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Eye Contact between Physicians and Older-patients in
          Anxiety-provoking Communication

               R Gorawara-Bhat*, D Dethmers** and MA Cook***


    * Section of Geriatrics & Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine,
              The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637

                      ** School of Social Service Administration,
                   The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637

                      *** JVC Radiology and Medical Analysis LLC,
                                Clayton, Missouri 63105


The International Conference on Communication in Healthcare 2011
              19 October 2011, Chicago, Illinois, USA
   This research was supported by The Section of Geriatrics & Palliative Medicine (RGB) and JVC Radiology (MAC).
The original research was supported by AHRQ # (1 RO3 HS01 4088-01A1) (RGB) and NIA Grant # R44 AG15737 (MAC).
                       The Investigators retained full independence in the conduct of this research.
Eye Contact in Physician-Older patient Interactions


• Routine physician-older patient (> = 65 yrs) interactions:

      -- Eye contact most frequently invoked nonverbal dimension
         (Gorawara-Bhat et al 2007)

      -- Eye contact -- ―Looking‖ and ―Listening‖
         Verbal dimension -- ―Talking‖

      -- Characteristics of Eye contact related to Patient-Centered (PC)
         interaction (Gorawara-Bhat et al 2011)

             -- Type of Eye contact (Sustained or Brief);
             -- Frequency of occurrence

• Literature – Eye contact -- salient nonverbal dimension of
   Patient-centered communication (MacDonald, 2009; Mast, 2007)

                                                                           2
Eye Contact in Anxiety-provoking Interactions



• Goals of Present Work:
        1) Nature of eye contact in anxiety-provoking interactions
        2) Comparison with Routine Interactions



• Physician and Older-patient anxiety-provoking
  communication as ―naturally occurring‖ in office visits



• ―Looking and Listening‖ as embedded in ―Talking‖


                                                                     3
Sample Description
•   Secondary analysis -- NIA (National Institute of Aging) videotapes of
    physician-older patient interactions (2005)

•   Search Words:
    prostate, PSA, mammogram, referral, surgery, cancer, screening, depressi
    on, exercise, weight, smoking, and diet

•   Identified 58 out of 489 anxiety-provoking visits from NIA database

•   Discarded tapes (gaze of physician and/or patient not visible, little
    info, dysfunctional and/or encrypted tape) (22 out of 58)

•   Anxiety-provoking visits -- 4 emergent types:
         1) cancer
         2) depression/suicide
         3) behavioral issues (e.g. smoking, substance abuse)
         4) acute medical visits

•   Anxiety-provoking segments coded (n = 37)
    # of physician older-patient visits: n = 36 ; 3 tapes w multiple segments
    # of physician older-patient, companion* visits: n = 3
    (*companion – an extension of older patient)                                4
Data Analysis – NVivo 9.0 Software

• Qualitative Software -- NVivo 9.0 used to code physician and
  patient nonverbal (―looking‖) and verbal (―talking‖) characteristics
  in anxiety-provoking segments

• NVivo 9.0 — juxtaposition of verbal transcripts alongside visual
  frames; examined simultaneously

• Each physician - older patient visit reviewed within NVivo 9.0;
  anxiety-provoking segment(s) identified, and time-stamped

• 8 segments coded independently by 2 investigators (RGB & DD)
  Results identical -- Inter-Rater reliability established;
  25 segments coded (DD); 4 segments coded (RGB)

• Segments reviewed, coded for physician and patient ―looking‖ and
  ―talking‖ behaviors (RGB, DD) (Table 1)

• Comparison w Routine Office visits (n = 8)
                                                                     5
Results – Thematic Codes

Table 1: Coding Anxiety-provoking segments in physician-older patient visits
                                (n = 37)

A.   Codes for physician ―looking‖ & ―talking‖
       (nonverbal & verbal communication)

     1.   Physician Looking and Not Talking (listen)
     2.   Physician Looking and Talking (listen)
     3.   Physician Not Looking and Talking (not listen)
     4.   Physician Not Looking and no responsive Talking (not listen)


