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Communicative Contingencies in Handling Emergency Medical Calls [Pehme köide]

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Calls to emergency medical services are primarily a telephone-mediated communicative activity, where detailed critical information is exchanged through an elaborate series of questions and answers. Although, on the surface, it may seem a routine information-exchange activity, the framing of questions and how they are responded to and followed up in the absence of any visible cues are filled with communicative contingencies, requiring fast-thinking professional judgment. The core focus of humanities and medicine scholar Srikant Sarangis work is to unpack these nuanced communicative contingencies underpinning decision-making from a language/interaction perspective. In adopting the activity-type analytical framework to identify the various linguistic and interactional features of telephone-mediated emergency medical calls and their rhetorical potential, the book explores how the different elicited and volunteered information trajectories vis-à-vis instruction and advice formats constitute the basis of risk assessments and decisions regarding dispatch of help.

Drawing on a comprehensive database of telephone calls about breathlessness (comprising 400 call transcripts from two regions in Denmark), the book highlights caller type as a significant variable in the communication process. In essence, during the emergency medical calls, the call-taker handles not only factual information in an algorithmic, scripted manner against established criteria but also the caller type as part of the emergent communicative contingencies. In addition to delineating the general interaction trajectories across the dataset, of the six caller types identified, the analysis focuses on three types patient, spouse/partner, and professional carer and each type receives case-study length treatment. The key findings of Communicative Contingencies in Handling Emergency Medical Calls lead to the formulation of a set of practical guidelines for the training of professional practitioners and for raising awareness among caller types.
1. Preface
2. Introduction and Background Context
3. Previous Studies in Emergency Communication
4. Data, Methodology, and Analytical Framework
5. Characterizing Telephone-Mediated Emergency Medical Communication
6. QuestionAnswer Patterns in Elicited and Volunteered Information
7. Case Study 1: Patient as Caller
8. Case Study 2: Spouse/Partner as Caller
9. Case Study 3: Professional Carer as Caller
10. Handling Difficult Callers
Conclusion and Practical Implications

Glossary
Appendices
Srikant Sarangi is an adjunct professor in humanities and medicine at Aalborg University and an emeritus professor in language and communication at Cardiff University. He is also the former director of the Danish Institute of Humanities and Medicine (DIHM) and the former director of the Health Communication Research Centre.