Patient-physician communication in the emergency department in Taiwan: physicians' perspectives

BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Feb 5;22(1):152. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-07533-1.

Abstract

Background: Effective patient-physician communication promotes trust and understanding between physicians and patients and reduces medical disputes. In this study, the Roter Interaction Analysis System was used to explore physician-patient communication behaviors in the emergency departments of Taiwanese hospitals.

Method: Data was collected from the dialogues between 8 emergency physicians and 54 patients through nonparticipant observation, and 675 pieces of data were quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed.

Results: The results showed that: 1. Emergency physicians' communication behaviors are task-focused. They usually ask closed-ended questions to collect data to identify the symptoms quickly and provide medical treatment. 2. Socioemotion-oriented physician-patient communication behaviors are less common in the emergency department and only serve as an aid for health education and follow-up. Due to time constraints, it is difficult to establish relationships with patients and evoke their positivity.

Conclusions: It is suggested that future education programs on physician-patient communication in the emergency department should focus on strengthening physicians' ability to communicate with patients in a more open way. They should adopt socioemotional-oriented communication skills, expressing respect and kindness, and allowing patients to briefly describe their symptoms and participate in the treatment process to achieve physician-patient consensus.

Keywords: Emergency department; Patient-physician communication; Roter interaction analysis system.

MeSH terms

  • Communication
  • Emergency Service, Hospital
  • Humans
  • Physician-Patient Relations*
  • Physicians*
  • Taiwan