Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > What do people appreciate in physicians’ commun...

Associated organisational unit

View graph of relations

What do people appreciate in physicians’ communication?: an international study with focus groups using videotaped medical consultations

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • Maria A. Mazzi
  • Michela Rimondini
  • Myriam Deveugele
  • Christa Zimmermann
  • Francesca Moretti
  • Liesbeth van Vliet
  • Giuseppe Deledda
  • Ian Fletcher
  • Jozien Bensing
Close
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>10/2015
<mark>Journal</mark>Health Expectations
Issue number5
Volume18
Number of pages12
Pages (from-to)1215-1226
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date25/06/13
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Background The literature shows that the quality of communication is usually determined from a professional perspective. Patients or lay people are seldom involved in the development of quality indicators or communication.
Objective To give voice to the lay people perspective on what constitutes
‘good communication’ by evoking their reactions to variations in physician communication.
Design Lay people from four different countries watched the same videotaped standardized medical encounters and discussed their preferences in gender-specific focus groups who were balanced in age groups.
Setting and participants Two hundred and fifty-nine lay people (64 NL, 72 IT, 75 UK and 48 BE) distributed over 35 focus groups of 6–8 persons each.
Main variables studied Comments on doctors’ behaviours were classified by the GULiVer framework in terms of contents and preferences.
Results Participants prevalently discussed ‘task-oriented expressions’
(39%: competency, self-confident, providing solutions), ‘affective oriented/emotional expressions’ (25%: empathy, listening, reassuring) and ‘process-oriented expressions’ (23%: flexibility, summarizing, verifying). ‘Showing an affective attitude’ was most appreciated (positive percentage within category: 93%, particularly facilitations and inviting attitude), followed by ‘providing solution’ (85%). Among disfavoured behaviour, repetitions (88%), ‘writing and reading’ (54%) and asking permission (42%) were found.
Conclusions Although an affective attitude is appreciated by nearly everybody, people may vary widely in their communication needs and preferences: what is ‘good communication’ for one person may be disliked or even a source of irritation for another. A physician should be flexible and capable of adapting the consultation to the different needs of different patients. This challenges the
idea of general communication guidelines.