meaning-making in the work of patient advocates emily heaphy may meaning meeting march 31, 2007
TRANSCRIPT
Meaning-Making in the Work of Patient Advocates
Emily Heaphy
May Meaning Meeting
March 31, 2007
Overview
Patient Advocates: Who & Why
Research Question
Research Design and Analysis
Meaning-Making Themes
Theoretical Import
Help from you!
Who are Patient Advocates?
Employed by the hospital
Job TitleOmbuds, patient advocate, patient representative, guest relations, patient relations
Typical ComplaintsRude staff, coordination, pain medication
EducationHigh school to masters
Characteristics of the Work
RelationalEmotionalAmbiguous
• Negotiation
• Mediation
• Communication
• Customer ServiceSHCA Professional Association
• Angry family members
• Sad patients
• Defensive hospital staff
• Careseekers’ needs
• Profession
• Loyalties
Why patient advocates?
Insights into studying agency in organizations
Social Skill (Fligstein, 1997)
Basis of social skill is ability to relate to the situation of the other
– Versus self-interested actors
Definition: Motivate cooperation in others by finding common meanings and identities
– E.g., framing, agenda setting
Theoretical context: New institutional theory
Research Questions
How do patient advocates’ make meaning for self and others?
Data
What do these meaning-making themes reveal about accomplishing work?
Theoretical play-time
Questions for you
Do categories of meaning-making make sense to you?
What do these categories unlock in terms of agency and accomplishing work?
What additional theories make sense to understand this data?
Cultural/Professional/Institutional Context
Individual Interviews
Shadowing
Individual Interviews
Shadowing
Veterans Health Administration
Teaching Hospitals
Work Practice Work Practice
Background Interviews
Conference Participant-Observation
Documents
PA PA
Methods
Cultural/Professional/Institutional Context
Individual Interviews
Individual Interviews
Veterans Health Administration
Teaching Hospitals
Work Practice Work Practice
PA PA
Methods
Interviews
Individual Interviews
31 interviews
24 women7 men
24 White7 African-American
19 tertiary
hospitals
Goal:Understand
patient advocates’
work practice, including the
body
Setting: 1-on-1
interviews in offices (4
via phone)
Length:• 45 min. - 3 hours
• Additional informal conversation, meals, facility tours
7 VA12 Teaching
Sample
Interview Description
Interviews
Interview contentBackground: Career path, typical day
Stories about handling cases Effective, challenged, ambiguous
Examples of role responsibilities
Taped and transcribed
Wrote field notes after interview & visit
Current Analysis
Data management Unit of analysis:
Stories about handling cases
Reducing stories to 1-page format
Analytic questionsHow do patient advocates make meaning for self and others?
Moving towards theory development via coding, memoing, discussions
Meaning-Making Themes
Discernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing survivors’ grief narratives
Meaning-making themes
Discernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing grief narratives
Theme 1: Discernment
Defined: Finding core meaning(s) in others’ stories
Often muddled and contradictory
A process of meaning-making over time
Co-constructing meaning
Discernment
Sorting emotional cues
Creating relational moment for re-narration
Channeling information for appropriate meaning-making
Sorting emotional cues
Excerpt of Story #52 Yesterday, at 10 after 4, I had a patient that
both [my coworker] and I know call, leave me a message, an angry message. I tried to call him back, he...the line was busy…I called him right up until 4:30, and I couldn’t get through. And then, I’m looking up...because..he was ranting on the phone, so you’re trying to figure out, “Okay, what did he say?”Because you can’t understand him?
Well, I could understand him physically, but it wasn’t making sense. He was so angry….
Creating relational momentfor re-narrationExcerpt of Story #28I’ll have a veteran come in sometimes. It’s amazing…
and they might be out of the service 50 years, married 50 years, and they have some emotional issues that are coming out, and all of a sudden, I’ll ask the right question, and they’ll just burst into tears. And the wife will be sitting there, and they’ve never shared whatever it is. The wife had no clue...because they did not share that information with their families. And I hear this a lot...they have post traumatic stress disorder, or they have some kind of an issue that is eating at them, and they’ve never shared it. Time after time, patient’s wives will come in and, “I never knew that.” You know, you’ve been married to someone 50 years…
Excerpt of Story #41I got a letter from a mother, out West, that
has a son here that’s under the guardianship of a father, and she was concerned the father wasn’t doing a very good job, and the other side of the story is, the mother hasn’t seen her son in years, and only talks to him once a month. And she’s getting the side of the son who’s not really capable of giving her full information. But I made sure that letter went to both the psychiatrist and their doctor. So I mean, whether it’s factual or not, it’s up to the doctor to decide.
Channeling information for appropriate meaning-making
Appropriate mean-makers
Meaning-making themes
DiscernmentSorting
emotional cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Theme 2: Perspective-taking
Empathy
Holding multiple perspectives on a case
Creating perspective-taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-taking
Empathy
Excerpt of Story #14 A social worker and I worked on a murder-
torture sort of case. We worked with the surviving patient who was a young teenager…
And I just had a lot of others in the ICU…particularly where we’ve had a family member come in with a gunshot wound or been beaten by a bat. And of course you can imagine yourself, if you had a family member who these things [happened to] are just your worst nightmare ever.
