Routine, ceremony, or drama: an exploratory field study of the primary care clinical encounter.
Publication/Presentation Date
3-1-1992
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Practicing family physicians often find family systems theory and the biopsychosocial model attractive, but have difficulties applying them in a busy office practice.
METHODS: Two family physicians in a four-person group practice were identified as "exemplars" at managing daily office practice. A collaborative, qualitative methodology was used to explore their strategy. A series of semistructured key informant interviews with the two physicians and the head nurse identified themes later clarified using ethnoscience interviewing techniques. The resultant clinical encounter typology and decision-making taxonomy were evaluated using participant observation and key informant review. The final results were compared with the literature on physician-patient relationships.
RESULTS: Three clinical encounter types were identified. "Routines" were simple, single, and brief visits in which a contractual style and the biomedical model were used. "Ceremonies" were linked rituals that invoked a covenantal style. "Dramas" were a series of visits concerning situations of conflict and emotion and included psychosocial problems. The family was often convened for dramas. Determination of the presenting concern, the trigger for coming, the patient request, the illness prototype, and the type of communication allowed recognition of the clinical encounter type.
CONCLUSIONS: Identifying a clinical encounter as a routine, ceremony, or drama may help family physicians integrate family systems concepts into their busy office practices. These findings have numerous implications for future research, clinical practice, and teaching.
Volume
34
Issue
3
First Page
289
Last Page
296
ISSN
0094-3509
Published In/Presented At
Miller W. L. (1992). Routine, ceremony, or drama: an exploratory field study of the primary care clinical encounter. The Journal of family practice, 34(3), 289–296.
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
1541955
Department(s)
Department of Family Medicine
Document Type
Article