The Missing Voice in Interdisciplinary Communication
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- case report
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Health Research
- Vol. 3 (1) , 74-90
- https://doi.org/10.1177/104973239300300105
Abstract
The research problem investigated in this article emerged from a year-long ethnographic study of the interdisciplinary process of teams evaluating children for mental retardation/developmental disabilities. The researchers noticed that when a discipline was not present at team meetings, others attempted to speak for it. This article examines the team process and case consequences of such a "missing voice." Data collected through participant observation and videotaping were triangulated with transcripts, written and audiovisual records, and an interview with the missing team member. This process revealed a trail of ambiguous findings and uncertainty on the part of team members of disciplines related to that of the missing member. The "missing" member identified the knowledge, assessment skills, and theoretical perspective she could have contributed if consulted. The findings demonstrate that (a) team members bring differing knowledge and observational perspectives and (b) team deliberations appear to be a function of who is present and what is negotiated.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- "I Beg to Differ"Published by Taylor & Francis ,1990
- The Social Worker Joins The TeamSocial Work in Health Care, 1990
- Interactive Frames and Knowledge Schemas in Interaction: Examples from a Medical Examination/InterviewSocial Psychology Quarterly, 1987
- Medical professionals and parents: A linguistic analysis of communication across contextsLanguage in Society, 1986
- Naturalistic inquiryInternational Journal of Intercultural Relations, 1985
- The role of language and the language of role in institutional decision makingLanguage in Society, 1983
- Research on Teaching as a Linguistic Process: A State of the ArtReview of Research in Education, 1983
- Politics of Interprofessional Collaboration: Challenge to AdvocacySocial Casework, 1981
- The Interprofessional Team as a Small GroupPublished by Taylor & Francis ,1975