More than words: how multimodal analysis can inform health professions education.

Christen Rachul, Lara Varpio
Author Information
  1. Christen Rachul: Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, S204, 750 Bannatyne Avenue, Winnipeg, MB, R3E 0W2, Canada. christen.rachul@umanitoba.ca. ORCID
  2. Lara Varpio: Department of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, USA.

Abstract

The contexts and methods for communicating in healthcare and health professions education (HPE) profoundly affect how we understand information, relate to others, and construct our identities. Multimodal analysis provides a method for exploring how we communicate using multiple modes-e.g., language, gestures, images-in concert with each other and within specific contexts. In this paper, we demonstrate how multimodal analysis helps us investigate the ways our communication practices shape healthcare and HPE. We provide an overview of the theoretical underpinnings, traditions, and methodologies of multimodal analysis. Then, we illustrate how to design and conduct a study using one particular approach to multimodal analysis, multimodal (inter)action analysis, using examples from a study focused on clinical reasoning and patient documentation. Finally, we suggest how multimodal analysis can be used to address a variety of HPE topics and contexts, highlighting the unique contributions multimodal analysis can offer to our field.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Clinical Reasoning
Communication
Health Occupations
Humans
Linguistics
Nonverbal Communication
Physicians
Research Design
Social Media

Word Cloud

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