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How Hospitalized Older Adults and Physicians Negotiate Plan-of-Care Decisions during Daily Rounds

The purpose of this study is to explore how older adults and physicians negotiate the plan of care during daily rounds in the hospital setting. We audio-recorded 40 physician-patient interactions during daily rounds in a small teaching hospital. We analyzed the data using conversation analysis, a qu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Health communication 2023-04, Vol.38 (4), p.681-694
Main Authors: Pecanac, Kristen E., LeSage, Emily, Stephens, Elizabeth
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The purpose of this study is to explore how older adults and physicians negotiate the plan of care during daily rounds in the hospital setting. We audio-recorded 40 physician-patient interactions during daily rounds in a small teaching hospital. We analyzed the data using conversation analysis, a qualitative method that examines the turns-of-talk during interactions. We focused the analysis on how physicians introduced the plan of care and how the plan of care was subsequently negotiated with the patient. Physicians often introduced the plan in two different ways that have a persuasive design: leading with evidence and medical expertise or, for sensitive topics in which the plan could be disagreeable, using preplan sequences to delicately introduce the plan of care and assess patient response. Patients negotiated the plan of care by displaying resistance, both passively and actively. Despite patients sharing their evidence for their preferred plan of care in resisting the physician's plan, physicians often closed the negotiation by reorienting to a different aspect of the plan of care.
ISSN:1041-0236
1532-7027
DOI:10.1080/10410236.2021.1967549