The interactional management of patients' physical incompetence: a conversation analytic study of physiotherapy interactions Ruth Parry 2134/32700 https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/The_interactional_management_of_patients_physical_incompetence_a_conversation_analytic_study_of_physiotherapy_interactions/9476000 Patients’ physical incompetence is a feature of many clinical interactions; the challenges it presents are not only technical but also interactional. This paper examines how interpretations and interactional consequences of physical incompetence are dealt with during stroke physiotherapy. A conversation analytic approach was used to examine video-recorded treatment sessions. Analysis demonstrated that managing physical incompetence forms an important element of the organisation of these interactions. Through their conduct, patients and therapists limit and counter its various negative implications, including those which attribute it to failure of a patient’s efforts, co-operation and personal competence, and failure of therapy. Understanding orientations to incompetence and their influence upon interactions provides some explanations, or ‘good reasons’, for certain features of clinical interactions that have attracted criticism. Analysis also shows how management of incompetence is grounded in the clinician’s authority and contributes to its maintenance. In the face of failures of physical competence, participants collaboratively and continually work to portray patients as deserving of treatment rather than sanction, and to convey that despite evident difficulties, the therapeutic process is a cooperative and successful endeavour. The paper examines how these meanings are addressed and accomplished through interaction. 2018-04-24 08:35:38 Clinical interactions Conversation analysis Competence Physical incompetence Physiotherapy Patient Language, Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified Studies in Human Society not elsewhere classified Sociology