作者: Tabor E. Flickinger , Somnath Saha , Debra Roter , P. Todd Korthuis , Victoria Sharp
DOI: 10.1016/J.PEC.2015.08.020
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摘要: Abstract Objective Attitudes towards patients may influence how clinicians interact. We investigated whether respect for was associated with communication behaviors during HIV care encounters. Methods analyzed audio-recordings of visits between 413 adult HIV-infected and 45 primary providers. The independent variable clinician-reported the patient outcomes were clinician assessed by Roter Interaction Analysis System (RIAS). performed negative binomial regressions counts linear global outcomes. Results When had higher a patient, they engaged in more rapport-building, social chitchat, positive talk. Patients them talk, gave psychosocial information. Encounters emotional tone [regression coefficient 2.97 (1.92–4.59)], [2.71 (1.75–4.21)], less verbal dominance [0.81 (0.68–0.96)] patient-centeredness [1.28 (1.09–1.51)]. Conclusions Respect is patient-centered Practice Implications Clinicians should be mindful their respectful attitudes work to foster regard patients. Educators consider methods enhance trainees’ skills training.