Using root metaphors to analyze communication between nurses and patients: a qualitative study

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2017Suggested citation
Álvarez, Isabel;
Selva Pareja, Laia;
Medina, José Luis;
Sáez Cárdenas, Salvador;
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(2017)
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Using root metaphors to analyze communication between nurses and patients: a qualitative study.
BMC Medical Education, 2017, vol. 17, núm. 216, p.1-11.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-017-1059-0.
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Metaphors in communication can serve to convey individuals’ backgrounds, contexts, experiences, and worldviews. Metaphors used in a health care setting can help achieve consensual communication in professional–patient relationships. Patients use metaphors to describe symptoms, or how disease affects them. Health professionals draw on shared understanding of such metaphors to better comprehend and meet patient needs, and to communicate information that patients can more easily integrate into their lives.
This study incorporated a theoretical framework based on four worldviews, each with an underlying foundational metaphor (root metaphor). The use of these root metaphors (formism, mechanism, contextualism, and organicism) can have an explanatory function and serve to impart new meanings, as each type of metaphor can lead to a particular interpretation. The study aimed to extract and discuss the root metaphors, with a view to analyzing the communication between health professionals and patients.
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