Holding multiple perspectives
Excerpt of Story #17A patient had some money and jewelry in a safe, and the patient wanted his girlfriend to pick it up. So she went to Security and they wouldn’t release it because the form hadn’t been filled out properly, and she was really upset, understandably, and Security was upset because she was making such a ruckus. It’s a big hospital - I would be ticked off too. So I ended up giving her a gift card for her inconvenience - lots of gift cards today.
Creating perspective-taking in Patients
Excerpt from Story #20
A man was upset about a nurse, and I can explain that if you were feeling chest pains, would you want the nurse to stop and get you water? And then, he’ll say no, I guess I would want her to help me with my chest pains.
Creating perspective-taking in Staff
Excerpt from Story #27An example…is a patient of a mother of
disabled child who has difficulty arriving for appointments on time. The physician’s office is very angry, very upset. The staff person I spoke to was very unforgiving. I said, have you ever tried to dress a child in the morning let alone a disabled child and be dependent on public transportation to arrive someplace on time? Well no I haven’t. Well until you do, perhaps the best thing to do is to schedule this non- (inaudible) for an end of the day when if there is a delay she hasn’t backed up the whole schedule for the whole office. Secondly if she doesn’t show that time can be used as administrative time for the doctor.
Physician’s office
Physician
Patient
Perspective of:
“Imaginative” perspective-taking
Excerpt of Story #42We get reports from people sometimes
that say, “I know so and so is selling their drugs on the street.” I pass that information onto the doctor, but it has to be up to the doctor to decide, because it’s not my choice of whether he’s going to cut that patient off from his narcotics just because somebody said he’s selling them. It could be an ex-wife who’s very angry for all I know. But the idea is just to get it in the right direction and let the person...those people need to handle it.
Meaning-making themes
Discernment
Perspective-taking
Sorting emotional
cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Empathy Holding multiple
perspectives
Creating perspective-
taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-
taking
Theme 3: Co-constructing survivor’s grief narratives
Re-presenting artifacts
Creating limits
Re-presenting artifacts
Excerpt of Story #60Have you see a death certificate? Neither
have I. I’m interested to see what it looks like but [a deceased patient’s daughter] said that there is a portion that gives you the option of cause of death and that under smoking there are 4 options. The doctor checked “probably” on it [for her father]. She was upset because she said “My father was an extreme advocate against smoking so this is not good representation.”
Creating limits
Excerpt of Story #37This [mother of a cancer patient] was using me as
her therapist…People call and expect more of me than I can give them. There comes a time when it needs to end…She’s really looking . . .for answers and sometimes answers that we can’t give. Sometimes the answers doctors can’t give. They want you to say what really happened and to be honest, we’re all human, and sometimes I think doctors should just say I don’t know what happened. I think they don’t feel comfortable in saying that but we need to say that to people. There are things beyond our control and I did the best I could do with the knowledge that I have and let it go.
Question 1: How do patient advocates make meaning for self and others?
Discernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing grief narratives
Sorting emotional
cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Empathy Holding multiple
perspectives
Creating perspective-
taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-
taking
Re-presenting
artifacts
Creating limits
Question 2
What do these forms of meaning-making reveal about accomplishing work?
3 answers
1. Meaning-makingOrganizes action in self and othersDiscernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing grief narratives
Sorting emotional
cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Empathy Holding multiple
perspectives
Creating perspective-
taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-
taking
Re-presenting
artifacts
Creating limits
2. Withholding from meaning-making is a form of work Discernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing grief narratives
Sorting emotional
cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Empathy Holding multiple
perspectives
Creating perspective-
taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-
taking
Re-presenting
artifacts
Creating limits
3. The work of re-narrating “biographies” in bureaucracies (Heimer,
1995)
Discernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing grief narratives
Sorting emotional
cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Empathy Holding multiple
perspectives
Creating perspective-
taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-
taking
Re-presenting
artifacts
Creating limits
Potential Theoretical Import
Elaborates theory of social skill by Describing how meaning-making occurs
Links individual actions with making (small) organizational alterations
Example of meaning construction – and co-construction – as a core task of work
Other ideas?
Questions for you
Do categories of meaning-making make sense to you?
What do these categories unlock in terms of accomplishing work?
What additional theories make sense to understand this data?
EXTRAS
Meaning-making themes
Discernment
Perspective-taking
Co-constructing grief narratives
Sorting emotional
cues
Creating relational
moment for re-narration
Channeling information for approp.
M-M
Empathy Holding multiple
perspectives
Creating perspective-
taking in others
“Imaginative” perspective-
taking
Re-presenting
artifacts
Creating limits
How does meaning-making help accomplish work?
