Kelly Matthew, Vick Judith B, McArthur Amanda, Beach Mary Catherine
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 733 N Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Department of Medicine, Duke University, 40 Duke Medicine Circle, Durham NC, 27710, USA; Durham Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation, Durham VA Health System, Durham NC, VA Medical Center (152), 508 Fulton Street, Durham, NC 27705, USA; National Clinician Scholars Program, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Sep;357:117162. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117162. Epub 2024 Jul 30.
Against Medical Advice (AMA) discharges pose significant challenges to the healthcare system, straining patient-clinician relationships while contributing to avoidable morbidity and mortality. Furthermore, though these discharges culminate in patients' departure from hospitals, their effects reverberate long after, propagated by clinician notes stored in patients' medical records. These notes capture exceptionally fraught interactions between patients and providers, describing the circumstances surrounding breakdowns in clinical relationships. Additionally, they represent just one side of complex, contentious social interactions, for in describing AMA discharges, clinician notewriters quite literally have the last word. For these reasons, notes documenting AMA discharges provide insight into the ways in which clinicians conceptualize, characterize, and propagate power differentials in the contemporary healthcare system. Here, we present a qualitative thematic analysis of 185 notes documenting AMA discharges from a large urban US medical center, interpreting note dynamics through three sociological models of power analysis: (i) the distributive model of power promulgated by Max Weber, (ii) the collectivist power model characterized by Talcott Parsons and Hannah Arendt, and (iii) structural interpretations of power developed by Michel Foucault. We argue that in documenting AMA discharges, clinicians appear to conceive of their relationship with patients in almost exclusively distributive terms, which in turn contributes to an adversarial dynamic whereby both patients and clinicians ultimately suffer disempowerment. We furthermore argue that by facilitating clinicians' recognition of power's collectivist and structural dimensions, we may help transform breakdowns in patient-clinician relationships into opportunities for collaboration.
违反医嘱(AMA)出院给医疗系统带来了重大挑战,不仅使患者与临床医生的关系紧张,还导致了可避免的发病率和死亡率。此外,尽管这些出院行为最终导致患者离开医院,但其影响在患者出院后仍会长期存在,通过保存在患者病历中的临床医生记录不断传播。这些记录捕捉了患者与医护人员之间异常紧张的互动,描述了临床关系破裂的相关情况。此外,它们仅仅代表了复杂、有争议的社会互动的一个方面,因为在描述违反医嘱出院时,撰写记录的临床医生实际上拥有最终话语权。出于这些原因,记录违反医嘱出院情况的记录为了解临床医生在当代医疗系统中如何概念化、描述和传播权力差异提供了洞见。在此,我们对美国一家大型城市医疗中心的185份记录违反医嘱出院情况的记录进行了定性主题分析,通过三种社会学权力分析模型来解读记录动态:(i)马克斯·韦伯提出的权力分配模型,(ii)塔尔科特·帕森斯和汉娜·阿伦特所描述的集体主义权力模型,以及(iii)米歇尔·福柯发展的权力结构解释。我们认为,在记录违反医嘱出院情况时,临床医生似乎几乎完全从权力分配的角度来构想他们与患者的关系,这反过来又促成了一种对抗性动态,最终患者和临床医生都会感到被剥夺权力。我们还认为,通过促使临床医生认识到权力的集体主义和结构维度,我们或许能够帮助将患者与临床医生关系的破裂转化为合作的机会。