On practices of 'good doctoring': reconsidering the relationship between provider roles and patient adherence
- 1 May 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Sociology of Health & Illness
- Vol. 27 (4) , 421-447
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9566.2005.00450.x
Abstract
Questions pertaining to patient adherence and provider roles are part of the classical repertoires in sociological and health services research. While extensive research programmes consider why patients do not follow medical advice, less is known about how practitioners assess patient adherence. Similarly, there has been much work on provider roles changing with the organisation of healthcare, but less attention to the ways providers conceptualise, choose and strategically enact practices in the course of their work. Using data from a year-long ethnographic study of two diabetes clinics, I examine some of the stances medical practitioners actively choose and enact in their treatment of diabetes patients - educators, detectives, negotiators, salesmen, cheerleaders and policemen - and how they tailor their actions to specific patients in order to maximise their adherence to treatment regimens. Findings suggest that the notions of 'patient adherence' and 'physician roles' are conceptually broader and more fluid than what is captured in existing literature, and this rigidity potentially impairs our ability to learn more about the everyday practices of medical work.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE INFLUENCE OF CLINIC ORGANIZATIONAL FEATURES ON PROVIDERS’ ASSESSMENTS OF PATIENT ADHERENCE TO TREATMENT REGIMENSPublished by Emerald Publishing ,2005
- Framing the doctor‐patient relationship in chronic illness: a comparative study of general practitioners’ accountsSociology of Health & Illness, 2004
- Towards generous constraint: freedom and coercion in a French addiction treatmentSociology of Health & Illness, 2002
- Doctor–patient communication about drugs: the evidence for shared decision makingPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Doing Attributions in Medical Interaction: Patients' Explanations for Illness and Doctors' ResponsesSocial Psychology Quarterly, 1998
- Authority and Accountability: The Delivery of Diagnosis in Primary Health CareSocial Psychology Quarterly, 1998
- Experience of Hypoglycemia Among Insulin Dependent Diabetics and its Impact on the FamilySociology of Health & Illness, 1997
- Shared decision-making in the medical encounter: What does it mean? (or it takes at least two to tango)Social Science & Medicine, 1997
- The dilemma of seeking urgent care: Asthma episodes and emergency service useSocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- On Interests and their Transformation: Enrolment and Counter-EnrolmentSocial Studies of Science, 1982