| Literature DB >> 26440647 |
Abstract
Communication difficulties persist between patients and physicians. In order to improve care, patients' experiences of this communication must be understood. The main objective of this study is to synthesize qualitative studies exploring patients' experiences in communicating with a primary care physician. A secondary objective is to explore specific factors pertaining to ethnic minority or majority patients and their influence on patients' experiences of communication. Pertinent health and social sciences electronic databases were searched systematically (PubMed, Cinahl, PsychNet, and IBSS). Fifty-seven articles were included in the review on the basis of being qualitative studies targeting patients' experiences of communication with a primary care physician. The meta-ethnography method for qualitative studies was used to interpret data and the COREQ checklist was used to evaluate the quality of included studies. Three concepts emerged from analyses: negative experiences, positive experiences, and outcomes of communication. Negative experiences related to being treated with disrespect, experiencing pressure due to time constraints, and feeling helpless due to the dominance of biomedical culture in the medical encounter. Positive experiences are attributed to certain relational skills, technical skills, as well as certain approaches to care privileged by the physician. Outcomes of communication depend on patients' evaluation of the consultation. Four categories of specific factors exerted mainly a negative influence on consultations for ethnic minorities: language barriers, discrimination, differing values, and acculturation. Ethnic majorities also raised specific factors influencing their experience: differing values and discrimination. Findings of this review are limited by the fact that more than half of the studies did not explore cultural aspects relating to this experience. Future research should address these aspects in more detail. In conclusion, all patients seemed to face additional cultural challenges. Findings provide a foundation for the development of tailored interventions to patients' preferences, thus ensuring more satisfactory experiences. Health care providers should be sensitive to specific factors (cultural and micro-cultural) during all medical encounters.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26440647 PMCID: PMC4594916 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0139577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart for the three step article selection process.
Fig 2Number of publications per year and number of publications per year discussing culture.
Fig 3Number of publications by country.
Fig 4Number of publications according to patient sample.
Overview of studies targeting patients’ experiences in communicating with a primary care physician (n = 57): authors, year and country of publication, aim, sample, method, and attention to cultural aspects.
| Author (Year) | Country | Aim | Sample | Method & Analyses | Culture |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bowes & Domokos (1995) [ | UK | Explore South Asian women's experiences and use of health services | 20 Pakistani Muslim women (17 born abroad) | UII | √ |
| Punamaki & Kokko (1995) | Finland | Describe and analyze patients' consultation experiences | 127 patients or parents of patients (60F, 67M) (ENR | SSI | |
| Johansson, Hamberg, Lindgren & Westman (1996) | Sweden | Explore female patients’ experiences in consultation | 20 Swedish female with musculoskeletal disorders | SSI Grounded Theory | |
|
| USA | Identify physician behaviours that foster trust | 29 patients (1 FG | 4 FGs Grounded Theory | √ |
|
| USA | Identify provider related factors that may affect patient-provider communication about abuse for immigrant women | 14 Hispanic and 14 Asian women (n = 28) | 4 FG: 2 Hispanic, 2 Asian Thematic | √ |
|
