Pakistan Armed Forces Medical Journal (Dec 2020)

POWER SHARING IN MEDICAL CONSULTATIONS

  • Ayesha Junaid,
  • Muhammad Shaban Rafi,
  • Najm Us Saqib Khan,
  • Junaid Sarfraz Khan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70, no. 6
pp. 1756 – 1764

Abstract

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Objective: To examine the management of power by doctors in medical consultations. The power is defined here as a dialogic, egalitarian, and patient-centered. Study Design: Qualitative study. Place and Duration of Study: Out-patient departments of Mayo Hospital, Lahore, Pakistan, from Nov 2019 for two weeks. Methodology: The data were collected through in-depth interviews and observations from outpatient departments of Mayo Hospital. Bourdieu's Social Practice Theory and Fairclough’s theory of Power and Language were used as a theoretical framework in the community of practice, for the interpretation of the qualitative data sets. Results: The interpretations of relational power by doctors and patients surface three themes: Power, Power and Solidarity, and Solidarity. Although power-sharing is the modern rhetoric, it is hardly conceptualized in the selected hospital. Conclusion: With a proliferation of patient-centered approach of the medical profession, power-sharing with patients might perpetuate dissatisfaction among the participants.

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