The everyday elasticity of compliance in a symptomless disease

Authors

  • Lina Klara Hoel Felde University of Southern Denmark

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v8i2.123

Keywords:

compliance, constructionism, ethnomethodology, treatment decision-making, symptom[less]

Abstract

Medically, compliance refers to the extent to which a patient’s response to medical advice coincides with doctors’ orders. Rather than this absolute standard, this article treats compliance as an institutionally available discourse continually figured in practice. The aim of this article is to describe people’s everyday elasticity of compliance in shifting contexts in everyday life. The empirical material presented, based on interviews with people with elevated cholesterol, suggests that people with symptomless diseases can be perceived to be living in a virtual ‘temporal limbo’, living ‘here and now’ in the present from one episode to the next. Presentbound conditions create, from moment to moment, a temporal limbo that challenges and conditions the participants’ constructions of compliance. Using three contexts as examples, this article empirically demonstrates how people with a symptomless disease accomplish – reflexively produce and reproduce – compliance in and through shifting contexts. Compliance is ever-emerging and stretched, adapted to the circumstances at hand, ongoingly constructed through a reflexive interplay between compliance-in-practice and compliance practice in a discursive give-and-take. This elasticity of compliance reveals a reflexive critique of medical compliance as a moral standard and leads us to discuss how people are adequately compliant in everyday moral contexts.

Author Biography

  • Lina Klara Hoel Felde, University of Southern Denmark
    Lina Klara Hoel Felde’s research interests include people’s identity work within medical (and other institutional) discursive environments which is the topic in her thesis called Identity Work among People with Elevated Cholesterol – The Everyday Elasticity of Compliance with Medical Regimens. Expanding medicine’s concepts of risk and compliance, her focus has been on the way people ‘do’ medical concepts that otherwise might be taken for granted as moral standards. She has a PhD in Medical Sociology, trained as a sociologist (BA) and physician (MD).

Published

2012-06-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Hoel Felde, L. K. (2012). The everyday elasticity of compliance in a symptomless disease. Communication and Medicine, 8(2), 123-134. https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v8i2.123

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