Tuesday, December 17, 2013

BLOG 26: RESEARCH PAPER

Medical as a discourse community


          "Research on interaction in medical encounters has moved from a framework that assumed a static and institutional asymmetry between providers and patients" (Barton, 2000). Barton explains that research on interaction in medical encounters has moved from a framework that lacked action and lack of equality between providers (physicians) and patients. Ellen Barton focuses on, " the situated nature of two intertwined dimensions of the context of medical encounters-expertise and compliance within the interactional practices of referrals and accounts of referrals between medical professionals and families" (Barton, 2000). In this research study, I will study medical conversations shaped by a discourse community, meaning the language usage a physician (expert) uses when speaking to a patient opposed to how the physician (expert) speaks to the family. Within this research study I will focus on how the patient feels about how the physician talks to the patient versus family. Focusing if the patient complies (having compliance) with the treatment prescribed by her physician (expert) versus non-compliant with the treatment prescribed by her physician (expert) for her medical condition.
             In this research study, the relationship between Barton's study and this research study is both focus on the compliance and non-compliance of what the physician (expert) requires the patient to follow. Barton's research study is different from this research study because it will be from an adult, the patient's point of view opposed to a parental view regarding a child as the patient.
            Ellen Burton's research study focuses on, "specifically on families who have a child diagnosed with a disability, and investigates a number of settings within this experience," (Barton, 2000). Within this research study I will focus on  an adult patient with a medical condition known as Lupus, focusing on her point of view of the way the physician speaks to her (as the patient) opposed to the way the physician speaks to the patient's family. I will focus on compliance and non-compliance of the patient with the physician's requirements.
            "In medicine, compliance and non-compliance are technically defined in behavioral terms as, "the extent to which a person's behavior coincides with medical or health advice" (Barton, 2000). According to Barton, "Often-cited examples of compliance and non-compliance in the medical literature include taking medicine, attending appointments, following dietary restrictions, performing self-examinations, etc." (Barton, 2000).
            Within this research study, compliance will be defined as the patient's communication with the physician, taking the required medication and procedures that the patient undergoes every time due to her medical condition. "When patients were asked what aspect of the interaction had the most influence in increasing their compliance behavior, most stated that it was having someone take the time to talk to them, answer their questions and consider their concerns" (Barton, 2000).
            "Discourse is assumed to be designed and shaped to occur in particular sequential and social contexts" (Barton, 2000). "When physicians make a referral, their medical expertise provides them with a coherent model of the various specialties and their domains" (Barton, 2000). Within this research study the patient was referred to a Hematologist and then the Hematologist referred the patient to a Gastroenterologist, who performs Endoscopy's. Each specialist performs tasks that are within their area of expertise.
             “Non-compliance, then, seems to be a contextual dimension of major importance: its discovery affects the interaction by triggering asymmetrical dominance by the medical professional in pursuit of accepted standards of medical care for the child,” (Barton, 2000). Not only is this research study focusing on compliance, non-compliance as well. With an adult patient, who is able to make decisions on her own, there are times due to the circumstances of the medical condition; the patient is often non-compliant to certain treatments given by the physician. 
            “In the following excerpts from a parent’s account of her daughter’s hospitalization, for example, the physician probes repeatedly in interactional work that attempts to develop a reliable account,” (Barton, 2000).  In Barton’s observations, non-compliance occurred inadvertently when the child was taken off medication, removed from a psychiatric placement and not re-evaluated. The parent’s were unable to give a reliable account for the physician (expert) with enough information to make decisions about the child’s care.
            “Because of the lack of expertise displayed in the family’s accounts, this responsibility has been shifted to staff,” (Barton, 2000). In Barton’s observations, she focuses on a case when a family has a reputation for intentional non-compliance. During one of her observations with a particular appointment, a nurse tells her that, “This family is non-compliant as hell,” (Barton, 2000).  Barton’s observation regarding the family’s non-compliance was, “Problematic accounts from families known to be non-compliant, such as the family in (19) can be received in markedly asymmetrical form,” (Barton, 2000).
