Hearing aid adjustment : Translating symptom descriptions into treatment and dealing with expectations
Publikation: Forskning - peer review › Bidrag til bog/antologi
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Hearing aid adjustment : Translating symptom descriptions into treatment and dealing with expectations. / Heinemann, Trine; Matthews, Ben; Raudaskoski, Pirkko Liisa.
Hearing Aids Communication : Bringing Together Human Interaction, Technology and Audiology to Improve Hearing Aid Use. red. / Maria Egbert; Arnulf Depperman. Verlag für Gesprächsforschung, 2012. s. 113-124.Publikation: Forskning - peer review › Bidrag til bog/antologi
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Hearing aid adjustment
T2 - Hearing Aids Communication
A1 - Heinemann,Trine
A1 - Matthews,Ben
A1 - Raudaskoski,Pirkko Liisa
AU - Heinemann,Trine
AU - Matthews,Ben
AU - Raudaskoski,Pirkko Liisa
PB - Verlag für Gesprächsforschung
PY - 2012/2/8
Y1 - 2012/2/8
N2 - Conversation analytic research on clinical encounters shows that interactional conduct can be consequential for diagnosis, treatment and compliance. Problems reported for doctor-patient interaction can also be identified in Danish audiological encounters. There are, however, also specific aspects to the interaction during hearing aid fitting. This report of a Danish pilot study describes two such problems. The first problem arises from the requirement that the audiologist needs to ‘translate’ the patient’s subjective hearing description for making technological decisions. The second problem is the way in which the hearing aid user’s implicit and often unrealistic expectations are handled. This kind of research has potential application for developing a model of best practices.
AB - Conversation analytic research on clinical encounters shows that interactional conduct can be consequential for diagnosis, treatment and compliance. Problems reported for doctor-patient interaction can also be identified in Danish audiological encounters. There are, however, also specific aspects to the interaction during hearing aid fitting. This report of a Danish pilot study describes two such problems. The first problem arises from the requirement that the audiologist needs to ‘translate’ the patient’s subjective hearing description for making technological decisions. The second problem is the way in which the hearing aid user’s implicit and often unrealistic expectations are handled. This kind of research has potential application for developing a model of best practices.
UR - http://www.verlag-gespraechsforschung.de/2012/pdf/hearingaids.pdf
BT - Hearing Aids Communication
A2 - Depperman,Arnulf
ED - Depperman,Arnulf
SP - 113
EP - 124
ER -