1st Edition

Partnership for Health Building Relationships Between Women and Health Caregivers

    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the 1960s, feminists voiced their outrage about the health care system in the United States which routinely discriminated against women and, in so doing, literally jeopardized their health and well-being. Over a decade later, women's health advocates still stressed the need for reform of this male-dominated institution because of the on-going threat to the health of American women. In the 1990s, nearly 40 years after women began their fight for quality and equitable treatment from the medical profession, women unfortunately continue to confront problems on numerous levels including discrimination in medical research and in the availability of insurance and health care providers. Most alarming, however, is the fact that women today--like women in the '60s and before--lack information, understanding, and adequate diagnoses and treatment from their health caregivers.

    This book extends from a program of research on women's health issues by the authors. More than 150 audio-taped, naturally occurring interactions between health caregivers and their female patients from three different health care settings--as well as ethnographic field notes in three additional settings which provide health care to women-- constitute the data for this investigation. They explore the consequentiality of relational issues during women's health care encounters and examine how health care participants save face, enact roles, co-construct their encounters, and accomplish the objective of education and medical care.

    Unlike earlier works, this study utilizes an extensive data collection derived directly from hundreds of interactions between health care providers and their patients, as opposed to surveys or case studies of singular practitioners. The authors examine the data in light of insights from a variety of theoretical perspectives and are committed to exploring the implication that medical encounters are collaboratively managed by both patients and caregivers. Given these theoretical and empirical contributions, the authors believe this book will advance present understanding in the areas of health and relational communication, women's health care, gender issues in communication, conversation analysis, discourse processes, and institutional talk.

    Contents: Partnership for Health: An Introduction. The Consequentiality of Relational Dynamics. Co-Accomplishment of Relational Goals. The Co-Accomplishment of Educational Goals. The Co-Accomplishment of Medical Goals. Partnership for Health: Continuing the Dialogue. Appendices: Description of Data. Summary of Transcription Notations.

    Biography

    Christina S. Beck

    "This book is an important contribution to our understanding of how medical encounters are co-constructed by patients and caregivers. The primary contribution of this insightful book lies in its capacity to enable readers to think about health care interaction in new ways. This should be 'required reading' for patients, practitioners, scholars, and health educators, although readers should not expect a traditional 'how-to' book. Readers will...discover thoughtful commentary, theoretically sound suggestions, and a new paradigm for thinking about interaction in all of its complexity...the authors of this book provide essential information for practitioners and patients alike who share the common goal of achieving the best health care possible."
    Journal of Health Communication