            Within this research study, the patient had some encounters with her physician of being non-compliant when the physician kept insisting on the patient to continue taking a certain medication for a specific treatment. In this case the patient was non-compliant because of the side effects that she was feeling from that particular medication.  According to Barton, “ … if the non-compliance may be unintentional, as in…the physicians interaction and actions become more authoritative, as the family which has displayed its lack of expertise is turned over to the clinic staff” (Barton, 2000).
Methods
            Within this research study I conducted two interviews with an adult patient with a medical condition known as Lupus and her point of view of how her physician speaks to her (as a patient) opposed to how the physician speaks to the family. I will also focus on whether the patient has compliance or non-compliance when it comes to the physician’s regimen, requirements for treatment. The two interviews that I conducted each were thirty minutes long. Asking questions regarding her medical condition and her perspective on how her medical condition changed her from the beginning of being diagnosed with the condition to how it evolved into what it is now. Focusing on when she was compliant to her physician’s requirement and when she was non-compliant as well. I also conducted an ethnographic study, which I observed the patient in a Hematologist’s office while doing her weekly blood count. The ethnographic study was twenty-five minutes long. “Ethnographic field research involves the study of groups and people as they go about their everyday lives,” (Emerson, 1995).
            In this research I will analyze the subcategories that are part of compliance and non-compliance. The subcategories that apply to compliance and non-compliance came from the interview response’s given by my subject. Each subcategory for compliance was in agreement with Barton’s research study because it focuses on communication, procedures and taking medications. The subcategories for non-compliance came from the response’s given by my subject; which focuses on side effects, I know more than the doctor and fear.  Within the interview questions and responses provided by my subject, I noticed that two set of stories stood out; which were Agency and Conflict, but each category has their own subcategories.
Presentation of Data and Analysis
            In this research study, two interviews were performed with MC (my subject) and I found within my subject’s responses that two categories appeared with subcategories that support each one. I focus on the two categories; which are compliance versus non-compliance and each subcategory is supported by the interview responses that were provided by my subject.
            Compliance:  Within the interview, my subject MC spoke about how she complies with the treatment that her physician (expert) requires her to do, such as communication, telling the physician whether or not the medication or treatment is benefiting or not regarding her medical condition.  Compliance also appeared in our interview when she spoke about procedures and appointments.
            Communication:  MC talks about how her physician wants her to try many medications to if MC is able to tolerate them or not. In the example below, MC refers to certain medications that she was either trying out or taking as “crap,” a way of pointing out to her physician that she isn’t tolerating the medication that was prescribed to her.
A: What does the doctor say when you say you won’t take that crap anymore?
MC: Sometimes he tries to give me another medication. Try this one, try this one, but the results it’s particularly the same. Pain in the stomach, sick, but he tries to always help me. Sometimes the medication works and I accept better than the last one or I reject it. It all depends on my body, if it accepts it or not. But I always try to tell him that I do or don’t do well and he helps me. I can’t say that he doesn’t when it’s not true he has always helped me. At times we become stubborn, but we move forward. But I always take the medication he gives me and I try to explain my reaction whether good or bad.
            Within the category Compliance, one of the subcategories that appeared in the interview was about being compliant in taking medications.  MC describes how she is compliant with the treatment her physician (expert) prescribes to her and her reaction to each one.
Taking Medications:
A: What medication?
MC: Ahh… it was so long ago. I took all possible type of medication for various treatments. It was cortisone, pain medication for inflammation, sleeping pills and…
A: Tell me a story when you were happy with the treatment, your physician prescribed to you?
MC: in the beginning when I first began taking the injections, what’s the name?
A: Humira
MC: Humira, I was, I thought that I got to the moment of bettering my condition, but unfortunately it only lasted about one or two months and then it went back to the beginning.
A: Describe to me more of what you mean about being happy with this treatment?