| UK | Compare physicians’ and patients’ perspective of time constraints | 60 adults diagnosed with depression (ENR) | II | |
|
| UK | Identify factors that hinder or facilitate communication | 63 adolescents with chronic physical illness (36F, 27M) (ENR) | SSI Thematic | |
| Gask, Rogers, Oliver, May & Roland (2003) | UK | Explore experiences of care that depressed patients receive from their physician | 27 patients with mild depression (19F, 8M) (ENR) | SSI Thematic | |
|
| UK | Examine women's perspectives of optimal risk communication and decision making | 34 native English-speaking women in menopause, 6 non-native English-speakers (n = 40) | FG & 4 SSI Thematic | |
|
| Australia | Identify critical factors and obstacles to effective health communication | 3 adults with intellectual disabilities (2F, 1M) (ENR) | SSI Thematic | |
| Dubé, Fuller, Rosen, Fagan, O'Donnell (2004) | USA | Examine communication issues important to men on cancer screening topics | 29 White, 8 Black, 5 Hispanic, 11 biracial, other and unspecified men (n = 53) | 8 FGs Thematic | |
|
| USA | Explore the importance of concordant spiritual belief systems in patient-physician interactions | 1 Jewish, 6 Christian, 2 Agnostic, 1 Buddhist (6F, 4M) (n = 10) | SSI Thematic | |
|
| USA | Explore perspective of psychiatrically ill patients receiving primary care | 11 Caucasian, 5 other with chronic psychiatric disorders (8F, 8M) (n = 16) | FG Thematic | |
|
| USA | Understand patient's perspective on information disclosure | 26 African American, 8 Asian, 5 Hispanic, 39 White, 4 Other women (n = 85) | II Thematic | |
|
| UK | Understand the ways in which White and South Asian patients communicate with White physicians | 7 White, 18 South Asian (21F, 4M) (n = 25) | Video recall and SSI Thematic | √ |
|
| UK | Explore lesbians’ and gays’ experiences of primary care | 18 White, 5 Black and other ethnic minority (13F, 10M) (n = 23) | FG Grounded Theory | √ |
| Moffat, Cleland, van der Molen & Price (2006) | UK | Explore patients' experiences of consultations regarding asthma | 14 patients with severe asthma (8F, 6M) (ENR) | SSI Grounded Theory | |
|
| Canada | Understand the complexity of physician-patient communication in Aboriginal communities | 26 Aboriginal patients (22F, 4M) | 8 SSI & 3 FGs Thematic | √ |
|
| UK | Explore knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours about herbal medicine and use disclosure | 18 White British female herbal medicine users | II Thematic | |
| Abdulhadi, Shafaee, Freudenthal, Östenson & Wahlström (2007) | Oman | Explore views of type 2 diabetic patients regarding medical encounter | 27 Omani type 2 diabetes patients (14F, 13M) | 4 FG Thematic | √ |
| Borgsteede, Deliens, Graafland-Riedstra, Francke, van der Wal & Willems (2007) | Netherlands | Explore patients’ experiences of communicating about euthanasia | 12 patients with short life expectancy (ENR) | SSI Thematic | |
| Fagerli, Lien & Wandel (2007) | Norway | Explore patients’ experiences of medical encounters | 15 Pakistani born type 2 diabetes patients (11F, 4M) | SSI Phenomenology | √ |
| Kokanovic & Manderson (2007) | Australia | Describe the way patients in an Australian setting are told of diabetes | 8 Chinese, 8 Indian, 8 Pacific Island, 8 Greek type 2 diabetes patients (16F, 16M) (n = 32) | SSI Thematic | √ |
| Lowe, Griffiths & Sidhu (2007) | UK | Explore attitudes and experiences of South Asian women towards contraceptive service provision | 19 Pakistani women (2 born in UK, 17 born abroad) | SSI Grounded Theory | √ |
| Mercer, Cawston & Bikker (2007) | UK | Explore patients' views on determinants of quality of consultations in an economically deprived community | 72 White Caucasian low SES | 11 FGs Grounded Theory | |
| Oliffe & Thorne (2007) | Canada, Australia | Explore male patients’ experiences of interactions with male physicians about prostate cancer | 33 Australian, 19 Canadian men with prostate cancer (n = 52) | SSI Thematic | |
