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Adherence and the Moral Construction of the Self: A Narrative Analysis of Anticoagulant Medication

Meredith K D Hawking, John Robson, Stephanie Taylor, Deborah Swinglehurst

2020Qualitative Health Research19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this article, we examine illness narratives to illuminate the discursive work that patients undertake to construct themselves as "good" and adherent. Biographical narrative interviews were undertaken with 17 patients receiving anticoagulation for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation, from five English hospitals (May 2016-June 2017). Through pluralistic narrative analysis, we highlight the discursive tensions narrators face when sharing accounts of their medicine-taking. They undertake challenging linguistic and performative work to reconcile apparently paradoxical positions. We show how the adherent patient is co-constructed through dialogue at the intersection of discourses including authority of doctors, personal responsibility for health, scarcity of resources, and deservingness. We conclude that the notion of medication adherence places a hidden moral and discursive burden of treatment on patients which they must negotiate when invited into conversations about their medications. This discursive work reveals, constitutes, and upholds medicine-taking as a profoundly moral practice.

Topics & Concepts

NarrativePerformative utteranceNegotiationConstruct (python library)Moral dilemmaFace (sociological concept)Narrative inquiryDiscourse analysisSociologyMedicineSocial psychologyPsychologyEpistemologyLinguisticsSocial scienceProgramming languagePhilosophyComputer scienceMental Health and Patient InvolvementFoucault, Power, and EthicsInterpreting and Communication in Healthcare
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