Knowing patients as persons: Senior and Junior GPs explore a professional resource
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8490Date
2013-09-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
As part of a research project exploring inter-professional communication in Norwegian healthcare, junior and senior general
practitioners (GPs) participated in focus group interviews regarding the medical relevance of acquiring and sharing
knowledge about their patients as persons. The transcripts were interpreted using phenomenological- hermeneutical and
discourse analysis. Both GP groups expressed concern over the lack of emphasis on person-oriented knowledge in the
healthcare system and pointed out factors which interfere with the documentation and sharing of such knowledge. Senior
GPs attributed more importance to person-related knowledge than did junior GPs while displaying considerably more verbal
authority and professional independence. The seniors’ discourse was dominated by ethical considerations while juniors
focused more on legal arguments. Our study documents how, with experience, GPs’ reflections and decision-making
become more oriented towards solutions adapted to each patient’s life circumstances. To conceptualize expert GPs’
purposeful application of person-centered knowledge, we propose the term "situated gaze.”
Publisher
The European Society for Person Centered HealthcareCitation
European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare 1(2013) s. 88-99Metadata
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