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Healthcare professionals’ assertions and women’s responses during labour: A conversation analytic study of data from One born every minute
Institution:1. Division of Midwifery, School of Health Sciences, Floor 12, Tower Building, University Park, University of Nottingham NG7 2RD UK;2. Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX UK;1. University of Groningen, Center for Language and Cognition, Oude kijk in ‘t Jatstraat 26, Groningen 9712 EK, the Netherland;2. NHL Stenden Hogeschool, University of Applied Sciences, Rengerslaan 10, Leeuwarden 8917 DD, the Netherland;3. Health Communication Research Unit, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:ObjectiveCommunication during labour is consequential for women’s experience yet analyses of situated labour-ward interaction are rare. This study demonstrates the value of explicating the interactional practices used to initiate ‘decisions’ during labour.MethodsInteractions between 26 labouring women, their birth partners and HCPs were transcribed from the British television programme, One Born Every Minute. Conversation analysis was used to examine how decisions were initiated and accomplished in interaction.FindingsHCPs initiate decision-making using interactional practices that vary the ‘optionality’ afforded labouring women in the responsive turn. Our focus here is on the minimisation of optionality through ‘assertions’. An ‘assertive’ turn-design (e.g. ‘we need to…’) conveys strong expectation of agreement. HCPs assert decisions in contexts of risk but also in contexts of routine activities. Labouring women tend to acquiesce to assertions.ConclusionThe expectation of agreement set up by an assertive initiating turn can reduce women’s opportunities to participate in shared decision-making (SDM).Practice implicationsWhen decisions are asserted by HCPs there is a possible dissonance between the tenets of SDM in British health policy and what occurs in situ. This highlights an educational need for HCPs in how best to afford labouring women more optionality, particularly in low-risk contexts.
Keywords:Conversation analysis  Medical interaction  Shared decision-making  Childbirth
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