Fatigante Marilena, Zucchermaglio Cristina, Alby Francesca
Department of Social and Developmental Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2021 Jun 3;12:664747. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.664747. eCollection 2021.
Companions to medical visits have been alternatively viewed as members who "support" or "inhibit" and "interfere" with the doctor-patient interaction. One way of looking at the companions' contribution to medical visits is by coding roles or functions of their communicative behavior. Our paper aims at reconsidering these findings and analyzing how the companion participation is a local and sequential accomplishment, changing from time to time in the consultation. The paper relies upon an overall collection of 58 videorecordings of first oncological visits. Visits were conducted in two different hospitals, one of which a University hospital, and by different oncologists, including both senior professionals and (in the second setting) medical students in oncology. Visits were fully transcribed according to the Jeffersonian conventions and authors examined the transcripts and video according to the methodology of Conversation Analysis. The aim of the paper focused on how patient's companions orient and contribute to the accomplishment of the different aims and activities at different stages of the visit as an institutional speech event. The multimodal analysis of turns and actions (such as, gaze shifts, prosodic modulation, bodily arrangements), and the close examination of the sequential and temporal arrangements of companions' and their co-participants' turns revealed that companions finely attune to the multiparty framework of the encounter and the institutional constraints that govern the oncological first visit. Overall, results show two relevant features: that companions act as to preserve the doctor-patient interaction and to maintain the patient as the most responsible and legitimate agent in the interaction; that companions' contributions are relevant to the activities that sequentially unfold at different stages in the consultation (e.g., history taking, problem presentation, treatment recommendation etc.). The study complements earlier findings on the companion's roles, showing how these are highly mobile, multimodal and multiparty accomplishments, and they are tied to the specific contingencies of the visit. The results solicit to consider the value of multimodal analysis in understanding the complexity of multiparty communication in medical setting, and make it usable also in medical education.
陪同就医者在医患互动中,有时被视为“支持”的一方,有时又被视为“阻碍”和“干扰”的一方。看待陪同者对就医过程贡献的一种方式是对其交际行为的角色或功能进行编码。我们的论文旨在重新审视这些研究结果,并分析陪同者的参与是如何在诊疗过程中随时发生变化的一种局部且依序完成的行为。本文基于对58次肿瘤初诊视频记录的全面收集。这些就诊在两家不同的医院进行,其中一家是大学医院,由不同的肿瘤医生进行诊疗,包括资深专业人员以及(在第二种情况下)肿瘤专业的医学生。就诊过程按照杰斐逊惯例进行了完整转录,作者根据会话分析方法对转录文本和视频进行了研究。本文的目的聚焦于患者的陪同者如何在作为一种机构性言语活动的就诊不同阶段,定位并促成不同目标和活动的完成。对轮流发言和行为(如目光转移、韵律调节、身体姿势)的多模态分析,以及对陪同者及其共同参与者轮流发言的顺序和时间安排的仔细研究表明,陪同者能够很好地适应诊疗互动的多方框架以及规范肿瘤初诊的机构性限制。总体而言,研究结果显示出两个相关特征:陪同者的行为旨在维护医患互动,并使患者在互动中保持最有责任且合法的主体地位;陪同者的贡献与诊疗过程中不同阶段依次展开的活动(如病史采集、问题陈述、治疗建议等)相关。该研究补充了早期关于陪同者角色的研究结果,展示了这些角色是如何具有高度灵活性、多模态性和多方协作性的成就,并且它们与就诊的特定偶然情况相关联。研究结果促使我们考虑多模态分析在理解医疗环境中多方沟通复杂性方面的价值,并使其在医学教育中也能发挥作用。