B.   Codes for patient ―looking‖ & ―talking‖
       (nonverbal & verbal communication)

     1.   Patient Looking and Not Talking (listen)
     2.   Patient Looking and Talking (listen)
     3.   Patient Not Looking and Talking (not listen)
                                                                         6
     4.   Patient Not Looking and no responsive Talking (not listen)
Results - Demographics

          Table 2: Demographic Characteristics of
   Physicians & Older-Patients in Anxiety-provoking visits



                   Physicians (n = 18 )   Older-patients (n = 37)
                       Age (years)
Average (Range)        52 (34 -82)             74 (65 – 91)
                           Race
Caucasian                  16                       36
African-American            2                       1



                                                               7
Anxiety-provoking Communication
                        Example – Suicidal Ideation




•   Frequency of occurrence
    of physicians‘ gaze is twice
    that of patient (96% vs 54%)

•   Physician - ―sustained‖ gaze
    establishes ―engagement frame‖

•   Patient – ―brief‖ gaze
    no reciprocal frame maintenance




                                                      8
Anxiety-provoking Communication
                               Example -- Smoking




•   Physician‘s frequency of gaze
    -- high (92%)

•   Patient‘s frequency
    of gaze -- similar (89%)

•   Physician initiates
    ―engagement frame‖;
    patient reciprocates gaze




                                                    9
Anxiety-provoking Communication
                   Example – Acute Medical Issue



• Physician‘s frequency of
   gaze -- low (72%)
  -- Characterized –
     ―Brief‖ episode

• Patients frequency of
   gaze -- continuous (95%)
   -- Characterized as
      ―Sustained‖ episode
  -- Establish
     ―engagement frame‖



                                                   10
Anxiety-provoking Communication

                          Example – Cancer




• Physician -- low
      eye contact (60%)

• Patient -- high
        eye contact (90%)
    - tries to establish
     ―engagement frame‖




                                               11
Characteristics of Physician ―Looking & Listening‖
   Table 3: Comparison of Anxiety-provoking & Routine Visits

                                  EYE CONTACT BY TYPE OF INTERACTION

                                                   ANXIETY-PROVOKING VISITS
                                                                                                     ROUTINE
                                      Cancer        Depression/ Behavioral            Acute        VISITS (n= 8)
                                      (n=14)        Suicide (n=7) (n=7)              Medical
                                    CHARACTERISTICS OF SEGMENTS

Avg Segment Length                      3.54            8:01           3:41            3:53             6.23
(Range) (minutes)                   (0.17-12.58)    (1:50-21:00)   (0:28 - 6:39)   (1:41 - 6:41)   (3.36 - 11.00)
Eye contact Duration (minutes)         0.17            1:02            0:25            0:12            3.15


                                          TYPE OF EYE CONTACT
Number of Brief Episodes                47              15              28              58              35
Number of Sustained Episodes            25              17              17              13              15
Number of Brief Episodes/ Visit         3.1             2.5             4              7.25             4.4
Number of Sustained Episodes/ Visit     1.9             2.7            2.3             1.6              1.9




                                                                                                          12
Results – Communication
   Table 4: Nonverbal & Verbal Communication between Physicians and
        Older-patients in Different Types of Anxiety-provoking Visits

Communication               Ratios of "Looking" and "Talking" (%)

                 Cancer       Depression/       Behavioral     Acute Medical
                 (n =14)     Suicide (n = 7)   Issues (n =7)    Issues (n =9)

NONVERBAL       Ratio of frequency of "Looking" to "Not-Looking" (%)
Physician       2.7 (73%)      22.5 (96%)        12 (92%)         3 (72%)
Patient         8.5 (90%)      1.2 (54%)         8 (89%)         18 (95%)


VERBAL          Ratio of frequency of "Talking" to "Not-Talking" (%)
Physician       2.3 (70%)      1.1 (51%)         1 (56%)         1.4 (58%)
Patient          1 (48%)       1.4 (48%)         1 (48%)         1.3 (57%)
                                                                            13
Results – ―Looking‖ and ―Talking‖
Table 5: Comparison of ―Looking‖ and ―Talking‖ in
       Anxiety-provoking and Routine Visits
                  Anxiety-Provoking         Routine
Communication
                      visits (%)            visits (%)
                        (n = 8)              (n = 8)
             Ratio of Looking to Not-looking

