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Abstract
Background
There
is an assumption that there is a similarity between surgeon-patient and
primary care consultations. Yet, surgeon communication has had far less
analytic attention than its primary care counterparts. Therefore, this
assumption of similarity (and the proposition here of dissimilarity) has
yet to be evidenced through detailed interactional analysis.
Methods
Conversation
analysis (CA) is a methodology used to understand both mundane and
institutional interactions. Using CA, we have developed an understanding
of surgeon-patient interactions in outpatient clinic settings in New
Zealand. Rather than attempting to determine what ‘bad’ communication
is, we describe and analyse what occurs routinely in surgeon-patient
consultations, particularly how these interactions are built up by both
patient and doctor.
Results
This
research shows that while surgeon-patient consultations share some
similarities to the overall structure of primary care consultations,
there are two unique structures that occur in surgical consultations.
These structures follow a logical progression of activities and are
influenced by the type of visit (referred versus follow-up).
Discussion
This
article summarizes the first comprehensive description of the overall
interactional structure of surgeon-patient consultations. It
demonstrates that surgeon-patient consultations are structurally
distinct from primary care consultations. This key finding has
implications for surgeon-specific research and education, highlighting
the need to question current assumptions in communication training and
in clinical practice.
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