Titre :
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Do multimorbidity and deprivation influence patients’ emotional expressions and doctors’ responses in primary care consultations? – An exploratory study using multilevel analysis (2015)
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Auteurs :
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LUNDY J-M.
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Type de document :
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Article : texte imprimé
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Dans :
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Patient Education and Counseling (Vol. 98 n° 9, Septembre 2015)
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Article en page(s) :
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pp.1063–1070
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Note générale :
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biblio.
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Catégories :
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SOINS DE SANTE PRIMAIRES
MORBIDITE
STRESS
EMOTION
MEDECINE GENERALE
VIDEO
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Mots-clés:
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SOINS DE SANTE PRIMAIRES
;
MORBIDITE
;
STRESS
;
EMOTION
;
MEDECINE GENERALE
;
VIDEO
;
RELATION SOIGNANT-SOIGNE
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Résumé :
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ObjectiveTo explore whether and how patient multimorbidity and socioeconomic deprivation might influence patients’ emotional expression and doctors’ responses in the general practice (GP) consultations.MethodsVideo recordings of 107 consultations (eight GPs) were coded with the Verona Coding Definitions of Emotional Sequences (VR-CoDES). Multilevel logistic regressions modelled the probability of GP providing space response, considering patient multimorbidity, deprivation conditions and other contextual factors. Further multinomial regressions explored the possible impact of multimorbidity and deprivation on expression of and specific responses to patients’ emotional distress.ResultsIt was less likely for GPs to provide space as the consultation proceeded, controlling for multimorbidity and deprivation variables. Patients with multimorbidity were less likely to express emotional distress in an explicit form. GPs were more likely to provide acknowledgement to emotions expressed by patients from more deprived areas.ConclusionMultimorbidity and deprivation may influence the dynamics of the GP consultations in specific ways. Rigorous methodologies using larger samples are required to explore further how these two variables relate to each other and influence cue expression, provider response and subsequent patient outcomes.Practice implicationsUnderstanding how multimorbidity and deprivation impact on GP consultations may help inform future service improvement programmes.
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Note de contenu :
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SCIENTIFIQUE
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