Clinical reasoning, clinical trials and risky drinkers in everyday primary care: a qualitative study of British general practitioners
Clinical reasoning, clinical trials and risky drinkers in everyday primary care: a qualitative study of British general practitioners
Alcohol and other substance misuse problems have historically been seen as refractory in primary care, but in the past 20 years Brief Interventions have come to be seen as an important and effective response to a range of problems around 'risky drinking'. Proponents of brief interventions have argued that these interventions are best accomplished in the community, but that primary health care professionals resist using them. This qualitative study investigated responses to alcohol problems in a maximum variation sample of 28 primary care professionals in and around a northern English city. We found clinicians negotiating alcohol problems using interactional techniques that integrated elements of brief interventions, and which fitted these to the interactional and temporal order of clinical encounters and physician-patient relationships in primary care. Central to these accounts was the problem of finding an interactional solution that drew together notions of what was both ethically and practically possible in any given encounter
alcohol problems, brief interventions, evidence-based medicine, general practice, physician-patient relationship, qualitative methods
387-397
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Rapley, Tim
eb4364d5-c016-403a-969a-aae1fd35a97c
Kaner, Eileen
dd32baba-7237-4a2c-ae71-9c411af36ff2
August 2006
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Rapley, Tim
eb4364d5-c016-403a-969a-aae1fd35a97c
Kaner, Eileen
dd32baba-7237-4a2c-ae71-9c411af36ff2
May, Carl, Rapley, Tim and Kaner, Eileen
(2006)
Clinical reasoning, clinical trials and risky drinkers in everyday primary care: a qualitative study of British general practitioners.
Addiction Research & Theory, 14 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/16066350600609883).
Abstract
Alcohol and other substance misuse problems have historically been seen as refractory in primary care, but in the past 20 years Brief Interventions have come to be seen as an important and effective response to a range of problems around 'risky drinking'. Proponents of brief interventions have argued that these interventions are best accomplished in the community, but that primary health care professionals resist using them. This qualitative study investigated responses to alcohol problems in a maximum variation sample of 28 primary care professionals in and around a northern English city. We found clinicians negotiating alcohol problems using interactional techniques that integrated elements of brief interventions, and which fitted these to the interactional and temporal order of clinical encounters and physician-patient relationships in primary care. Central to these accounts was the problem of finding an interactional solution that drew together notions of what was both ethically and practically possible in any given encounter
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Published date: August 2006
Keywords:
alcohol problems, brief interventions, evidence-based medicine, general practice, physician-patient relationship, qualitative methods
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Local EPrints ID: 163539
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/163539
ISSN: 1606-6359
PURE UUID: 37d09a10-36a7-4d6e-b6a6-b36624f451d8
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Date deposited: 13 Sep 2010 11:44
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:05
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Contributors
Author:
Carl May
Author:
Tim Rapley
Author:
Eileen Kaner
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