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Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()

OBJECTIVE: Patients might exaggerate their symptoms in an attempt to align the clinician’s views with their own. A person who sees potential benefit in symptom exaggeration might also experience less trust, more difficulty communicating, and lower satisfaction with their clinician. We asked if there...

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Autores principales: Sarwar, Faiza, Crijns, Tom, Ramtin, Sina, Ring, David, Reichel, Lee, Fatehi, Amirreza
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10194274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37213755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100050
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author Sarwar, Faiza
Crijns, Tom
Ramtin, Sina
Ring, David
Reichel, Lee
Fatehi, Amirreza
author_facet Sarwar, Faiza
Crijns, Tom
Ramtin, Sina
Ring, David
Reichel, Lee
Fatehi, Amirreza
author_sort Sarwar, Faiza
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Patients might exaggerate their symptoms in an attempt to align the clinician’s views with their own. A person who sees potential benefit in symptom exaggeration might also experience less trust, more difficulty communicating, and lower satisfaction with their clinician. We asked if there was an association between patient rating of communication effectiveness, patient satisfaction, and patient trust with symptom exaggeration? METHODS: One hundred and thirty-two patients in four orthopaedic offices completed surveys including demographics, Communication-Effectiveness-Questionnaire (CEQ-6), Negative-Pain-Thoughts-Questionnaire (NPTQ-4), a Guttman-style satisfaction question, PROMIS Depression, and Stanford Trust in Physician. Patients were randomly assigned to answer three questions about symptom exaggeration for two scenarios: 1) their own exaggeration during the just-completed visit or 2) the average person’s tendency to exaggerate. RESULTS: In multivariable analysis, lower ratings of communication effectiveness were associated with greater symptom exaggeration (p=0.002), while an annual household income>$100,000 (p=0.033) was associated with higher ratings. Higher rating of satisfaction was associated with lower education attained (p=0.004). Greater trust was associated with lower personal exaggeration (p=0.002). CONCLUSION: The relationship between greater exaggeration and lower ratings of communication effectiveness and trust suggests that symptom descriptions that seem more intense or diffuse than expected may indicate opportunities for more effective communication and trust. INNOVATION: Patient experience can be improved by training clinicians to identify symptom exaggeration as a signal that the patient does not feel heard and understood and a cue to return to communication strategies that build trust.
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spelling pubmed-101942742023-05-19 Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust() Sarwar, Faiza Crijns, Tom Ramtin, Sina Ring, David Reichel, Lee Fatehi, Amirreza PEC Innov Full length article OBJECTIVE: Patients might exaggerate their symptoms in an attempt to align the clinician’s views with their own. A person who sees potential benefit in symptom exaggeration might also experience less trust, more difficulty communicating, and lower satisfaction with their clinician. We asked if there was an association between patient rating of communication effectiveness, patient satisfaction, and patient trust with symptom exaggeration? METHODS: One hundred and thirty-two patients in four orthopaedic offices completed surveys including demographics, Communication-Effectiveness-Questionnaire (CEQ-6), Negative-Pain-Thoughts-Questionnaire (NPTQ-4), a Guttman-style satisfaction question, PROMIS Depression, and Stanford Trust in Physician. Patients were randomly assigned to answer three questions about symptom exaggeration for two scenarios: 1) their own exaggeration during the just-completed visit or 2) the average person’s tendency to exaggerate. RESULTS: In multivariable analysis, lower ratings of communication effectiveness were associated with greater symptom exaggeration (p=0.002), while an annual household income>$100,000 (p=0.033) was associated with higher ratings. Higher rating of satisfaction was associated with lower education attained (p=0.004). Greater trust was associated with lower personal exaggeration (p=0.002). CONCLUSION: The relationship between greater exaggeration and lower ratings of communication effectiveness and trust suggests that symptom descriptions that seem more intense or diffuse than expected may indicate opportunities for more effective communication and trust. INNOVATION: Patient experience can be improved by training clinicians to identify symptom exaggeration as a signal that the patient does not feel heard and understood and a cue to return to communication strategies that build trust. Elsevier 2022-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10194274/ /pubmed/37213755 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100050 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full length article
Sarwar, Faiza
Crijns, Tom
Ramtin, Sina
Ring, David
Reichel, Lee
Fatehi, Amirreza
Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
title Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
title_full Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
title_fullStr Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
title_full_unstemmed Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
title_short Patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
title_sort patient symptom exaggeration is associated with communication effectiveness and trust()
topic Full length article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10194274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37213755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100050
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