Title: The Tacit Order of Teamwork: Collaboration and Embodied Conduct in Anesthesia
Abstract:This article explores the interactional organization of collaborative work in the field of anesthesia. "Anesthetic teams" provide a distinctive case for the analysis of collaborative work, because the...This article explores the interactional organization of collaborative work in the field of anesthesia. "Anesthetic teams" provide a distinctive case for the analysis of collaborative work, because their work is undertaken with, around, and on an aware and variously involved coparticipant, namely, the patient. To explore such collaboration, this article draws on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis to examine audiovisual data of naturally occurring preoperative anesthetic work recorded in a British hospital. There are three key consequences of the analysis that we elaborate: first, it points toward the limitations of Erving Goffman's regions metaphor for explicating the organization of collaborative work in settings like anesthesia; second, it reveals key organizing practices and skills associated with in situ teamworking that are distinctly absent from the literature of health-care teams; third, it points toward the critical importance of analyzing embodied conduct, not just language or talk, when examining copresent organizational activities.Read More
Publication Year: 2002
Publication Date: 2002-03-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 222
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot