» Articles » PMID: 28812368

How Psychiatrists Recommend Treatment and Its Relationship with Patient Uptake

Overview
Journal Health Commun
Specialty Health Services
Date 2017 Aug 17
PMID 28812368
Citations 9
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Consultations for patients with chronic mental health conditions are conceived as meetings of experts: medical and experiential, respectively. Treatment decisions, in these terms, become a joint responsibility rather than handed down ex-cathedra. One resource for constituting decisions as 'shared' is the treatment recommendation - decisional authority can be invoked through its design. There is concern that people diagnosed with schizophrenia are infrequently involved in treatment decisions. However, the methods psychiatrists actually employ remain undefined. This article advances our understanding of psychiatric practice by mapping alternative methods used by psychiatrists to recommend treatment in outpatient consultations in situ. First, we unpack the types of treatments psychiatrists recommend. Then, we ask how psychiatrists recommend treatment? Applying a novel coding taxonomy, informed by the conversation analytic principle that recommendations represent different social actions, we identify the distribution of alternative formulations for psychiatrists' recommendations (pronouncements, suggestions, proposals, and offers). We also propose one linguistic dimension, personal pronouns, on which recommending actions often depend, implicative for who is projected as 'accountable' for the decision. Finally, we examine the relationship between action type and patient uptake: is a particular type of recommendation more likely to attract acceptance/resistance from patients? And how does this relate to decisional accountability?

Citing Articles

The Role of Health Care Communication in Treatment Outcomes.

Stivers T, Tate A Annu Rev Linguist. 2024; 9:233-252.

PMID: 39450277 PMC: 11501081. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-linguistics-030521-054400.


Facilitators and Barriers to Shared Decision-Making Communication Between Latina Mothers and Pediatric Mental Healthcare Providers.

Wallace D, Hale K, Guzman L, Stein G, Jolles M, Sleath B Health Commun. 2024; 1-12.

PMID: 38982623 PMC: 11711327. DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2024.2375791.


Invoking Uncertainty: Parents' Accounts for Intrusions on Medical Authority in Pediatric Neurology.

Cox K J Health Soc Behav. 2023; 64(4):537-554.

PMID: 37864431 PMC: 10683329. DOI: 10.1177/00221465231194052.


Navigating Intercultural Medical Encounters: An Examination of Patient-Centered Communication Practices with Italian and Foreign Cancer Patients Living in Italy.

Marino F, Alby F, Zucchermaglio C, Scalisi T, Lauriola M Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(11).

PMID: 37296970 PMC: 10251865. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15113008.


Treatment decision making in psychiatry: Formulating patients' perspectives in outpatient psychiatric consultations.

Yao X, Zhang X Front Psychol. 2023; 14:1144500.

PMID: 37051608 PMC: 10083260. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1144500.


References
1.
Toerien M, Shaw R, Reuber M . Initiating decision-making in neurology consultations: 'recommending' versus 'option-listing' and the implications for medical authority. Sociol Health Illn. 2013; 35(6):873-90. DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12000. View

2.
Kushida S, Yamakawa Y . Fitting proposals to their sequential environment: a comparison of turn designs for proposing treatment in ongoing outpatient psychiatric consultations in Japan. Sociol Health Illn. 2015; 37(4):522-44. DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12204. View

3.
Angell B, Bolden G . Justifying medication decisions in mental health care: Psychiatrists' accounts for treatment recommendations. Soc Sci Med. 2015; 138:44-56. PMC: 4595152. DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.04.029. View

4.
Costello B, Roberts F . Medical recommendations as joint social practice. Health Commun. 2001; 13(3):241-60. DOI: 10.1207/S15327027HC1303_2. View

5.
Toerien M . Deferring the Decision Point: Treatment Assertions in Neurology Outpatient Consultations. Health Commun. 2017; 33(11):1355-1365. DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2017.1350912. View