We explored mediating concepts that affect clinical novices shifting between their talk
with patients in eye examinations and their talk
about patients in case presentations (nCPs). In a Canadian optometry teaching clinic, patient ‘chief concern or request’, ‘illness
experience’, and ‘management’ utterances were observed in ten eye examinations and nCPs. Twenty-three participants (8 students,
5 instructors, and 10 patients) were observed; 22 were subsequently interviewed. Of 10 nCPs, the ‘chief concern or request’
was absent in four, the ‘illness experience’ was incomplete or absent in 9 and 5 of 19 (35.7%) ‘management’ topics were not
discussed with patients. During eye exams, 17 of 31 (54.8%) ‘management’ discussions with patients were not discussed with
instructors during nCPs. Instructional ‘scaffolding’ (Bruner and Sherwood in Play: its role in development and evolution,
p. 280,
1976) appeared limited regarding talk
with and
about patients. The limited and recontextualized reporting of patient concerns and experiences in nCPs represented lost opportunities
to provide and learn patient-centered care. While Goffman’s (The presentation of the self in everyday life, p. 114,
1969) ‘front stage’ performances and Mishler’s (The discourse of medicine: dialectics of medical interviews, p. 14,
1984) healthcare ‘voices’ suggest separate worlds of talk before patients and instructors, we found these worlds were not wholly
separate for neophyte speakers. Mediating concepts that influence clinical novices shifting their performances before their
audiences, included: (1) pedagogical inconsistencies, (2) incompatible values associated with talk, (3) discordance between
patient care and student education, (4) time limitations for teaching, and (5) insufficient instructional ‘scaffolding’ about
talk.
Keywords Patient-centered - Doctor–patient communication - Optometry - Clinical instruction