“I’m not the doctor; I’m just the patient”: Patient agency and shared decision-making in naturally occurring primary care consultations
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24375Date
2021-10-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Methods: Narrative analysis of verbatim transcripts of 22 naturally occurring consultations, sourced from a corpus of 212 consultations between general practitioners and patients in England. After thematically coding the whole dataset, we selected 22 consultations with particularly engaged patients for in-depth analysis.
Results: Patients oppose further actions more often than they propose actions, and they oppose more directly than they propose. When they explain why they propose and oppose something, they reveal their values. Patients’ role-performance changes throughout the consultations.
Conclusion: Assertive patients claim – and probably also achieve – most influence when they oppose actions directly and elaborate why. Patients display ambiguous role-expectations. In final concluding stages of decision-making processes, patients usually defer to GPs’ authority. Practice implications: Clinicians should be attentive to the ways in which patients want to engage in decision-making throughout the whole consultation, with awareness of normative dimensions of both process and content, and the ways in which patient’s actions are constrained by their institutional position.