of being heard a prerequisite of client involvement, the clients deviated from the professionals in that they also highlighted the need for actual decision-making power. However, when the professionals invoked the clients' responsibility for their own treatment, the clients were not eager to agree with their view. In addition, in analyzing problems of client involvement during the clients' and professionals' meta-talk about client involvement, the paper also shows how the "client involvement" rhetoric itself may, paradoxically, sometimes serve to hinder here-and-now client involvement.
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subjects Collaboration
Cultural change
Decision making
Delivery of Health Care
Focus Groups
Health care
Health Personnel
Health Services
Humans
Medical research
Motivation
Patient Participation
Professionals
Researchers
Social Work
title Being Heard, Exerting Influence, or Knowing How to Play the Game? Expectations of Client Involvement among Social and Health Care Professionals and Clients
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