Discernment helps organizes action
Perspective-taking gives them cognitive flexibility
Helps enlist others in concerns/issues
Constructively (towards problem resolution) channel emotions in organizations
Theoretical import?
Co-construction of meaning to agency
Patient advocates’ meaning–making as translating between cases and biographies (Heimer)
Making bureacracies navigable
How does meaning-making help accomplish work?
Organizes action
Cognitive flexibility
Helps enlist others in concerns/issues
Constructively (towards problem resolution) channel emotions in organizations
Why is discernment important?
Organizes their actionExcerpt of Story #2This case is kind of odd to deal with because the wife just called
about a month ago and the complaint is from 2004 when her husband passed away….I don’t think she feels that anything went wrong and nothing did but the family, especially the wife…hasn’t really gotten through the grief process. A lot of times that’s what we also find especially with patients who have something like cancer or something. You would think they would be prepared but they’re just never prepared
…. I’m going to make sure someone from Spiritual Care is actually [at the family meeting]…it just sounds to me that’s just where this family is….
The hospital staff has done everything they can to care for this person yet the family really ends up feeling dissatisfied because of that one piece. Here we are 2 years later trying to bring closure to that and justifiably the staff thinking they had closed that….Just because we do those things doesn’t mean someone is ready to go through the process. It can be emotionally draining to do this job.
Research Design:
Patient Advocates are like….Managers
Disturbance handling (Mintzberg, 1973)Toxin handlers (Frost, 2003)
Caregiving rolesSocial workers (Kahn, 1993; Meyerson, 1994)Nurses (Benner, 1984; Jacques, 1992)
Service workCustomer Service (e.g., Grandey, Fisk, Steiner, 2005; Rafaeli, 1989 )Salespeople (e.g., Ramsey & Sohi, 1997)
Neutral parties to conflict– Mediators (e.g., Poitras, 2005)– Ombuds (Silver, 1967; Gadlin, 2000)– Peacekeepers (Off, 2000)
Representatives in a conflict– Lawyers (e.g., Eylon, Giacalone, Pollard,
2000)– Negotiators (e.g., Fisher, Ury, & Patton,
1991)
Investigators– Detectives– Inspectors
“Dealing with involuntary
situations and change that is
partially beyond the managers’
control”(p. 82)
Why is discernment important?
“Truth” not the goal
Excerpt of Story #19
A girl came in to me today and told me she thought a nurse was high. I think it would be good to know the truth in that situation, but it doesn’t mean you will.
Putting themselves in others’ shoes
Excerpt of Story #59 For the phone call that I just got off, the patient was discharged from the
hospital and he was a diabetic. The…wife of the patient…had some concerns about his treatment while he was here…One of them was that he hadn’t had his insulin and she inquired about it to the nurse and the nurse looked through his charts and said, “Oh, he is a diabetic.”
…She should not have had to inquire about what types of medications or what type of shots he has or has not gotten. This is all things that we should be concerned about on a regular basis. He’s in our care so if God forbid he didn’t have a family member to come and visit, how would we have ever known this? There are some things that we need to do to improve as an institution and that for an example is something where I think to myself if this were my father who was in the hospital, number one, family has a very different way of responding to things especially when you have a loved one that’s in the hospital.
She addressed me in a very respectful fashion so I want to be on top of things for this . . . I don’t ever want for someone like that to have to call me and say, “Have you done anything about it?” I want to be able to call her and say that this is what’s taken place right now or this is who you can expect a phone call from.
Research Design:
Organizational Variation
VA hospitals Teaching Hospitals
Employment Full-time
Position in Organization
Centralized Office
reporting 1-3 levels from CEO
through Quality or Customer Service
Patient Advocates’ tie to organization
Personal connection to VA
Employee
(no long-time history)
Predictability of patients and issues
Distinct cohorts, mostly men, with shared history
Specialty cases, not gender- or age-specific
Treating all concerns as valid
Excerpt of Story #9
Sometimes we’re completely at fault. Sometimes the patient is way off base but you still have to respond in a manner that their concerns are . . . All concerns are valid and need to be treated as valid.
Treating all concerns as valid
Excerpt of Story #63Do you have a sense like what you did that made her feel
heard?Most of the time when…I get that response is that they tell
me that I listen and that I don’t say “Oh, that never happened.” I cannot say that. I can never say what has happened or can happen or didn’t happen if I wasn’t there. If a person is giving an impression because you are automatically defending your staff person or whomever, oh they would never do that, which I’ve heard myself, oh nobody on my staff would ever do that, and then you find out later that somebody on your staff did do that.
When I’m talking to them or listening to them and I immediately don’t discount what they say or respond in a manner which makes them think I don’t believe them, it validates their position.
Themes: Perspective-taking
Forms of perspective-takingEmpathy
Holding multiple perspectives on a casePart of comfort with ambiguity
Creating perspective-taking in othersa form of action
“Imaginative” perspective-takingPart of comfort with ambiguity