The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis

Title: The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based Critical Discourse Analysis approach Aim: Through use of real time interactions between healthcare workers and patients in an acute hospital setting this study sets out to investigate how health care workers help or hinder patients to e...

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Main Author: Slater, Nigel G.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29253/
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author Slater, Nigel G.
author_facet Slater, Nigel G.
author_sort Slater, Nigel G.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Title: The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based Critical Discourse Analysis approach Aim: Through use of real time interactions between healthcare workers and patients in an acute hospital setting this study sets out to investigate how health care workers help or hinder patients to express their pain during the pain assessment process. Background: Pain has long been an issue for investigation and there are a multitude of assessment options available. However, despite using an assessment framework, the ability of patients to use language to express pain has been shown to be more problematic than might be first considered. This study sets out to investigate how both patients and healthcare workers use language in this assessment process. Method: Real time data was recorded in an acute hospital in-patient setting. The use of corpus based critical discourse analysis enabled specific instances of word use and phrases related to pain experience to be identified and analysed. Findings: Two key areas were identified in the analysis of these interactions. The first area related to the traditional aspects of pain assessment relating to terminology used, location and function of pain. The second more important area related to how healthcare professionals presented a certain ‘mentality’ about the assessment process in how they appeared to be patient centred but through the use of brevity of interaction and trivialisation of the issues actually presented an opposite view. Conclusion: The primary conclusion is that although healthcare workers apply pain assessment processes, their use of language can show that they are both patient-centred and have their own motivations and agendas.
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spelling nottingham-292532025-02-28T11:35:47Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29253/ The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis Slater, Nigel G. Title: The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based Critical Discourse Analysis approach Aim: Through use of real time interactions between healthcare workers and patients in an acute hospital setting this study sets out to investigate how health care workers help or hinder patients to express their pain during the pain assessment process. Background: Pain has long been an issue for investigation and there are a multitude of assessment options available. However, despite using an assessment framework, the ability of patients to use language to express pain has been shown to be more problematic than might be first considered. This study sets out to investigate how both patients and healthcare workers use language in this assessment process. Method: Real time data was recorded in an acute hospital in-patient setting. The use of corpus based critical discourse analysis enabled specific instances of word use and phrases related to pain experience to be identified and analysed. Findings: Two key areas were identified in the analysis of these interactions. The first area related to the traditional aspects of pain assessment relating to terminology used, location and function of pain. The second more important area related to how healthcare professionals presented a certain ‘mentality’ about the assessment process in how they appeared to be patient centred but through the use of brevity of interaction and trivialisation of the issues actually presented an opposite view. Conclusion: The primary conclusion is that although healthcare workers apply pain assessment processes, their use of language can show that they are both patient-centred and have their own motivations and agendas. 2015-12-10 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29253/1/The%20Language%20of%20Acute%20Pain.pdf Slater, Nigel G. (2015) The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis. DHSci thesis, University of Nottingham. Pain assessment Critical Discourse Analysis Corpus-based approach Health language
spellingShingle Pain assessment
Critical Discourse Analysis
Corpus-based approach
Health language
Slater, Nigel G.
The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
title The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
title_full The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
title_fullStr The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
title_full_unstemmed The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
title_short The language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
title_sort language of acute pain assessment: a corpus-based critical discourse analysis
topic Pain assessment
Critical Discourse Analysis
Corpus-based approach
Health language
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29253/