|
Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools.
|
My Wife Ordered Me to Come!: A Discursive Analysis of Doctors and Nurses Accounts of Mens Use of General Practitioners
Sarah Seymour-Smith
The Open University, UK, S.E.Seymour-Smith{at}open.ac.uk
Margaret Wetherell
The Open University, UK
Ann Phoenix
The Open University, UK
This study used a discursive approach to analysing doctors and nurses accounts of mens health in the context of general practice. The analysis worked intensively with interview material from a small sample of general practitioners and their nursing colleagues. We examine the contradictory discursive framework through which this sample made sense of their male patients. The interpretative repertoires through which doctors and nurses constructed their representations of male patients and the subject positions these afforded men are outlined in detail. We describe how hegemonic masculinity is both critiqued for its detrimental consequences for health and paradoxically also indulged and protected. These constructions reflect a series of ideological dilemmas for men and health professionals between the maintenance of hegemonic masculine identities and negotiating adequate health care. Men who step outside typical gender constructions tended to be marked as deviant or rendered invisible as a consequence.
Key Words: discourse analysis general practice health identity masculinity
Journal of Health Psychology, Vol. 7, No. 3,
253-267 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/1359105302007003220

CiteULike Complore Connotea Del.icio.us Digg Reddit Technorati Twitter What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Allison and C. Campbell
"Maybe It Could Be a Heart Attack . . . But I'm Only 31": Young Men's Lived Experience of Myocardial Infarction--An Exploratory Study
American Journal of Men's Health,
June 1, 2009;
3(2):
116 - 125.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
N. Korobov and A. Thorne
The Negotiation of Compulsory Romance in Young Women Friends' Stories about Romantic Heterosexual Experiences
Feminism Psychology,
February 1, 2009;
19(1):
49 - 70.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. Oliffe
Health Behaviors, Prostate Cancer, and Masculinities: A Life Course Perspective
Men and Masculinities,
January 1, 2009;
11(3):
346 - 366.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
C. F. Garfield, A. Isacco, and T. E. Rogers
A Review of Men's Health and Masculinity
American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine,
November 1, 2008;
2(6):
474 - 487.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Seymour-Smith
`Blokes Don't Like That Sort of Thing': Men's Negotiation of a `Troubled' Self-help Group Identity
J Health Psychol,
September 1, 2008;
13(6):
785 - 797.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. A. Eliott and I. N. Olver
The Implications of Dying Cancer Patients' Talk on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Do-Not-Resuscitate Orders
Qual Health Res,
April 1, 2007;
17(4):
442 - 455.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
C. McVittie and J. Willock
"You Can't Fight Windmills": How Older Men Do Health, Ill Health, and Masculinities
Qual Health Res,
July 1, 2006;
16(6):
788 - 801.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Seymour-Smith and M. Wetherell
'What he hasn't told you...': Investigating the Micro-Politics of Gendered Support in Heterosexual Couples' Co-Constructed Accounts of Illness
Feminism Psychology,
February 1, 2006;
16(1):
105 - 127.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
E. Peel, O. Parry, M. Douglas, and J. Lawton
Taking the Biscuit? A Discursive Approach to Managing Diet in Type 2 Diabetes
J Health Psychol,
December 1, 2005;
10(6):
779 - 791.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
P. de Souza and K. E. Ciclitira
Men and Dieting: A Qualitative Analysis
J Health Psychol,
December 1, 2005;
10(6):
793 - 804.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Robertson and P. Williamson
Men and health promotion in the UK: Ten years further on?
Health Education Journal,
January 1, 2005;
64(4):
293 - 301.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
F. L. Bishop and L. Yardley
Constructing Agency in Treatment Decisions: Negotiating Responsibility in Cancer
Health (London) ,
October 1, 2004;
8(4):
465 - 482.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|
|