Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication

This study examines how professional identities are enacted in discourse; how clinicians convey their professional expertise and navigate the asymmetries that occur between expert and lay speakers in healthcare dyads. Utilising an innovative mixed-methods approach that combines corpus linguistics an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Emerson, Tristan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65893/
_version_ 1848800279533715456
author Emerson, Tristan
author_facet Emerson, Tristan
author_sort Emerson, Tristan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study examines how professional identities are enacted in discourse; how clinicians convey their professional expertise and navigate the asymmetries that occur between expert and lay speakers in healthcare dyads. Utilising an innovative mixed-methods approach that combines corpus linguistics and discursive pragmatics with ethnography, two distinct healthcare corpora are analysed: The simulated consultations of a pedagogic training programme for general practice trainees, and the real-life consultations of primary care- based clinical pharmacists – a novel professional role that has not yet seen examination of its communicative practices. Analysis of the two datasets identifies that the GP trainees enact a performative certainty characterised by a disposition to state what ‘is’ within consultations, through realis moods, epistemic stances and commentary over contemporaneous states of affairs. Asymmetry is navigated by the trainees via recurrent strategies such as implicatures and wh-interrogative constructions previously identified as ‘invitations to input’ (Emerson et al. 2020). Examination of the clinical pharmacy data illustrates the clinical pharmacists’ utilisation of transactional irrealis constructions (characterised as ‘emphatic front staging’) to provide discursive evidence of work being concurrently undertaken, and to be undertaken in the future, for patient-centric purposes. The analysis argues that these formulations also operationalise a significant identity component, by dialogizing the remit of the new CP role and its alignment to the wider healthcare institution. Analysis of both datasets also considers how the meso-level, contextual detail apparent in each corpus effects the individual clinician’s identity performance. In line with the commitment to the collaborative, applied linguistics methodology taken, the thesis makes a number of recommendations for applied professional practice based upon the findings.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:49:02Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-65893
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:49:02Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-658932025-02-28T15:12:54Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65893/ Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication Emerson, Tristan This study examines how professional identities are enacted in discourse; how clinicians convey their professional expertise and navigate the asymmetries that occur between expert and lay speakers in healthcare dyads. Utilising an innovative mixed-methods approach that combines corpus linguistics and discursive pragmatics with ethnography, two distinct healthcare corpora are analysed: The simulated consultations of a pedagogic training programme for general practice trainees, and the real-life consultations of primary care- based clinical pharmacists – a novel professional role that has not yet seen examination of its communicative practices. Analysis of the two datasets identifies that the GP trainees enact a performative certainty characterised by a disposition to state what ‘is’ within consultations, through realis moods, epistemic stances and commentary over contemporaneous states of affairs. Asymmetry is navigated by the trainees via recurrent strategies such as implicatures and wh-interrogative constructions previously identified as ‘invitations to input’ (Emerson et al. 2020). Examination of the clinical pharmacy data illustrates the clinical pharmacists’ utilisation of transactional irrealis constructions (characterised as ‘emphatic front staging’) to provide discursive evidence of work being concurrently undertaken, and to be undertaken in the future, for patient-centric purposes. The analysis argues that these formulations also operationalise a significant identity component, by dialogizing the remit of the new CP role and its alignment to the wider healthcare institution. Analysis of both datasets also considers how the meso-level, contextual detail apparent in each corpus effects the individual clinician’s identity performance. In line with the commitment to the collaborative, applied linguistics methodology taken, the thesis makes a number of recommendations for applied professional practice based upon the findings. 2021-12-08 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65893/1/TE%20Full%20Thesis%20V2.pdf Emerson, Tristan (2021) Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Healthcare communication medical communication applied linguistics discourse corpus linguistics pragmatics doctor patient interaction simulation professional communication identity
spellingShingle Healthcare communication
medical communication
applied linguistics
discourse
corpus linguistics
pragmatics
doctor patient interaction
simulation
professional communication
identity
Emerson, Tristan
Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
title Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
title_full Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
title_fullStr Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
title_full_unstemmed Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
title_short Discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
title_sort discourse and professional identities in healthcare communication
topic Healthcare communication
medical communication
applied linguistics
discourse
corpus linguistics
pragmatics
doctor patient interaction
simulation
professional communication
identity
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65893/