| Literature DB >> 28116007 |
Korie L Zink1, Marcia Perry2, Kory London2, Olivia Floto3, Benjamin Bassin2, John Burkhardt4, Sally A Santen4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: As patients become increasingly involved in their medical care, physician-patient communication gains importance. A previous study showed that physician self-disclosure (SD) of personal information by primary care providers decreased patient rating of the provider communication skills.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28116007 PMCID: PMC5226762 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2016.10.31014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Patient ratings of provider interaction in the emergency department (SD = Self-Disclosure).
| Presence of SD | Unsure of SD | No SD noted | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Provider communication skills | n = 82 | n = 43 | n = 314 |
| Excellent | 52 (63.4%) | 27 (63.8%) | 148 (47.1%) |
| Very good | 27 (32.9%) | 15 (34.9%) | 129 (41.1%) |
| Adequate | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (2.3%) | 32 (10.2%) |
| Poor | 2 (2.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (1.0%) |
| Very poor | 1 (1.2) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (0.6) |
| Provider rapport, No. (%) | n = 82 | n = 43 | n = 309 |
| Excellent | 44 (53.7%) | 19 (44.2%) | 115 (37.2%) |
| Very good | 30 (36.6%) | 22 (51.2%) | 139 (45.0%) |
| Adequate | 6 (7.3%) | 2 (4.7%) | 50 (16.2%) |
| Poor | 1 (1.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (1.0%) |
| Very poor | 1 (1.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.6%) |
| Importance of building good relationship with provider | n = 95 | n = 57 | n = 349 |
| Very important | 68 (71.6%) | 36 (63.2%) | 244 (69.9%) |
| Somewhat important | 25 (26.3%) | 19 (33.3%) | 87 (24.9%) |
| Not at all important | 2 (2.1%) | 2 (3.5%) | 18 (5.2%) |
| Satisfaction with provider communication skills | n = 91 | n = 54 | n = 337 |
| Very satisfied | 66 (72.5%) | 39 (72.2%) | 199 (59.1%) |
| Satisfied | 21 (23.1%) | 14 (25.9%) | 108 (32.0%) |
| Neutral | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 25 (7.4%) |
| Dissatisfied | 2 (2.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.6%) |
| Very dissatisfied | 2 (2.2%) | 1 (1.9%) | 3 (0.9%) |
p<0.05 comparing self-disclosure and no self-disclosure.
Communication score related to self-disclosure by emergency department provider.
| Very Poor to Adequate | Good | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||||
| Constant: very good, attending, did self disclose | Logit coefficient | Relative risk ratio | 95 % confidence interval | Logit coefficient | Relative risk ratio | 95 % confidence interval |
| Physician assistant | −13.66 (547.7) | 0.00 (0.00) | −1,087, 1,060 | −0.26 (0.48) | 0.77 (0.37) | −1.20, 0.68 |
| Resident | −0.75 (0.57) | 0.47 (0.27) | −1.86, 0.37 | −0.56 (0.33) | 0.57 (0.19) | −1.20, 0.09 |
| Did not self-disclose | 1.43 | 4.16 | 0.19, 2.66 | 0.60 | 1.81 | 0.04, 1.15 |
| constant | 2.50 | 0.08 | 0.54 | 0.58 | ||
Standard errors in parentheses
p<0.05
FigurePatient preferences regarding types of self-disclosure. Multivariate tests of means completed by encoding categorical responses (1, 0, −1). P<0.05, meaning there is a statistically significant difference between at least one of the means compared to the others. Mean scores above 0 had more positive responses, mean scores below 0 had more negative responses.
Preferred self-disclosure content for emergency department (ED) provider vs primary care provider (PCP).
| What information would you want to know about your doctor | ED (%) | PCP (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Education/training background | 43.9% | 58.6% |
| Family life | 7.6% | 26.3% |
| Personal/social life | 6.1% | 18.6% |
| Medical ailment/injury unrelated to patient’s | 13.1% | 21.6% |
| Medical ailment/injury related to patient’s | 34.5% | 39.6% |
| Would not like to know anything about provider | 36.9% | 20.4% |
p<0.05
Themes of open-ended responses in a study of the effect of provider self-disclosure on patient satisfaction.
| How would you/did you feel if your doctor talked about herself/himself regarding other topics not covered during your visit today? Why?* | n = 300 |
|---|---|
| Would/did like it | |
| Generally positive (makes patient feel better, more personal, humanizing, good communication) | 129 (43.0%) |
| Rapport/relationship/trust building | 48 (16.0%) |
| Makes patient comfortable/more at ease | 29 (9.7%) |
| Patient is interested to know more about provider | 13 (4.3%) |
| Would/did not care | |
| Depends on nature of SD/don’t know | 12 (4.0%) |
| Would/did dislike it | |
| Irrelevant/poor use of time | 31 (10.3%) |
| Generally negative | 23 (7.7%) |
| Why do you think a doctor might talk about her/himself?* | n = 369 |
| To make patient comfortable/at ease | 119 (32.2%) |
| To build rapport/relationship | 80 (21.7%) |
| To connect/relate/empathize with patient | 62 (16.8%) |
| To educate/share experiences | 39 (10.6%) |
| To build trust/prove credibility | 23 (6.2%) |
| Doctor arrogance/insecurity/just to chat | 26 (7.1%) |