| Julliard, Vivard, Delgado, Cruz, Kabak & Sabers (2008) | USA | Clarify which conditions reinforce nondisclosure of health information in clinical encounters between Latina patients and their physicians | 28 Hispanic women (8 born in US, 20 born in South or Central America) | SSI Grounded Theory | √ |
| Nguyen, Barg, Armstrong, Holmes & Hornik (2008) | USA | Examine elements of physician-patient cancer communication from the viewpoint of older Vietnamese immigrants | 20 Vietnamese immigrants | SSI Grounded Theory | √ |
| Smith, Braunack-Mayer, Wittert & Warin (2008) | Australia | Examine men’s experiences of communicating with physicians in order to describe qualities and styles of communication that men prefer | 30 Australian, 6 British men (n = 36) | SSI Thematic | |
| Shelley, Sussman, Williams, Segal & Crabtree (2009) | USA | Compare patients’ and physicians’ perspectives on communication about complementary and alternative medicine | 40 Hispanic, 5 Non-Hispanic White, 48 Native American (72F, 21M) (n = 93) | SSI Thematic | √ |
| Wullink, Veldhuijzen, van Schrojenstein, de Valk, Metsemakers & Dinant (2009) | Netherlands | Explore preferences of adults with intellectual disabilities based on positive and negative experiences of communication | 12 adults with intellectual disabilities (8F, 4M) (ENR) | 2 SSI & 1 FG Thematic | |
| Matthias, Bair, Nyland, Huffman, Stubbs, Damusb & Kroenke (2010) | USA | Compare patients’ experiences of communication with nursing staff and communication with physicians | 18 adults with musculoskeletal pain and depression (11F, 7M) (ENR) | 4 FGs Thematic | |
| Peek, Odoms-Young, Quinn, Gorawara-Bhat, Wilson & Chin (2010) | USA | Examine African American patients’ perceptions of the influence of race on physician-patient communication | 51 African American with diabetes (42F, 9M) | 24 SSI & 5 FGs Phenomenology | √ |
| Yorkston, Johnson, Boesflug, Skala & Amtmann (2010) | USA | Explore patients’ experiences of communication about pain and fatigue | 22 White, 1 Black adult with chronic pain (18F, 5M) (n = 23) | FG Thematic | |
| Jagosh, Boudreau, Steinert, MacDonald & Ingram (2011) | Canada | Understand patients attitudes, perceptions, and thoughts about their communication experiences | 55 adults (10 French-speaking; 45 English-speaking; 3 Bilingual) (32F, 26M) | SSI Thematic | |
| Walseth, Abildsnes & Schei (2011) | Norway | Verify Haberma’s theory of communication according to patients’ perspective | 12 adults (5F, 7M) (ENR) | SSI Thematic | |
| Black (2012) | USA | Explore elders' perspective of the influence of their beliefs on health care encounters | 60 African American elders (30F, 30M) | SSI Thematic | √ |
| Burton (2012) | Guatemala | Explore the ways in which facework influences physician-patient interactions for Achi patients | 24 Achi Aboriginal patients | SSI & observations Thematic | √ |
|
| Australia | Explore the relationship between perceived time constraints, jargon use, and patient information-seeking | 7 Non-Native English-speakers from Europe and Asia, 10 Native English-speakers (14F, 3M) (n = 17) | SSI Grounded Theory | √ |
|
| Australia | Explore women's views of care provided by physicians in the first 12 months postpartum | 29 women (ENR) | SSI Thematic | |
|
| Canada | Explore patients' experiences of fairness and commitment in health care contexts | 23 adults (15F, 8M) (ENR) | SSI Grounded Theory | |
|
| USA | Explores refugees’ perspectives regarding communication barriers impeding on communication about war related trauma | 37 Liberia, 3 Laos, 3 Asian, 4 Africa, 1 Bosnia, 3 South American (32F, 18M) (n = 50) | SSI Thematic | √ |
|
| USA | Explore patients' perceptions of the quality of care delivered by a foreign international medical graduate physician | 4 White, 5 Black, 1 Native American lower SES patients (6F, 4M) (n = 10) | SSI Thematic | √ |
|
| USA | Understand respective experiences, perceptions, and challenges both patients with chronic pain and physicians face communicating about pain | 20 White, 4 Black, 2 Other chronic pain patients (2F, 24M) (n = 26) | SSI Thematic | |
