From Bodily Sensations to Symptoms: Health Care–Seeking Practices Among People Affected by Acute Coronary Syndrome

Author:

Beedholm Kirsten1ORCID,Andersen Lene Søndergaard2,Lorentzen Vibeke134

Affiliation:

1. Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

2. VIA University College, Viborg, Denmark

3. Center for Research in Clinical Nursing, Viborg, Denmark

4. Deakin University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

The reduction of prehospital delay for patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is widely discussed within cardiac research. Medically informed literature generally considers patient hesitancy in seeking treatment a significant barrier to accessing timely treatment. With this starting point, we conducted an interview study with people previously hospitalized for ACS and with the bystanders involved in their decision to contact the health care system. The analysis was conducted in two stages: first, a systematic extraction of key information; second, an in-depth analysis informed by medical anthropology. This led us to understand the prehospital period as an interpretation process where bodily sensations appeared as symptoms. Informants vacillated between sensations, knowledge, interpretations, and emotions as they struggled to preserve everyday ordinariness. They were led to contact the health care system by bodily discomfort rather than a rational decision to reduce risk. The paradigmatic implications from medical anthropology proved an important alternative to the medical paradigm.

Funder

Hans Juulsgaard Jensen’s Family Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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