Rhodes Penny, Langdon Mark, Rowley Emma, Wright John, Small Neil
Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, United Kingdom.
Qual Health Res. 2006 Mar;16(3):353-76. doi: 10.1177/1049732305282396.
The authors examine the interaction between nurses and patients with type 2 diabetes during routine consultations in primary care settings in the United Kingdom. Through preconsultation interviews, the authors identified the patients' expectations. The article draws on videotaped consultations with 25 patients with type 2 diabetes. Using conversation analysis, the authors examine the use of a rigid agenda, imposed via a computerized checklist, and consider how far this is able to suppress the patient's agenda. They consider the potential impact for the patient and the factors that might encourage the clinician, and the nurse specifically, to adopt a narrowly task-based approach to the consultation. They identify two potentially conflicting strands within contemporary diabetes care, patient-centered practice and an emphasis on biomedical audit, and suggest that achievement of the former might be compromised by the demands of the latter.
作者们研究了在英国初级医疗环境中进行常规会诊时护士与2型糖尿病患者之间的互动情况。通过会诊前访谈,作者们明确了患者的期望。本文借鉴了对25名2型糖尿病患者会诊的录像资料。作者们运用对话分析方法,研究了通过计算机化检查表强制实施的严格议程的使用情况,并考量其在多大程度上能够压制患者的议程。他们思考了这对患者的潜在影响以及可能促使临床医生,尤其是护士,在会诊中采取狭义任务导向型方法的因素。他们指出当代糖尿病护理中存在两个潜在冲突的方面,即以患者为中心的实践和对生物医学审计的强调,并认为前者的实现可能会受到后者要求的影响。