In:Identity Struggles: Evidence from workplaces around the world
Edited by Dorien Van De Mieroop and Stephanie Schnurr
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 69] 2017
► pp. 243–262
Chapter 13Managing patients’ expectations in telephone complaints in Scotland
Published online: 26 April 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.69.13ben
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.69.13ben
Abstract
In this Conversation Analytical study we examine telephone complaints to the NHS which address a variety of issues raised by patients or their families. One area of ‘identity struggle’ for the patient caller is located in the difficult moral work that often needs to accompany the act of complaining. Complaints are an accountable activity, and legitimacy is ‘built into’ the complaint through a variety of means including invocations of the ‘right’ to complain, emotion discourse and constructions of the self as a ‘good’ or ‘reasonable’ patient. Similarly, identity conflicts arise for complaints handlers when the ideal forms of rapport involved in complaining sequences sometimes come into conflict with the institutionality of the event.
It is hoped that a detailed and discursive exploration of this key stage of the patient experience will lead to productive observations about effective communicative strategies for addressing complaints in ways that successfully manage the patient’s expectations.
Keywords: complaints, affiliation, CA, telephone conversations, NHS
Article outline
- Introduction
- Complaints, consumers and the UK National Health Service (NHS)
- The NHS complaints process
- Methods and data
- Data analysis
- The moral work required to complain
- Conflicting agendas for complaint recipients
- Conversational affiliation
- Conclusion
Notes References
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Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Benwell, Bethan & Catrin Rhys
McCreaddie, May, Bethan Benwell & Alice Gritti
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