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Considering mono- and multilingual interactions on a continuum: an analysis of interactions in medical settings

Authors :
Hohenstein, C
Lévy-Tödter, M
Bigi, Sarah Francesca Maria
Grazia Rossi, Maria
Sarah Bigi (ORCID:0000-0003-0506-6140)
Hohenstein, C
Lévy-Tödter, M
Bigi, Sarah Francesca Maria
Grazia Rossi, Maria
Sarah Bigi (ORCID:0000-0003-0506-6140)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Changing geo-political scenarios, especially in Europe, Northern Africa and the Middle East, are displacing populations and reshaping societies. In this context, the provision of health care becomes even more challenging as the cultural and linguistic gaps add challenges to the highly complex interactions taking place within clinical settings. In this contribution, we analyze the main issues regarding effective communication in multilingual medical settings and propose to adopt a theoretical framework that allows to consider mono- and multi-lingual settings on a continuum, thus offering homogeneous tools for the analysis of misunderstandings and ineffective communication. We propose, first, to consider doctor-patient interactions by using the concept of activity type. We argue that, from this perspective, the most challenging aspect of this kind of interaction is not so much the quantitative knowledge disparity between the parties (somewhat foreseen by the preconditions of existence of the activity type itself), but rather the qualitative knowledge disparity. With ‘qualitative knowledge disparity’ we refer to two specific conditions that characterize this activity type: 1. The fact that at least one of the parties involved is defined by having a technical knowledge the other(s) do not share (or share only up to a certain degree); 2. As a consequence of point 1., the fact that the parties often do not share the criteria for the interpretation/assessment of the objective facts (symptoms and clinical parameters), which should constitute the starting point for decisions and actions. The problems that arise in real-life interactions as a consequence of these characteristics have been explored by using theoretical constructs such as ‘asymmetry’, ‘power relations’, ‘medical world vs life world’, ‘voices’, etc. What seems lacking is a dialogical perspective on the issue, allowing the description of the phenomena and of possible solutions that can be tested empirically. In o

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1145014550
Document Type :
Electronic Resource