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Symptoms and signs in particular: The influence of the medical concern on the shape of physician-patient talk
Published/Copyright:
January 23, 2006
Published Online: 2006-01-23
Published in Print: 2004-04-29
Copyright © 2004 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Articles in the same Issue
- Editorial: Towards a communicative mentality in medical and healthcare practice
- The discursive construction of competence and responsibility in medical collegial talk
- Space, repetition and collective interlocution: Psychiatric interviews in a Borneo longhouse
- Cognitive overload and communication in two healthcare settings
- Thirty-five voices in search of an author: What focus groups reveal about patients experiences in managed care settings
- Symptoms and signs in particular: The influence of the medical concern on the shape of physician-patient talk
- Joint working relationships: Children, parents and child healthcare nurses at work
- Speaking about dying in the intensive care unit, and its implications for multidisciplinary end-of-life care
- The unjust world problem: Towards an ethics of advocacy for healthcare providers and researchers