Physician               5 ( 83%)                2 (65%)
Patient                 2 ( 68%)            60 ( 98%)


              Ratio of Talking to Not-talking

Physician              1.4 ( 58%)               2 (66%)
Patient                1.2 (55%)                1 (47%)
                                                          14
Summary and Conclusions - 1



In Verbal Communication:
• In Anxiety-provoking and Routine interactions – Frequency of occurrence of
    ―talking‖ for physicians and patients is similar.

    Physicians and Patients ―accommodate‖, i.e. ‗complement‘ one another in
    terms of the functions of their respective utterances (Street, 1991).

In Nonverbal Communication (Eye contact):
• In anxiety-provoking interactions—physicians seek patients gaze to
   establish ‗engagement frame‘
   - patients reciprocate to some extent (Table 5).

•   In routine interactions, patients seek physicians gaze to establish
    ‗engagement frame‘
    - physicians show little reciprocal behavior (Table 5)
                                                                          15
Conclusions and Implications -- 2

•   1. Nonverbal dimension of Eye contact – an essential foundation for
    patient-centered communication -- used differentially in routine and
    anxiety-provoking interactions by physicians

•   2. When a prescriptive resolution of patients‘ chief complaint is
    possible, physicians may not invoke eye contact to complement verbal
    communication. E.g. acute medical issues, routine visits, prostate
    cancer.

•   3. When no prescriptive resolution of patients‘ chief complaint is
    conceivable, physicians generally invoke eye contact to complement their
    verbal communication. E.g. suicidal ideation, depression.

•   4. To make interaction patient-centered, physician education should
    emphasize that physicians‘ invoke eye contact to complement verbal
    communication and establish an ‗engagement frame‘ with patients.


                                                                           16
References

•   Finset A. Nonverbal communication—an important key to in-depth under- standing
    of provider-patient interaction (Editorial). Patient Educ Couns 2007;66:127–8.

•   Teresi JA, Ramirez M, Ocepek-Welikson K, Cook MA. The development and
    psychometric analyses of ADEPT: an instrument for assessing the interactions
    between doctors and their elderly patients. Ann Behav Med 2005;30: 225–42

•   Gorawara-Bhat R, Cook MA, Sachs GA. Nonverbal communication in doctor– elderly
    patient transactions (NDEPT): development of a tool. Patient Educ Couns 2007;
    66:223–34.

•   Gorawara-Bhat R, Cook MA. Eye contact in Patient-centered Communication.
    Patient Educ Couns 2011; 82: 442-447.

•   Ruusvuori J. Looking means listening: coordinating displays of engagement in
    doctor–patient interaction. Soc Sci Med 2001;52:1093–108.

•   Robinson JD. Getting down to business: talk, gaze and body orientation during
    openings of doctor–patient consultations. Health Commun 1998;25: 97–123.

                                                                                    17

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Nonverbal Communication: Eye contact between physicians and older-patients in anxiety-provoking visits