| Claramita, Mubarika, Nugraheni, van Dalen & van der Vleuten (2013) | Indonesia | Examine cultural relevance of Western physician-patient communication style to Indonesian physician-patient interactions from the patients' and physicians’ perspective | 20 Javanese patients (Indonesian) | SSI Grounded Theory | √ |
| Cocksedge, George, Renwick & Chew-Graham (2013) | UK | Explore the use of touch in consultations from both physician and patient perspectives | 10 White British, 1 other (n = 11) | SSI Thematic | |
|
| USA | Explore women’s experiences of communication about sexual health | 13 White, 13 African American, 1 Native American women (n = 27) | SSI Thematic | |
|
| USA | Examine communication and interaction as experienced by patients and physicians | 23 White, 3 Black intellectually disabled women (n = 27) | SSI Grounded Theory | |
|
| Canada | Explore the perspective of adults with intellectual disabilities on helpful interactions with their family physician | 11 adults with intellectual disabilities (7F, 4M) | SSI Thematic | |
| Bayliss, Riste, Fisher, Wearden, Peters, Lovell, & Chew-Graham (2014) [ | UK | Explore possible reasons why people from Black and ethnic minority groups may be less frequently diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome or myalgic encephalitis | 6 Pakistani, 2 Indian, 2 Black British, 1 Other White patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (8F, 3M) (n = 11) | SSI Thematic | √ |
| Marcinowicz Pawlikowska & Oleszczyk (2014) | Poland | Identify which aspects of GPs' behaviour are the most important for older people in their perception of the quality of the GP visits | 30 patients over the age of 65 (18F, 12M) | SSI Thematic | |
| Matthias, Krebs, Bergman, Coffing, & Bair (2014) [ | USA | Advance the understanding of communication about opioid treatment for chronic pain | 7 African American, 23 White veteran patients with chronic pain (4F, 26M) (n = 30) | SSI Thematic | |
| Ritholz, Beverly, Brooks, Abrahamson, & Weinger (2014) [ | USA | Explore perceptions of barriers and facilitators to diabetes self-care communication during medical appointments | 34 patients with diabetes (82% non-Hispanic White) (41% female) | SSI Thematic | |
|
| Australia | Explore the experiences of ethnically diverse patients with diabetes in receiving self-management support from GPs | 11 Arabic-speaking migrants, 9 English-speaking migrants, 8 Vietnamese-speaking migrants (17F, 11M) (n = 28) | FG Phenomenology | √ |
| Esquibel & Borkan (2014) [ | USA | Explore ways in which opioid medication influences the doctor-patient relationship by exploring experiences of adults receiving opioid therapy and that of their physicians | 21 patients receiving opioid therapy (13F, 8M) | SSI Thematic | |
| Melton, Graff, Holmes, Brown, & Bailey (2014) [ | USA | Explore the experience of asthma patients in the management of their illness | 4 African American patients with asthma (4F) | SSI Phenomenology | √ |
|
| Canada | Explore barriers and facilitators of patient-provider communication about patient searches for health information on the Internet | 56 elderly patients (57% born in Canada) (30F, 26M) | SSI Grounded theory and thematic |
aUK: United Kingdom.
bUII: Unstructured individual interviews.
c√: Cultural aspects are discussed.
dENR: Ethnicity not reported.
eSSI: Semi-structured individual interviews.
fUSA: United States of America.
gFG: Focus group interviews.
hII: Individual interviews.
iSES: Socio-economic status.
Fig 5Summary of the three major concepts: positive experiences, negative experiences, and outcomes of such communication experiences.
Synthesis of the first concept: Negative experiences.
Negative experiences discussed by participants are grouped in four categories: experiences of disrespect, time constraints, dominance of biomedical culture, and feelings of helplessness. Examples raised by participants for each category are presented.
