Demystifying the Privacy Myth: Navigating around Gate Keepers in Male Reproductive Health Clinic
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Date
2022Author
Ouma, Melvin Atieno
Chai, Jonathan Furaha
Kitetu, Catherine Wawasi
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Show full item recordAbstract
Successful doctor-patient interaction in a medical setting heavily relies on
negotiating communication practices in terms of language use. To the outsider, the
medical setting is shrouded in the mystery of what happens inside and how near
impossible it is for a non-medical practitioner to get access to a health facility for
research purposes abound. Emanating from a recent successfully concluded
linguistic study, aiming to determine the features of the language and strategies
employed by doctors and patients in a male reproductive health clinic, this paper
explores the procedures of gaining access from an outsider’s perspective. Thus
responding to the existing myths about privacy and confidentiality of the medical
profession vis a vis social science researchers. The paper provides an overview of
how the researcher navigated around the gatekeepers and how patients’ consent,
privacy, and confidentiality were taken care of during the study. Critiques and
questions of methodology that arose in the academic genre are adequately addressed
in this paper. The paper answers questions such as if reproductive health is sensitive
and data in the medical setting problematic, how will the data for this particular
study be collected? Will participant observation be convenient? Will patients allow
the researcher to record the doctor-patient interaction despite the anonymity and
privacy of the data?