This was a study of physicians' narratives regarding their medical experiences
with children with persistent medically unexplained physical illness. The goal was to
better understand those attitudes and beliefs that are involved in the construction of
meaning regarding the child's symptoms of illness or pain. The study also sought to learn
more about physicians' early life experiences with health and illness and their potential to
shape diagnostic thinking and treatment. Ten physician participants were interviewed
using an open-ended, semistructured interview methodology. Interviews were analyzed
using an alternative narrative approach described by Mishler (1986, 1991) to identify key
themes within and across interviews for comparative analysis. The subjective experience
and dynamic discourse between interviewer and participant were also analyzed (Mishler,
1991; Paget, 1983).
Four key themes emerged: (1) the experience of certainty and uncertainty; (2)
physician search for restitution; (3) the path to truth and the construction of the
physician's illness narrative; and (4) the parallel anxiety between physician and parent.
Findings suggested a "stages of training" model or developmental career theme
associated with the ways in which physicians make meaning of persistent medically
unexplained illness or pain in the child.
Implications for diagnosis and treatment include the possibility that the nature of
the relationship between physicians and parents-- particularly the ability to negotiate
trust, intimacy, and power--may lead to a hidden and collaborative meaning making of
symptoms that occurs in exclusion, of the child, Certain early life experiences of the
physician may also be brought to bear in the medical encounter with parent and child.
Physicians would benefit from training in neutrality and negotiation of therapeutic goals
with parents of sick children, as well as training to enhance self-awareness and
understanding of the ways in which alliances and conflicts with patients and parents may
occur as a result of family of origin issues.
Date of Award | 2008 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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- child somatization
- physician narrative
- physician attitude
- physician belief
- physician stages of training
- physician uncertainty
RULING OUT THE 'BAD THINGS:' HOW PHYSICIANS MAKE MEANING OF PERSISTENT UNEXPLAINED ILLNESS IN CHILDREN
VARGA, S. (Author). 2008
Student thesis: PhD