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Rhetorical work and medical authority: Constructing convincing cases in insurance medicine

Erik Børve Rasmussen

Social Science & Medicine, 2020, vol. 264, issue C

Abstract: This article explores general practitioners' (GPs) persuasive efforts in cases where biomedical evidence is absent but expected. Health insurance in Western countries is based on the biomedical ideal that legitimate complaints should have objective causes detectable by medical examination. For GPs responsible for assessing sickness and incapacity for work, the demand for objective evidence can be problematic: what if they as experts deem that a patient is in fact sick and eligible for benefits, but are unable to provide objective evidence to that fact? How can they convince bureaucrats in the insurance system to accept their judgment? Taking ‘medically unexplained symptoms’ as my case, I draw on focus group and follow-up interviews with GPs in Norway to explore how GPs attempt to persuade bureaucrats to accept their professional judgment. Proposing the concept of ‘rhetorical work’, I reconstruct a typology of such work that doctors engage in to influence bureaucratic decision-making and provide long-term health benefits for patients. I then discuss the potential societal implications of GPs' rhetorical practices and the applications of the concept of rhetorical work in future research.

Keywords: Norway; Insurance medicine; Rhetorical work; Subjective complaints; Medically unexplained symptoms; Interview study (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113324

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