‘Unilateral’ decision making and patient participation in primary care

Authors

  • Taru Ijäs-Kallio University of Tampere
  • Johanna Ruusuvuori Finnish Institute of Occupational Health University of Tampere
  • Anssi Peräkylä University of Helsinki

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v8i2.145

Keywords:

primary care, upper respiratory tract infection, doctor-patient interaction, patient participation, decision making, conversation analysis

Abstract

Using conversation analysis as a method, we examine patients’ responses to doctors’ treatment decision deliveries in Finnish primary care consultations for upper respiratory tract infection. We investigate decision-making sequences that are initiated by doctors’ ‘unilateral’ decision delivery (Collins et al. 2005). In line with Collins et al., we see the doctors’ decision deliveries as unilateral when they are offered as suggestions, recommendations or conclusions that make relevant patients’ acceptance of the decision rather than their further contributions to the decision. In contrast, more ‘bilateral’ decision making encourages and is dependent in part on patient’s contributions, too (Collins et al. 2005). We examine how patients respond to unilaterally made decisions and how they participate in and contribute to the outcome of the decision-making process. Within minimal responses patients approve the doctor’s unilateral agency in decision making whereas within two types of extended responses patients voice their own perspectives. 1) In positive responses they appraise the doctor’s decision as appropriate; 2) in other instances, patients may challenge the decision with an extended response that initiates a negotiation on the decision. We suggest that, firstly, unilateral decision making may be collaboratively maintained in consultations and that, secondly, patients have means for challenging it.

Author Biographies

  • Taru Ijäs-Kallio, University of Tampere
    Taru Ijäs-Kallio wrote her doctoral dissertation on diagnostic and treatment decision-making in Finnish primary care consultations. Her research interests include interactional constituents of patient participation and professional-client relationship in health care.
  • Johanna Ruusuvuori, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health University of Tampere
    Johanna Ruusuvuori is a senior researcher in the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health. Her research interests include medical interaction, emotion in social interaction, changing professional-client relations in various contexts of health care, and the role of facial expression in face-to-face interaction.
  • Anssi Peräkylä, University of Helsinki
    Anssi Peräkylä, PhD is a professor of sociology in the Department of Sociology, University of Helsinki. His current research interests include interaction in medical consultations and psychotherapy. He is also studying facial expressions in emotional interaction and interaction and emotion between a baby and a care-taker.

Published

2012-06-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Ijäs-Kallio, T., Ruusuvuori, J., & Peräkylä, A. (2012). ‘Unilateral’ decision making and patient participation in primary care. Communication and Medicine, 8(2), 145-155. https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v8i2.145