| Negative Experiences | Examples |
|---|---|
| Disrespect | Patients are ignored, interrupted, not taken seriously, not listened to, labelled and treated accordingly (discrimination). Patients’ expertise is dismissed, privacy not respected |
| Time Constraints | Patients feel unworthy of physician's time, like a burden, rushed (which limits what is brought up), dehumanized/depersonalized, stressed and limited in questions they can ask. Physicians’ behaviour is affected: asks less questions or more close-ended questions, uses more jargon |
| Time Constraints | Patients feel unworthy of physician's time, like a burden, rushed (which limits what is brought up), dehumanized/depersonalized, stressed and limited in questions they can ask. Physicians’ behaviour is affected: asks less questions or more close-ended questions, uses more jargon |
| Dominance Of Biomedical Culture | Patients feel that biomedical culture dominates: physicians decide what is discussed (mostly biomedical info), physicians do not get to know the patient in a holistic way, use incomprehensible medical jargon, patients’ attempts to discuss psychosocial information related to disease fail, lack of continuity of care |
| Dominance Of Biomedical Culture | Patients feel that biomedical culture dominates: physicians decide what is discussed (mostly biomedical info), physicians do not get to know the patient in a holistic way, use incomprehensible medical jargon, patients’ attempts to discuss psychosocial information related to disease fail, lack of continuity of care |
| Feelings Of Helplessness | Patients don't understand jargon, are too shy/intimidated to ask, need the physician to initiate conversation, fear disclosure of information (fear physician’s reaction), undergo intimate procedures without preparation (experience discomfort with physicians but must endure), experience anxiety and shame while intimate information disclosure/inquiry, experience shock when obtaining diagnosis depending on physician’s disclosure technique, need to expose oneself to many doctors, experience difficulty setting agenda and expressing symptoms |
| Feelings Of Helplessness | Patients don't understand jargon, are too shy/intimidated to ask, need the physician to initiate conversation, fear disclosure of information (fear physician’s reaction), undergo intimate procedures without preparation (experience discomfort with physicians but must endure), experience anxiety and shame while intimate information disclosure/inquiry, experience shock when obtaining diagnosis depending on physician’s disclosure technique, need to expose oneself to many doctors, experience difficulty setting agenda and expressing symptoms |
Synthesis of the second concept: Positive experiences.
Positive experiences discussed by participants are grouped in three categories relating to physicians’ relational skills, technical competences, and approach to care. Examples raised by participants for each category are presented.
| Positive Experiences | Examples |
|---|---|
| Physicians’ Relational Skills | Patients appreciate being treated with respect and dignity, an empathic, supportive, genuinely interested, friendly, compassionate, respectful, open-minded, accepting, non-judgemental, honest, frank physician, continuity of care (getting to know a physician), use of humour and use of appropriate touch by physician, (some patients appreciate) similarity with physician (e.g. gender, religious beliefs, and ethnicity). |
| Physicians’ Technical Competence | Patients appreciate a highly competent physician who takes time to investigate symptoms, ask questions, initiate sensitive topics, allows patients to ask questions, is attentive to detail, makes correct diagnosis, gives time to patient to talk, takes time to listen, and does not rush, carefully educates the patient, gives precise explanations, tailors word choice to patient, avoids jargon, uses images and text, gives enough information, takes action, orders appropriate tests, makes referrals when needed, extends consultation time, explains before doing (sensitive) procedures |
| Physicians’ Technical Competence | Patients appreciate a highly competent physician who takes time to investigate symptoms, ask questions, initiate sensitive topics, allows patients to ask questions, is attentive to detail, makes correct diagnosis, gives time to patient to talk, takes time to listen, and does not rush, carefully educates the patient, gives precise explanations, tailors word choice to patient, avoids jargon, uses images and text, gives enough information, takes action, orders appropriate tests, makes referrals when needed, extends consultation time, explains before doing (sensitive) procedures |
| Physicians’ Approach to Care | Patients appreciate when physicians tailor their approach to patients, perceive the patient in his or her context and gets to know the patient as an individual, consider patients’ health and illness representations, value the patient’s opinion and expertise towards the illness, focus on topics other than biomedical information. Majority of patients appreciate equality and partnership between patient and physician. Minority of patients appreciate hierarchical/paternalistic approach. |
| Physicians’ Approach to Care | Patients appreciate when physicians tailor their approach to patients, perceive the patient in his or her context and gets to know the patient as an individual, consider patients’ health and illness representations, value the patient’s opinion and expertise towards the illness, focus on topics other than biomedical information. Majority of patients appreciate equality and partnership between patient and physician. Minority of patients appreciate hierarchical/paternalistic approach. |
Fig 6Outcomes of communication according to degree of satisfaction with communication experience.
Translation of the third theme: Outcomes of a Positive Communication Experience.
Positive outcomes of communication experiences raised by participants are grouped in four categories: fostering relationship, higher quality of care, patient autonomy enhanced, and satisfaction and adherence. Examples raised by participants for each category are presented.
| Positive Outcomes of Communication | Examples |
|---|---|
| Fostering the Relationship | Fosters trust and a satisfying relationship, helps create a sense of partnership |
| Higher Quality of Care | Proper referrals, patient satisfaction, disclosure of important health related information |
| Enhanced Patient Autonomy & Adherence | Feel more in control and responsible, more motivated to change and adhere to treatment, and to engage in more information-seeking behaviours |
| Satisfaction | Reduces feelings of vulnerability, relieves pain, stress, patients feel consoled, supported, cared for, valued, and welcomed |
Translation of the third theme: Outcomes of a Negative Communication Experience.
