Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis

This thesis reports an ethnomethodological, conversation analytic study of communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists. The study sought to describe and explicate patterns of conduct by which therapists and patients communicate about treatment activities during therapy sessions. Anal...

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Main Author: Parry, Ruth
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28413/
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author Parry, Ruth
author_facet Parry, Ruth
author_sort Parry, Ruth
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis reports an ethnomethodological, conversation analytic study of communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists. The study sought to describe and explicate patterns of conduct by which therapists and patients communicate about treatment activities during therapy sessions. Analysis included a comparison between practices observed in the data and current published recommendations for good practice. The data consist of 74 treatment sessions that were video-recorded in four English hospitals. The 21 patient participants were undergoing inpatient rehabilitation for stroke. Most were recorded on four occasions over a two-week period. Their disabilities varied, but all could speak and understand at least short sentences in English. Each of the ten therapist participants was employed at senior level and used treatment approaches that are prevalent in the UK. Analysis involved repeated viewing of data and transcription of talk and body movement. It focused on three areas that emerged as central to physiotherapy interactions: The nature of treatment activities and of participation in them Achievement (success and failure) in these activities Reasons, goals and purposes underlying them Consistent with conversation analytic studies in other settings, we found that each communication practice in physiotherapy has a range of interactional effects, and that these are locally constructed and accomplished. Therefore, rather than generating �blanket prescriptions? about �good? and �bad? interactional practices, our study contributes to enhancing practitioners? understanding of the contingencies and underlying orientations that shape communication conduct, and raising their awareness of the effects of different means of achieving various interactional tasks in physiotherapy. We argue that these understandings can contribute to improvements in the practice and training of physiotherapy communication. Our study contributes to ethnomethodological and conversation analytic knowledge regarding methodological strategies for researching lay professional interactions, and to sociological understandings about the organisation of conduct in clinical interactions, particularly the role of orientations to managing physical incompetence and its implications.
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English
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spelling nottingham-284132020-05-08T12:45:26Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28413/ Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis Parry, Ruth This thesis reports an ethnomethodological, conversation analytic study of communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists. The study sought to describe and explicate patterns of conduct by which therapists and patients communicate about treatment activities during therapy sessions. Analysis included a comparison between practices observed in the data and current published recommendations for good practice. The data consist of 74 treatment sessions that were video-recorded in four English hospitals. The 21 patient participants were undergoing inpatient rehabilitation for stroke. Most were recorded on four occasions over a two-week period. Their disabilities varied, but all could speak and understand at least short sentences in English. Each of the ten therapist participants was employed at senior level and used treatment approaches that are prevalent in the UK. Analysis involved repeated viewing of data and transcription of talk and body movement. It focused on three areas that emerged as central to physiotherapy interactions: The nature of treatment activities and of participation in them Achievement (success and failure) in these activities Reasons, goals and purposes underlying them Consistent with conversation analytic studies in other settings, we found that each communication practice in physiotherapy has a range of interactional effects, and that these are locally constructed and accomplished. Therefore, rather than generating �blanket prescriptions? about �good? and �bad? interactional practices, our study contributes to enhancing practitioners? understanding of the contingencies and underlying orientations that shape communication conduct, and raising their awareness of the effects of different means of achieving various interactional tasks in physiotherapy. We argue that these understandings can contribute to improvements in the practice and training of physiotherapy communication. Our study contributes to ethnomethodological and conversation analytic knowledge regarding methodological strategies for researching lay professional interactions, and to sociological understandings about the organisation of conduct in clinical interactions, particularly the role of orientations to managing physical incompetence and its implications. 2002-07-10 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by_nc https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28413/1/Parry%20PhD%20Vol1_part%201%20and%202.pdf application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28413/2/Parry%20PhD%20Vol2_transcripts.pdf Parry, Ruth (2002) Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Conversation analysis Communication in physical therapy Physiotherapist and patient relations Stroke rehabilitation
spellingShingle Conversation analysis
Communication in physical therapy
Physiotherapist and patient relations
Stroke rehabilitation
Parry, Ruth
Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
title Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
title_full Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
title_fullStr Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
title_full_unstemmed Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
title_short Communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
title_sort communication between stroke patients and physiotherapists: a conversation analysis
topic Conversation analysis
Communication in physical therapy
Physiotherapist and patient relations
Stroke rehabilitation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28413/