
Antibiotics will soon no longer be able to cure common illnesses such as strep throat, sinusitis and middle ear infections as they have done for the last 60 years. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are increasing at a much faster rate than new antibiotics to treat them are being developed. The prescription of antibiotics for viral illnesses is a key cause of increasing bacterial resistance. Despite this fact, many children continue to receive antibiotics unnecessarily for the treatment of viral upper respiratory tract infections. Why do American physicians continue to prescribe inappropriately given the high social stakes of this action? The answer appears to lie in the fundamentally social nature of medical practice: physicians do not prescribe as the result of a clinical algorithm but prescribe in the context of a conversation with a parent and a child. Thus, physicians have a classic social dilemma which pits individual parents and children against a greater social good.This book examines parent-physician conversations in detail, showing how parents put pressure on doctors in largely covert ways, for instance in specific communication practices for explaining why they have brought their child to the doctor or answering a history-taking question. This book also shows how physicians yield to this seemingly subtle pressure evidencing that apparently small differences in wording have important consequences for diagnosis and treatment recommendations. Following parents use of these interactional practices, physicians are more likely to make concessions, alter their diagnosis or alter their treatment recommendation. This book also shows how small changes in the way physicians present their findings and recommendations can decrease parent pressure for antibiotics. This book carefully documents the important and observable link between micro social interaction and macro public health domains.
This book investigates why physicians continue to prescribe antibiotics for viral illnesses despite the global threat of antibiotic resistance, focusing on the social dynamics of the clinical encounter. Tanya Stivers, a researcher in sociolinguistics and medical interaction, utilizes detailed transcripts of parent-physician consultations to analyze how communication patterns influence medical decision-making. The author argues that the prescription process is not merely a clinical algorithm but a social negotiation where subtle linguistic cues from parents exert pressure on doctors, often leading to inappropriate antibiotic use.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in sociolinguistics and medical communication recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of language and clinical practice. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous, evidence-based look at how small linguistic choices carry significant public health consequences.
Page Count:
232
Publication Date:
2007-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190295139
ISBN-13:
9780190295134
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