Negative outcomes of communication experiences raised by participants are grouped in four categories: relational issues and distrust, lower quality of care, overuse or underuse of resources, and dissatisfaction and non-adherence. Examples raised by participants for each category are presented.
| Negative Outcomes of Communication | Examples |
|---|---|
| Relational Issues & Distrust | Patients experience difficulty establishing a high quality relationship, distrust in physician, lack of faith in the physician’s capacity to help |
| Lower Quality of Care | Patients do not receive enough information to understand illness in all its facets, disclose important health-related information, not all issues are addressed, receive proper referrals, receive a treatment plan suited to their reality, receive enough information about treatment plan, or the treatment plan is badly explained |
| Overuse or Underuse of Resources | Patients seek a second opinion or consult elsewhere for the same issue, avoid consulting for future issues or consult only if perceived as an emergency, delay follow-ups, change physicians |
| Dissatisfaction & Non-Adherence | Patient are unsatisfied, frustrated, feel unrecognized, and disapprove of physician's approach, less motivated to comply or adhere to treatment |
Overview of studies discussing specific factors affecting EMPs’ experiences (n = 23): author, year, country of publication, sample, aim, and synthesis of specific factors.
| Author (Year) | Country | Sample | Aim | Synthesis of Specific Factors Affecting EMPs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bowes & Domokos (1995) | UK | 20 Pakistani born women | Explore South Asian women's experiences and use of health services | Language barriers are problematic, challenging to find a professional interpreter, feel labelled and treated according to stereotypes (e.g. relating to traditional clothing) |
| Thom, Campbell & Alto (1997) | USA | 29 patients (1 FG | Identify physician behaviours that foster trust | EMPs |
| Rodriguez, Bauer, Flores-Ortiz, Szkupinzki-Quiroga (1998) | USA | 14 Hispanic and 14 Asian women (n = 28) | Identify provider related factors that may affect physician-patient communication about abuse for immigrant women | Abused immigrant women's discourse is similar to White patients’ discourse with regard to disclosing sensitive info (e.g. need to be asked, need to be empathic). |
|
| UK | 7 White British and 16 South Asian | Understand the ways in which White and South Asian patients communicate with white physicians | South Asian patients experience language barrier. South Asians prefer White doctor because less importance is attributed to social hierarchy and authority in the UK. Whites and South Asians have different evaluations of similar experiences (e.g. South Asians don't perceive social talk as pertinent to a consultation). South Asians more critical of care than Whites. |
|
| UK | 18 White, 5 Black and other ethnic minority (n = 23) | Explore lesbians’ and gays’ experiences of primary care | Gay or lesbian EMPs feel their ethnic minority identity intersects with their homosexual identity. For some, it is felt as potentially increasing their risk and experience of discrimination. |
|
| Canada | 26 Aboriginals | Understand the complexity of physician-patient communication in Aboriginal communities | Aboriginals experience strong discrimination and distrust in physicians. Feelings linked to historical context and previous historical trauma. Time constraints seem to afflict Aboriginals even more since concept of time is different for Aboriginals; giving someone time is respectful as it shows the other person that he or she is worthy. |
| Abdulhadi, Shafaee, Freudenthal, Östenson & Wahlström (2007) | Oman | 27 Omani | Explore views of type 2 diabetic patients regarding medical encounter | Social hierarchy and respect for authority seems highly valued and prescribed in Oman and patients do not appreciate that; some even prefer a physician from another culture in order to reduce feelings of inferiority. |
| Fagerli, Lien & Wandel (2007) | Norway | 16 Pakistani born | Explore patients’ experiences of medical encounters | Pakistani EMPs in Norway experience language barrier. Seems like acculturation experiences influence communication experiences; more acculturated patients (e.g. workers, fluent in Norwegian) rate experiences as more positive than less acculturated patients. |
| Kokanovic & Manderson (2007) | Australia | 8 Chinese, 8 Indian, 8 Pacific Island, and 8 Greeks | Describe the way patients in an Australian setting are told of diabetes | EMPs' discourse resembles that of general patient population (e.g. short consultations, do not understand complicated jargon used to explain condition, appreciate when offered psychosocial information on diabetes). Experiences seem homogenous between immigrant groups but small sample, thus difficult to evaluate. |
