This article compares two practices for initiating treatment decision-making, evident in audio-recorded consultations between a neurologist and 13 patients in two hospital clinics in the UK. We call these ‘recommending’ and ‘option-listing’. The former entails making a proposal to do something; the latter entails the construction of a list of options. Using conversation analysis (CA), we illustrate each, showing that the distinction between these two practices matters to participants. Our analysis centres on two distinctions between the practices: epistemic differences and differences in the slots each creates for the patient’s response. Considering the implications of our findings for understanding medical authority, we argue that option-l...
Over the past decade, the ideal model of shared decision-making has been increasingly promoted as th...
Recommendations can be implied by asserting some generalisation about a treatment’s benefit without ...
Objectives: To determine how often patients are given choice in neurology outpatient consultations a...
This article compares two practices for initiating treatment decision-making, evident in audio-recor...
Background: The NHS is committed to offering patients more choice. Yet even within the NHS, the mean...
The UK's Royal College of Surgeons (2016) has argued that health professionals must replace a 'pater...
The normative view that patients should be offered more choice both within and beyond the UK's Natio...
Background: We report follow-on research from our previous qualitative analysis of how neurologists ...
The normative view that patients should be offered more choice both within and beyond the UK's Natio...
Using conversation analysis (CA), we studied conversations between one United Kingdom-based epilepsy...
Background We report follow-on research from our previous qualitative analysis of how neurologists o...
Using conversation analysis, this paper investigates when patients exercise their right to refuse tr...
Although shared decision making (SDM) in general practice continues to be promoted as a highly desir...
Using conversation analysis (CA), we studied conversations between one United Kingdom-based epilepsy...
Abstract Background Proven benefits of Shared Decision Making (SDM) include improved patient knowled...
Over the past decade, the ideal model of shared decision-making has been increasingly promoted as th...
Recommendations can be implied by asserting some generalisation about a treatment’s benefit without ...
Objectives: To determine how often patients are given choice in neurology outpatient consultations a...
This article compares two practices for initiating treatment decision-making, evident in audio-recor...
Background: The NHS is committed to offering patients more choice. Yet even within the NHS, the mean...
The UK's Royal College of Surgeons (2016) has argued that health professionals must replace a 'pater...
The normative view that patients should be offered more choice both within and beyond the UK's Natio...
Background: We report follow-on research from our previous qualitative analysis of how neurologists ...
The normative view that patients should be offered more choice both within and beyond the UK's Natio...
Using conversation analysis (CA), we studied conversations between one United Kingdom-based epilepsy...
Background We report follow-on research from our previous qualitative analysis of how neurologists o...
Using conversation analysis, this paper investigates when patients exercise their right to refuse tr...
Although shared decision making (SDM) in general practice continues to be promoted as a highly desir...
Using conversation analysis (CA), we studied conversations between one United Kingdom-based epilepsy...
Abstract Background Proven benefits of Shared Decision Making (SDM) include improved patient knowled...
Over the past decade, the ideal model of shared decision-making has been increasingly promoted as th...
Recommendations can be implied by asserting some generalisation about a treatment’s benefit without ...
Objectives: To determine how often patients are given choice in neurology outpatient consultations a...