MC: Oh, because I stopped having pains, my blood levels were stabilized; my hemoglobin wasn’t that low and I was in a better state. I was able to live my life freely. I still worked. After the day of 19th of December 2012, it was when everything happened.
A: And with this treatment of the Humira, how often did you do this treatment and for how long?
MC:  It was once, one injection, every two weeks for two months. But on the second month, half way through I began feeling tired. I would become really tired especially after going up a flight of stairs, whatever little thing I would do, I felt tired. So I went to the doctors and the doctor said I can no longer take the injections because it wasn't helping, it was only harming me. And from there on, I kept going to the hospital, receiving blood transfusions.
            In the first interview I asked my subject MC, when she did not comply with the physician’s requirement, but the answer given by my subject indicated both compliance and non-compliance, as both categories appear within her response. For example:
A: Okay, Can you tell me a story, when you as a patient did not comply with the doctor’s requirement for your treatment?
MC:  No, I haven’t failed with any treatment given by the doctor. Just the Prednisone, I never liked that medication. I tried to take it, I’m not saying daily (non-compliance), but there were weeks that I would take it the full week, (compliance), but there were other weeks that it wouldn’t settle right with me.
A: Could you tell me more about your experience every time you were given a new medication to try for your treatment?
MC: If the doctor says I have to take it then I take it. But it’s the side effects of that medication that I have to see to discuss with the doctor about how I feel, if I feel well, if it’s the same thing as not taking anything and with his experience he tries to help me. Certain new situations, I never refused taking it, at times I say I don’t want it, it tastes horrible, I have stomach pains, or I’m not going to take that crap.
Another subcategory that came from the interview responses was about procedures and how she complies with the procedures that are required for her to do. Not only was this subcategory in the interview that was conducted between my subject and me, but also in my ethnographic study. In my ethnographic study, I observed my subject in a Hematologist office doing her weekly routine blood work. It’s a procedure because MC needs to check her blood count every week by a specialist (Hematologist) to make sure her hemoglobin, iron; red blood and white blood cell levels don’t drop drastically.
Procedures:
A:  Now that you mentioned that, Tell me about your experience every time you are required to go to the hospital and how it affects you every time?
MC: Every time I end up going to the hospital, it effects me  morally, physically, and mentally because it’s not one or two times, it’s various of times that I undergo the same procedure and every time I tolerate less each time.
A: Speaking about transfusions, could you explain to me how you feel every time you get iron transfusions as well as blood?
MC: When I get iron and blood, the first and second day I feel my immune system down, but little by little as days go by I begin to feel more strength, I am able to do more things around the house. And my state of being is different. Just walking is the hardest thing for me because my bones hurt me a lot still. I do have medication for pain (inflammation), but it hardly helps me.
            MC gives a response about Endoscopy’s to one of the questions asked during the interview. An Endoscopy is a procedure; it’s to look inside a person’s internal organs using an endoscope.
MC: Ahhh, it’s a critical medical condition because majority of the time I’m afraid to bleed, end up in the hospital, get blood transfusions. I need to do the treatment I need to do like go for Endoscopy’s, cauterization. All of this, I can’t live normally; I don’t have quality of life.
A: Hmmmm, How has your medical condition affect you and your family, in terms of following with what the physician recommended?
MC: Only when I do the Endoscopy, everyone wants me to automatically drink that famous solution in my mouth. Just by that there’s disagreements, one says drink it, another says drink and another says drink it, but I can’t. I have to scream and say, “Stop it, let me, my head alone.”
Non-Compliance:
            Side Effects: In the interview I asked my subject MC if there was a time that MC did not comply with her physician’s requirement.
A: Okay, can you tell me a story when you as a patient did not comply with the doctor’s requirement for your treatment?
MC: No, I haven’t failed with any treatment given by my doctor. Just the Prednisone, I never liked that medication. I tried to take it, I’m not saying daily, but there were weeks that I would take it the full week, but there were other weeks that it wouldn’t settle right with me.
In the second interview I asked MC a question about sleeping pills and why MC doesn’t like taking them.
A:  How come?
MC: I don’t like it, I never did. I feel sick with sleeping pills or relaxers. Just the state of being apathetic and not have a sense of anything. The silence is horrible.