| Lowe, Griffiths & Sidhu (2007) | UK | 17 Pakistan-born, 2 UK born but Pakistani origin | Explore attitudes and experiences of South Asian women towards contraceptive service provision | Pakistani women experience language barrier, difficulty accessing professional interpreters, obliged to turn to family and friends. They feel uncomfortable discussing certain topics in front of family and friends; therefore, they do not receive the information they need. Preference for female doctors. Problems due to cultural values such as respect for authority and negative consequences of ethnic match (e.g. for religious reasons, some physicians refuse to discuss contraception and women feel powerless in broaching the issue). |
| Julliard, Vivard, Delgado, Cruz, Kabak & Sabers (2008) | USA | 28 Hispanic women (8 born in US, 20 born in South or Central America) | Clarify which conditions reinforce nondisclosure of health information in clinical encounters between Latina patients and their physicians | Language barriers are problematic; difficult to disclose sensitive information when working with untrained interpreters because of privacy issues, women are frustrated and embarrassed. Values and belief differences; sexual issues are a big taboo. For Hispanics, need to maintain harmonious relations, so patients are fearful to disclose sexually transmitted diseases or abuse because of risk of destroying relations. Acculturation influence; women born outside the US prefer female physicians and need established relationship, trust, and warmth, whereas US-born patients understand that physician’s role is mainly to heal, therefore, not as much importance attributed to a warm relationship. |
| Nguyen, Barg, Armstrong, Holmes & Hornik (2008) | USA | 20 Vietnamese immigrants | Examine elements of physician-patient cancer communication from the viewpoint of older Vietnamese immigrants | Cultural belief; if you talk about an illness, it will develop. Physicians do not take belief into consideration when discussing prevention of illness. Language barrier is problematic and patients are not aware that the system needs to provide an interpreter. Patients accept the paternalistic model. Although they feel they do not have enough information to understand tests and procedures, they do not adopt the active patient role since for them it is the physician's role to initiate conversations. |
| Shelley, Sussman, Williams, Segal & Crabtree (2009) | USA | 40 Hispanics, 5 Non-Hispanic White, 48 Native Americans | Compare patients’ and physicians’ perspectives on communication about complementary and alternative medicine | EMPs’ and Whites’ discourse is similar except that for EMPs, alternative medicine seems to be more related to their cultural traditions, therefore they do not think the physician would understand or that it concerns the physician. |
| Peek, Odoms-Young, Quinn, Gorawara-Bhat, Wilson & Chin (2010) | USA | 51 African Americans | Examine African American patients’ perceptions of the influence of race on physician-patient communication | African American patients experience discrimination based on physicians' stereotypes (e.g. do not have as much time to talk as White patients, feel as if the physician did not explain because believed that Blacks would not understand). Most patients agree that it is best to consult a Black physician, ethnic match is positive. |
| Black (2012) | USA | 60 African American Elders | Explore elders' perspective of the influence of their beliefs on health care encounters | Black elderly patients say they feel more discriminated on the basis of their old age than on their skin colour, although many had examples of discrimination linked to their skin colour. Patients do not like that physicians do not inquire or know about their health and illness representations and cultural beliefs |
| Burton (2012) | Guatemala | 24 Achi (Aboriginal) patients | Explore the ways in which facework influences physician-patient interactions for Achi patients | Aboriginals experience serious discrimination (e.g. being ignored, physically and psychologically abused, and neglected). Physicians do not take into account cultural beliefs and norms when communicating (e.g. speak directly to patient and criticize their habits, for Achi, need to communicate indirectly to remain polite and respectful). |
| Dahm (2012) | Australia | 7 Non-Native English speakers from Europe and Asia, 10 Native English speakers (n = 17) | Explore relationship between perceived time constraints, jargon use, and patient information-seeking | EMPs feel the same about jargon and time constraints as general patient populations, but they do not focus and complain as much about short consultation times because consultations are even shorter in their countries of origin. |
