Abstract
Abstract
The negotiation of patients’ therapy proposals often makes a strong statement about doctors’ consultative styles
in Nigerian clinical encounters. This invites a search into the relationship between patients’ preferred treatment options and
doctors’ and patients’ approaches to negotiating them. Analysis reveals the sequential and face orientation mechanisms deployed in
negotiating patients’ proposals in predominantly doctor-centred clinics, the interactional moves made by them in negotiating the
proposals in predominantly patient-centred clinics, and the pragmatic implications of the proposals negotiated in both
clinics. The negotiations in the clinics are anchored to strategic rapport building, the colonisation of patients’ lifeworld and
constrained joint decisions. Rapport is poorly built in the doctor-centred clinic with power-imbued strategies which stifle
patients’ voice and lead to completely-constrained joint decisions on therapy proposals by patients. Participatory consultation
enhances negotiation in the patient-centred clinic, but the physician’s misleading strategic sequences and exaggerated emotions
somewhat weaken the ultimate consultative outcome.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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