社会生活中自残的一般做法。

IF 1.3 4区 社会学 Q4 SOCIAL SCIENCES, BIOMEDICAL
Social Theory & Health Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Epub Date: 2020-05-08 DOI:10.1057/s41285-020-00139-9
Amy Chandler, Caroline King, Chris Burton, Steve Platt
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引用次数: 3

摘要

临床从业人员对自我伤害的理解和反应的定性研究一直很有限。自残提供了一个特别引人注目的案例,通过这个案例,我们可以审视从业人员在治疗那些表现出明显不属于生物医学性质的患者时所面临的持久挑战。在这篇论文中,我们分析了30名全科医生(gp)治疗自残患者的情况。我们的分析表明,全科医生试图理解自我伤害的复杂方式。通过三种常见的“类型”患者(“好女孩”、“问题患者”和“突然”),我们展示了全科医生如何应对自残的“社会”和“心理”原因。我们认为,根据患者的社会身份,这些紧张关系以不同的方式出现,由当地环境塑造的账户,包括获得专业服务,以及关于自我伤害行为合法性的文化理解。我们建议,在一般实践中研究自我伤害的社会生活,可以更广泛地扩展对自我伤害的社会学分析,并有助于建立医患关系的社会学理论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The social life of self-harm in general practice.

Research engaging qualitatively with clinical practitioners' understanding of, and response to, self-harm has been limited. Self-harm offers a particularly compelling case through which to examine the enduring challenges faced by practitioners in treating patients whose presenting symptoms are not clearly biomedical in nature. In this paper, we present an analysis of 30 General Practitioners' (GPs') accounts of treating patients who had self-harmed. Our analysis demonstrates the complex ways in which GPs seek to make sense of self-harm. Illustrated through three common 'types' of patients (the 'good girl', the 'problem patient' and the 'out of the blue'), we show how GPs grapple with ideas of 'social' and 'psychological' causes of self-harm. We argue that these tensions emerge in different ways according to the social identities of patients, with accounts shaped by local contexts, including access to specialist services, as well as by cultural understandings regarding the legitimacy of self-harming behaviour. We suggest that studying the social life of self-harm in general practice extends a sociological analysis of self-harm more widely, as well as contributing to sociological theorisation on the doctor-patient relationship.

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来源期刊
Social Theory & Health
Social Theory & Health SOCIAL SCIENCES, BIOMEDICAL-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Social Theory & Health provides an international scholarly forum for theoretical reflection and debate on contemporary health issues, many of which bear directly on the planning and delivery of services. The journal aims to consolidate, refine and extend theoretically informed work on the role of health in modern societies. Interest in issues of theory and health now informs many academic and practice-oriented disciplines and crosses discipline boundaries. The Editors encourage contributions from all relevant disciplines, as well as from those involved directly in front-line treatment and care. Contributions from the developing world are particularly welcome. The journal aims to include contributions from all theoretical perspectives.
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