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Treatment decision-making during the early stages of heart attack
 — a case for the role of body and self in influencing delays
Author(s)Alexander M Clark
Journal titleSociology of Health & Illness, vol 23, no 4, 2001
Pagespp 425-446
KeywordsHeart disease ; Medical care ; Rights [elderly] ; Qualitative Studies ; Scotland.
AnnotationA majority of individuals with the symptoms of heart attack (or myocardial infarction, MI) delay for significant periods before seeking medical assistance. These delays are often lengthy and can adversely affect survival by compromising the efficacy of thrombolytic therapy. This qualitative study examined pre-hospital decision-making retrospectively in a sample of Scottish MI patients. From interviews with participants 48 hours after admittance to hospital, decision making was interpreted as following a five-stage pattern: experiencing symptoms as familiar sensations; moving from the everyday; responding to breakdown; increasing crisis; and decisions and dialogue. Throughout these phases, participants drew on aspects of the body, self and society in order to understand and react to what was happening to them. Phenomenologically, echoing movements associated with chronic illness participants experienced the body and self differently during the different stages of decision making. Their decision making was influenced by their views of the self, interpretations of the body and the symptoms of MI, and conceptions of personal and general risk. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-010809203 A
ClassmarkCQH: LK: IKR: 3DP: 9A

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