The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study

This research examines the experiences of Malaysian Neurosurgeons in managing communications with patients and their families in the aftermath of adverse medical events. These experiences were interpreted from a conflict avoidance and management perspective and the data from the research was analyze...

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Main Author: Veerapen, Richard
Other Authors: Kluge, Eike-Henner W.
Language:English
en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1983
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-19832015-01-29T16:51:01Z The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study Veerapen, Richard Kluge, Eike-Henner W. conflict management neurosurgeons patient-physician communications defensive medicine Malaysia medical decision making UVic Subject Index::Sciences and Engineering::Health Sciences::Medicine UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Social Sciences::Law UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Sociology::Family This research examines the experiences of Malaysian Neurosurgeons in managing communications with patients and their families in the aftermath of adverse medical events. These experiences were interpreted from a conflict avoidance and management perspective and the data from the research was analyzed using heuristic methodology. (Douglass and Moustakas 1985) The field of Neurosurgery in Malaysia was chosen firstly as a model of a high-risk medical specialty and secondly because of the researcher’s lived experience with the phenomenon being studied. Participants in the research were eleven Malaysian Neurosurgeons with at least ten years of independent clinical practice as specialists. Qualitative data was obtained through semi-structured in-depth interviews that were subsequently transcribed and analyzed heuristically, looking for different conflict management and patient-physician communication themes. The observations indicate that adverse medical events precipitate a major shift in the focus of tacit conflict management skill sets applied by the participants. The patient-Neurosurgeon relationship is abruptly transformed from one of high trust to one imbued with patient anxiety and suspicion of malpractice or medical error, and physician defensiveness. The observations also indicate that in multicultural Malaysia physician-family relationships were prioritized more than would be expected in a Western context. This may have implications for humanistic and interactive skills training for medical students and residents. 2009-12-16T15:53:54Z 2009-12-16T15:53:54Z 2009 2009-12-16T15:53:54Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1983 English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic conflict management
neurosurgeons
patient-physician communications
defensive medicine
Malaysia
medical decision making
UVic Subject Index::Sciences and Engineering::Health Sciences::Medicine
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Social Sciences::Law
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Sociology::Family
spellingShingle conflict management
neurosurgeons
patient-physician communications
defensive medicine
Malaysia
medical decision making
UVic Subject Index::Sciences and Engineering::Health Sciences::Medicine
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Social Sciences::Law
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Sociology::Family
Veerapen, Richard
The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
description This research examines the experiences of Malaysian Neurosurgeons in managing communications with patients and their families in the aftermath of adverse medical events. These experiences were interpreted from a conflict avoidance and management perspective and the data from the research was analyzed using heuristic methodology. (Douglass and Moustakas 1985) The field of Neurosurgery in Malaysia was chosen firstly as a model of a high-risk medical specialty and secondly because of the researcher’s lived experience with the phenomenon being studied. Participants in the research were eleven Malaysian Neurosurgeons with at least ten years of independent clinical practice as specialists. Qualitative data was obtained through semi-structured in-depth interviews that were subsequently transcribed and analyzed heuristically, looking for different conflict management and patient-physician communication themes. The observations indicate that adverse medical events precipitate a major shift in the focus of tacit conflict management skill sets applied by the participants. The patient-Neurosurgeon relationship is abruptly transformed from one of high trust to one imbued with patient anxiety and suspicion of malpractice or medical error, and physician defensiveness. The observations also indicate that in multicultural Malaysia physician-family relationships were prioritized more than would be expected in a Western context. This may have implications for humanistic and interactive skills training for medical students and residents.
author2 Kluge, Eike-Henner W.
author_facet Kluge, Eike-Henner W.
Veerapen, Richard
author Veerapen, Richard
author_sort Veerapen, Richard
title The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
title_short The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
title_full The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
title_fullStr The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
title_full_unstemmed The experience of Malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
title_sort experience of malaysian neurosurgeons with physician-patient conflict in the aftermath of adverse medical events: a heuristic study
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1983
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