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Legitimacy in clinical practice: How patients with chronic muscle pain position themselves in the physiotherapy encounter
Author(s) -
Ahlsen Birgitte,
Mengshoel Anne Marit,
Engebretsen Eivind
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
journal of evaluation in clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.737
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2753
pISSN - 1356-1294
DOI - 10.1111/jep.13768
Subject(s) - legitimacy , medicine , compliance (psychology) , physical therapy , health care , object (grammar) , position (finance) , disease , physical medicine and rehabilitation , psychology , nursing , social psychology , political science , law , linguistics , philosophy , finance , pathology , politics , economics
Abstract Rationale, Aims & Objective Patients who seek healthcare for long‐lasting pain and symptoms without a detectable disease must put in extra work to be taken seriously and gain recognition as a patient. However, little is known about how patients' help‐seeking is performed in clinical practice. The aim of the current study was to gain knowledge about the ways in which patients with chronic muscle pain position themselves as help‐seekers during their first physiotherapy encounter. Method The material consisted of observation of 10 therapist‐patient clinical interviews in primary care clinics and was analyzed using perspectives from discourse theory and the concept of positioning. Results The study highlights how the patients positioned themselves in continually shift between two discourses: that of disease (considering the patient as an object under study) and that of illness (positioning the patient as an active and participating but also troubled individual). This shifting of position was negotiated in interaction with the therapist: patients' opportunities to position themselves within the discourse of illness were limited by therapists' focus on facts and causal relationships within the discourse of disease. Conclusion Patients with chronic muscle pain seek to establish their legitimacy through the positivistic discourse of medicine and also through their compliance with the moral discourse of the patient as someone active, willing to take responsibility for their own health—and therefore worthy of treatment.