Accomplishing the Impossible: Talking About Body and Soul and Mind During a Medical Visit
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Health Communication
- Vol. 14 (1) , 1-21
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327027hc1401_1
Abstract
This study examines the practical side of communicating about patients' thoughts, feelings, and physical health. A study of 53 medical visits suggests that biopsychosocial communication need not be as difficult or as time consuming as many practitioners believe. Biopsychosocial medical visits can be conducted in roughly the same amount of time as biomedical visits with many important advantages. This report describes 6 communication techniques used by 1 doctor to encourage talk about lifeworld issues. The techniques include self-disclosing, expressing empathy, involving patients in decision-making, talking openly about patients' fears, asking open-ended questions, and listening attentively. The doctor studied was able to use these techniques without exceeding the average length of a biomedical visit.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Primary Care Physicians' Experience of Financial Incentives in Managed-Care SystemsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Fortnightly review: Stress, the brain, and mental illnessBMJ, 1997
- CONFERENCEThe Lancet, 1995
- Using 'windows of opportunities' in brief interviews to understand patients' concernsJAMA, 1993
- Negotiating Interpersonal and Medical Talk: Frame Shifts in the Gynaecologic ExamJournal of Language and Social Psychology, 1992
- Relational communication, satisfaction, compliance‐gaining strategies, and compliance in communication between physicians and patientsCommunication Monographs, 1987
- Themes in the Study of Self-DisclosurePublished by Springer Nature ,1987
- From sentence to sequence: Understanding the medical encounter through microinteractional analysisDiscourse Processes, 1984
- The Function of the Professional's Affective Behavior in Client Satisfaction: A Revised Approach to Social Interaction TheoryJournal of Health and Social Behavior, 1976
- Doctor-Patient CommunicationScientific American, 1972