Constructing therapeutic support and negotiating competing agendas: A discourse analysis of vocational advice provided to individuals who are absent from work due to ill-health.
Benjamin SaundersCarolyn Chew-GrahamGail SowdenKendra CookeKaren Walker-BoneIra MadanVaughan ParsonsCathy H LinakerGwenllian Wynne-JonesPublished in: Health (London, England : 1997) (2023)
Work participation is known to benefit people's overall health and wellbeing, but accessing vocational support during periods of sickness absence to facilitate return-to-work can be challenging for many people. In this study, we explored how vocational advice was delivered by trained vocational support workers (VSWs) to people who had been signed-off from work by their General Practitioner (GP), as part of a feasibility study testing a vocational advice intervention. We investigated the discursive and interactional strategies employed by VSWs and people absent from work, to pursue their joint and respective goals. Theme-oriented discourse analysis was carried out on eight VSW consultations. These consultations were shown to be complex interactions, during which VSWs utilised a range of strategies to provide therapeutic support in discussions about work. These included; signalling empathy with the person's perspective; positively evaluating their personal qualities and prior actions; reflecting individuals' views back to them to show they had been heard and understood; fostering a collaborative approach to action-planning; and attempting to reassure individuals about their return-to-work concerns. Some individuals were reluctant to engage in return-to-work planning, resulting in back-and-forth interactional negotiations between theirs and the VSW's individual goals and agendas. This led to VSWs putting in considerable interactional 'work' to subtly shift the discussion towards return-to-work planning. The discursive strategies we have identified have implications for training health professionals to facilitate work-orientated conversations with their patients, and will also inform training provided to VSWs ahead of a randomised controlled trial.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- public health
- newly diagnosed
- randomized controlled trial
- ejection fraction
- mental health
- physical activity
- prognostic factors
- general practice
- primary care
- resistance training
- health promotion
- global health
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- patient reported
- virtual reality
- quality improvement
- chronic kidney disease
- high intensity
- single molecule