Loughborough University
Browse

Companions' interventions on behalf of patients

Download (334.19 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-16, 14:46 authored by Johanna Ruusuvuori, Charles Antaki, Deborah Chinn
Some patients require a companion to help them answer questions from medical personnel. How the companions do so may depend, in part, on the nature of the patient’s condition. In the case of the patient with a learning disability, we find the companion tending strongly to respect the patient’s agency and entitlement to speak to their own experiences, by a) allowing the patient time to volunteer the answer to the question themselves, b) glossing inadequate answers as being a temporary failure to remember and c) constructing a no-problem answer (extending previous findings by Antaki and Chinn, 2019). In contrast, with a patient who is examined for or has a diagnosis of epilepsy or multiple sclerosis, we see the companion tending to take a more proactive and interventionist approach. We discuss our findings in the light of differences between the powers and capacities attributable to people with learning disability, epilepsy, and multiple sclerosis, and the different entitlements that their companions may assume in speaking for them.<p></p>

History

Related Materials

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Published in

Social Interaction. Video-Based Studies of Human Sociality

Volume

7

Issue

3

Publisher

Det Kgl. Bibliotek/Royal Danish Library

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. We follow the Budapest Open Access Initiative's definition of Open Access. The journal allows the author(s) to hold the copyright without restrictions. The journal allows software/spiders to automatically crawl the journal content (also known as text mining) The journal provides article level metadata to DOAJ The journal allows readers to read, download, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of its articles and allow readers to use them for any other lawful purpose.

Publication date

2024-12-05

Copyright date

2024

eISSN

2446-3620

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Charles Antaki. Deposit date: 16 October 2025

Usage metrics

    Loughborough Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC