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Building Confianza: Empowering Latinos/as Through Transcultural Health Care Communication
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The Use of Technology for Communicating With Clinicians or Seeking Health Information in a Multilingual Urban Cohort: Cross-Sectional Survey.
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In: Journal of medical Internet research, vol 22, iss 4 (2020)
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The Use of Technology for Communicating With Clinicians or Seeking Health Information in a Multilingual Urban Cohort: Cross-Sectional Survey.
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In: Journal of medical Internet research, vol 22, iss 4 (2020)
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Perspectives of English, Chinese, and Spanish-Speaking Safety-Net Patients on Clinician Computer Use: Qualitative Analysis.
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In: Journal of medical Internet research, vol 21, iss 5 (2019)
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Multicultural Health Translation, Interpreting and Communication
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Standardized patients in psychiatry – the best way to learn clinical skills?
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Deaf patient-provider communication and lung cancer screening: Health Information National Trends survey in American Sign Language (HINTS-ASL).
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In: Patient education and counseling, vol 101, iss 7 (2018)
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Obtaining History with a Language Barrier in the Emergency Department: Perhaps not a Barrier After All
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In: PMC (2018)
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What can organisational theory offer knowledge translation in healthcare? : a thematic and lexical analysis
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The Next Frontier in Communication and the ECLIPPSE Study: Bridging the Linguistic Divide in Secure Messaging.
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The Next Frontier in Communication and the ECLIPPSE Study: Bridging the Linguistic Divide in Secure Messaging.
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Communication Theory in Physician Training: Examining Medical School Communication Curriculum at American Medical Universities
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In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1504873270954601 (2017)
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Patient-centred advanced cancer care: a systemic functional linguistic analysis of oncology consultations with advanced cancer patients
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Karimi, Neda. - : Sydney, Australia : Macquarie University, 2017
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Agenda-setting revisited: When and how do primary-care physicians solicit patients' additional concerns?
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In: Patient education and counseling, vol 99, iss 5 (2016)
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Abstract:
ObjectiveSoliciting patients' complete agendas of concerns (aka. 'agenda setting') can improve patients' health outcomes and satisfaction, and physicians' time management. We assess the distribution, content, and effectiveness of physicians' post-chief-complaint, agenda-setting questions.MethodsWe coded videotapes/transcripts of 407 primary-, acute-care visits between adults and 85 general-practice physicians operating in 46 community-based clinics in two states representing urban and rural care. Measures are the incidence of physicians' questions, their linguistic format, position within visits, likelihood of being responded to, and the nature of such responses.ResultsPhysicians' questions designed to solicit concerns additional to chief concerns occurred in only 32% of visits (p<.001). Compared to questions whose communication format explicitly solicited 'questions' (e.g., "Do you have any questions?"), those that were formatted so as to allow for 'concerns' (e.g., "Any other concerns?") were significantly more likely to generate some type of agenda item (Chi(2) (1, N=131)=11.96, p=.001), and to do so more frequently when positioned 'early' vs. 'late' during visits (Chi(2) (1, N=73)=4.99, p=.025).ConclusionsAgenda setting is comparatively infrequent. The communication format and position of physicians' questions affects patients' provision of additional concerns/questions.Practice implicationsPhysicians should increase use of optimized forms of agenda setting.
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Keyword:
Adult; Agenda setting; Communication; Conversation analysis; Humans; Male; Medical and Health Sciences; Medical History Taking; Office Visits; Patient; Patient Satisfaction; Patient-Centered Care; Physician; Physician-Patient Relations; Physicians; Primary Care; Primary Health Care; Psychology and Cognitive Sciences; Public Health; Question asking; Surveys and Questionnaires; Videotape Recording
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URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6qx4080r
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Medical students' creative projects on a third year pediatrics clerkship: a qualitative analysis of patient-centeredness and emotional connection.
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In: BMC medical education, vol 16, iss 1 (2016)
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'Please don't call me Mister': patient preferences of how they are addressed and their knowledge of their treating medical team in an Australian hospital
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Beyond the 'dyad': a qualitative re-evaluation of the changing clinical consultation.
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Disclosure of complementary health approaches among low income and racially diverse safety net patients with diabetes.
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In: Patient education and counseling, vol 98, iss 11 (2015)
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A Study of Pragmatic Competence: International Medical Graduates' and Patients' Negotiation of the Treatment Phase of Medical Encounters
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In: Graduate Theses and Dissertations (2014)
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Diskurse der Unfruchtbarkeitsbehandlung: ein französisch-englischer Vergleich
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In: Freiburger FrauenStudien ; 1 ; 75-85 (2013)
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