            I know more than the doctor: In this particular case MC explains through her point of view that she may not know a lot about medicine, but she knows how she feels while taking the medication.
A: Speaking about your physician, tell me more of when you and your physician wouldn’t see things eye to eye when it comes to your condition?
MC: When I don’t agree with the doctor, neither is the doctor in agreement with my opinion; which in reality I don’t know anything about medicine, but I feel my body and system, what’s wrong. And sometimes he says it’s mentally and I say its not and he says that I have to take the medication to sleep and I hate sleeping pills.
A: And what would your doctor say when you would…
MC: He would say that I'm stubborn and I said stubborn is you because I know what I feel. I know that I have no knowledge about medicine, but you don't know everything about my body and the way I react or not. I began the treatment to a certain point, but after that point I can't do it. And at times we have our encounters because I say one thing and he says another. Because of the blood sugar levels was making me scared of eating, afraid it'll rise. He would say it was all mental, it was me being paranoid. I'm none of that, absolutely nothing
            Fear: MC talks about how she is afraid of bleeding again, going to the hospital and eating.
MC:  Afraid yes, I was afraid of eating, that part yes. I was afraid because of my diabetes. Now a day when I do Endoscopy’s, is when I feel nauseous, I don’t want to eat, but that is normal, but there was a time that I wanted to stop eating because of my diabetes. And he would say I’m stubborn that I need to eat, I know I needed to eat, but at the same time I was afraid of my diabetes.
A: Tell me a story when you weren’t happy with the treatment your physician prescribed to you?
MC: Someone with the life condition that I have is never happy because I live always being worried; if it’s today I’ll bleed or is it tomorrow my hemoglobin is low. If it’s low, everything turns to be the same. It’s transfusions, hospitals, etc. It’s a life that I have no quality at all. I can’t do certain things that other people can do, I can’t work. I have to do things much slower, yet I bleed. Many things I no longer can do, it’s difficult.
            While analyzing the interview, two sets of stories stood out; which were Agency and Conflict. These two set of stories are the main categories and within each category there are subcategories that support why these two set of stories came from. Agency is a set of stories where there is control and conflict are stories that are inner and the understanding of what is going on.  The subcategories that stood out from the interview that are part of Agency were the responses that MC gave me about having agency, when she felt she had agency, willingly to take medications, an action that made MC has asserted agency such as not eating. Or when she tried to have agency, arguing with the doctor about what she feels and dislikes when it comes to medications. Conflict subcategories focus on medicine versus side effects, side effects, and doctor’s orders versus how MC’s body feels.
Conclusion
            “Expertise and compliance are important parts of the context of medical encounters,” (Barton, 2000).  In my data, as well in Barton’s research study, supports that compliance and medical knowledge creates a certain kind of discourse, a medical discourse. In my data, the point of view of the patient is important when it comes to compliance versus non-compliance and how agency as well as conflict plays a part within a medical discourse. Within my data, as well as Barton’s research study, support the interaction between a physician (expert) as well as the patient when it comes to treating a medical condition.
Limitations
             In every data there are limitations and within my research study there were limitations compared to Barton’s research study. In my data, I only focused on the patient’s point of view regarding the way she views her medical condition and the way her physician speaks to her. Another limitation was that I only interviewed the patient, to have a more accurate analysis I would need to interview the physician. One of the limitations or differences between my data and Barton’s research study was that I focused on an adult, a female, who is able to respond for herself even though her state of being wasn’t very good. Which is different from Barton’s because she focused on a child with disability and how the compliance versus non-compliance applied to the child’s family. Within my data, the ethnographic study was limited to a Hematologist office, for a more accurate analysis I would need to observe MC in other places such as a hospital and the physician’s office. But for this research study I did have my subject MC and the nurses from the Hematologist’s office that helped me build my research study on medical discourse.


Works Cited


Barton, E. L. (2000). The interactional practices of referrals and accounts in medical discourse: expertise and compliance.
Emerson, R. M. (1995). Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes.




No comments:

Post a Comment