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. 2013 Jun;54(2):221-40.
doi: 10.1177/0022146513487379.

Patient disclosure of medical misdeeds

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Patient disclosure of medical misdeeds

Clara Bergen et al. J Health Soc Behav. 2013 Jun.

Abstract

Modern patients walk a tightrope between respecting medical authority and acting as knowledgeable advocates regarding health issues, with the agency and responsibilities that come with this. This article uses conversation analysis to explore this balance in relation to patient disclosures of medical misdeeds in video-recorded primary care medical visits (e.g., taking another's prescription medication or failing to adhere to a healthy lifestyle or prescription regimen). We focus on patient-initiated disclosures. We show that disclosures are used (1) where patients are seeking physician assessment of their behavior, (2) where patients are proposing the etiology of a health problem, and (3) where patients are lobbying for a particular treatment outcome. We argue that disclosures of medical misdeeds are an important but understudied domain of conduct in which patients show awareness of their own agency over, and responsibility for, their healthcare and respect for the physician's medical authority.

Keywords: conversation analysis; doctor-patient communication; medical authority; medical sociology; patient agency; physician-patient interaction; treatment negotiation.

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