| Shannon, O'Dougherty & Mehta (2012) | USA | 37 Liberia, 3 Laos, 3 Asian, 4 Africa, 1 Bosnia, 3 South American (n = 50) | Explores refugees’ perspectives regarding communication barriers impeding on communication about war related trauma | Differences in health representations; EMPs did not perceive war-related symptoms or emotional distress as health-related. Discourse is similar to White patients regarding disclosure of sensitive information; they believe they should defer authority to physician and should not be the one to initiate such conversations. |
| Weber & Mathews (2012) | USA | 4 White, 5 Black, 1 Aboriginal | Explore patients' perceptions of quality of care delivered by a foreign international medical graduate physician | Majority of patients evaluate experience as positive because of status equalization effect between ethnic minority physician and patients. However they mention language barriers associated to foreign physician's accent. |
| Claramita, Mubarika, Nugraheni, van Dalen & van der Vleuten (2013) | Indonesia | 20 Javanese patients (Indonesian) | Examine cultural relevance of Western physician-patient communication style to Indonesian physician-patient interactions from the patients' and doctors' perspective | Majority of patients in non-western country are not satisfied with paternalistic styles but are less able to defy this style because of predominance of collectivist values to maintain harmonious relationships and respect for authority. |
| Bayliss, Riste, Fisher, Wearden, Peters, Lovell, &Chew-Graham (2014) [ | UK | 6 Pakistani, 2 Indian, 2 Black British, 1 Other White | Explore possible reasons why people from Black and ethnic minority groups may be less frequently diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome or myalgic encephalitis | Language barrier is a problem for patients in expressing their symptoms and in understanding the physician. Some turn to professional interpreters, however, the interpreter does not always understand the patient’s dialect. Others bring family members or notes written by a community member. Patients feel physicians have negative stereotypes of their culture (e.g. lazy and complainer) and treat the patients accordingly. |
| Rose & Harris (2014) [ | Australia | 11 Arabic-speaking migrants, 9 English-speaking migrants, 8 Vietnamese-speaking migrants | Explore the experiences of ethnically diverse patients with diabetes in receiving self-management support from GPs | Patients feel they are not provided with enough culturally tailored advice. Some patients also aim to protect the relationship with their physician, although they dislike the paternalistic style. |
| Melton, Graff, Holmes, Brown, & Bailey (2014) [ | USA | 4 African American | Explore the experience of asthma patients in the management of their illness | Patients feel discriminated against based on their skin colour and historical tensions between African Americans and White Americans influence the way patients experience the consultation with physicians. |
aUK: United-Kingdom.
bUSA: United-States of America.
cFG: Focus group interviews.
dEMPs: Ethnic minority patients.
Specific factors influencing EMPs’ experiences in communicating with a physician (language barriers, discrimination, differences in values and beliefs, and acculturation issues).
| Specific Factors Affecting EMPs’ Experiences | Examples |
|---|---|
| Language Barriers | Difficulty accessing professional interpreters, obliged to turn to friends and family members, discomfort when consulting with untrained interpreters, some topics are not addressed with untrained interpreters |
| Discrimination | Based on their cultural belonging, treated according to physicians’ stereotypes |
| Differences in Values and Beliefs | Differences in health and illness representations (e.g. emotional distress is not health-related), differences in beliefs regarding respect for authority and need to maintain harmonious relationships; patients remain silent and do not contradict physicians, differences in time concepts |
| Acculturation Issues | More acculturated to host culture experience less language barriers and understand patient role in the host culture |
Specific factors related to micro-cultural belonging that influence ethnic majority patients’ experiences of communication.
| Micro-cultural Aspects Influencing Ethnic Majority Patients’ Experiences | Examples |
|---|---|
| Discrimination | Patients feel they are labelled according to their differences and treated according to stereotypes |
| Differences in Values and Beliefs | Patients feel their religious and spiritual beliefs are dismissed as well as their beliefs concerning alternative medicine |
Fig 7Relationship between positive and negative experiences: A balance metaphor.