TY - JOUR
T1 - Attending to child agency in paediatric palliative care consultations
T2 - Adults’ use of tag questions directed to the child
AU - Ekberg, Katie
AU - Ekberg, Stuart
AU - Weinglass, Lara
AU - Herbert, Anthony
AU - Rendle-Short, Johanna
AU - Bluebond-Langner, Myra
AU - Yates, Patsy
AU - Bradford, Natalie
AU - Danby, Susan
PY - 2022/3
Y1 - 2022/3
N2 - Children's agency in their own lives is increasingly recognised as important, including within paediatric health care. The issue of acknowledging child agency is complex in the context of paediatric palliative care, where children have serious and complex conditions that often impact their ability to verbally communicate with others. This study explores how clinicians and parents/guardians direct talk towards a child patient when they are present in a consultation. Conversation analysis methods were used to examine 74 video-recorded paediatric palliative care consultations. Detailed turn-by-turn examination of the recorded consultations identified the recurrent use of a practice described by linguists as a ‘tag question’, which follows some statement (e.g. ‘he loves that, don't ya’). Both clinicians and parents/guardians often directed these tag questions towards the child patient. Analysis demonstrated how these tag questions: (1) validated the child's epistemic authority over what was being said and (2) made a child's response a possible, but not necessary, next action. The findings are discussed in relation to the sociology of child agency and how this agency is acknowledged and displayed within and through social interaction. This research provides direct evidence of children's competence as informants about their own symptoms.
AB - Children's agency in their own lives is increasingly recognised as important, including within paediatric health care. The issue of acknowledging child agency is complex in the context of paediatric palliative care, where children have serious and complex conditions that often impact their ability to verbally communicate with others. This study explores how clinicians and parents/guardians direct talk towards a child patient when they are present in a consultation. Conversation analysis methods were used to examine 74 video-recorded paediatric palliative care consultations. Detailed turn-by-turn examination of the recorded consultations identified the recurrent use of a practice described by linguists as a ‘tag question’, which follows some statement (e.g. ‘he loves that, don't ya’). Both clinicians and parents/guardians often directed these tag questions towards the child patient. Analysis demonstrated how these tag questions: (1) validated the child's epistemic authority over what was being said and (2) made a child's response a possible, but not necessary, next action. The findings are discussed in relation to the sociology of child agency and how this agency is acknowledged and displayed within and through social interaction. This research provides direct evidence of children's competence as informants about their own symptoms.
KW - Child agency
KW - Conversation analysis
KW - Paediatric palliative care
KW - Tag questions
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/DP180101941
U2 - 10.1111/1467-9566.13437
DO - 10.1111/1467-9566.13437
M3 - Article
SN - 0141-9889
VL - 44
SP - 566
EP - 585
JO - Sociology of Health & Illness
JF - Sociology of Health & Illness
IS - 3
ER -