  • 1. Eye Contact between Physicians and Older-patients in Anxiety-provoking Communication R Gorawara-Bhat*, D Dethmers** and MA Cook*** * Section of Geriatrics & Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637 ** School of Social Service Administration, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637 *** JVC Radiology and Medical Analysis LLC, Clayton, Missouri 63105 The International Conference on Communication in Healthcare 2011 19 October 2011, Chicago, Illinois, USA This research was supported by The Section of Geriatrics & Palliative Medicine (RGB) and JVC Radiology (MAC). The original research was supported by AHRQ # (1 RO3 HS01 4088-01A1) (RGB) and NIA Grant # R44 AG15737 (MAC). The Investigators retained full independence in the conduct of this research.
  • 2. Eye Contact in Physician-Older patient Interactions • Routine physician-older patient (> = 65 yrs) interactions: -- Eye contact most frequently invoked nonverbal dimension (Gorawara-Bhat et al 2007) -- Eye contact -- ―Looking‖ and ―Listening‖ Verbal dimension -- ―Talking‖ -- Characteristics of Eye contact related to Patient-Centered (PC) interaction (Gorawara-Bhat et al 2011) -- Type of Eye contact (Sustained or Brief); -- Frequency of occurrence • Literature – Eye contact -- salient nonverbal dimension of Patient-centered communication (MacDonald, 2009; Mast, 2007) 2
  • 3. Eye Contact in Anxiety-provoking Interactions • Goals of Present Work: 1) Nature of eye contact in anxiety-provoking interactions 2) Comparison with Routine Interactions • Physician and Older-patient anxiety-provoking communication as ―naturally occurring‖ in office visits • ―Looking and Listening‖ as embedded in ―Talking‖ 3
  • 4. Sample Description • Secondary analysis -- NIA (National Institute of Aging) videotapes of physician-older patient interactions (2005) • Search Words: prostate, PSA, mammogram, referral, surgery, cancer, screening, depressi on, exercise, weight, smoking, and diet • Identified 58 out of 489 anxiety-provoking visits from NIA database • Discarded tapes (gaze of physician and/or patient not visible, little info, dysfunctional and/or encrypted tape) (22 out of 58) • Anxiety-provoking visits -- 4 emergent types: 1) cancer 2) depression/suicide 3) behavioral issues (e.g. smoking, substance abuse) 4) acute medical visits • Anxiety-provoking segments coded (n = 37) # of physician older-patient visits: n = 36 ; 3 tapes w multiple segments # of physician older-patient, companion* visits: n = 3 (*companion – an extension of older patient) 4
  • 5. Data Analysis – NVivo 9.0 Software • Qualitative Software -- NVivo 9.0 used to code physician and patient nonverbal (―looking‖) and verbal (―talking‖) characteristics in anxiety-provoking segments • NVivo 9.0 — juxtaposition of verbal transcripts alongside visual frames; examined simultaneously • Each physician - older patient visit reviewed within NVivo 9.0; anxiety-provoking segment(s) identified, and time-stamped • 8 segments coded independently by 2 investigators (RGB & DD) Results identical -- Inter-Rater reliability established; 25 segments coded (DD); 4 segments coded (RGB) • Segments reviewed, coded for physician and patient ―looking‖ and ―talking‖ behaviors (RGB, DD) (Table 1) • Comparison w Routine Office visits (n = 8) 5
  • 6. Results – Thematic Codes Table 1: Coding Anxiety-provoking segments in physician-older patient visits (n = 37) A. Codes for physician ―looking‖ & ―talking‖ (nonverbal & verbal communication) 1. Physician Looking and Not Talking (listen) 2. Physician Looking and Talking (listen) 3. Physician Not Looking and Talking (not listen) 4. Physician Not Looking and no responsive Talking (not listen) B. Codes for patient ―looking‖ & ―talking‖ (nonverbal & verbal communication) 1. Patient Looking and Not Talking (listen) 2. Patient Looking and Talking (listen) 3. Patient Not Looking and Talking (not listen) 6 4. Patient Not Looking and no responsive Talking (not listen)
  • 7. Results - Demographics Table 2: Demographic Characteristics of Physicians & Older-Patients in Anxiety-provoking visits Physicians (n = 18 ) Older-patients (n = 37) Age (years) Average (Range) 52 (34 -82) 74 (65 – 91) Race Caucasian 16 36 African-American 2 1 7
  • 8. Anxiety-provoking Communication Example – Suicidal Ideation • Frequency of occurrence of physicians‘ gaze is twice that of patient (96% vs 54%) • Physician - ―sustained‖ gaze establishes ―engagement frame‖ • Patient – ―brief‖ gaze no reciprocal frame maintenance 8
  • 9. Anxiety-provoking Communication Example -- Smoking • Physician‘s frequency of gaze -- high (92%) • Patient‘s frequency of gaze -- similar (89%) • Physician initiates ―engagement frame‖; patient reciprocates gaze 9
  • 10. Anxiety-provoking Communication Example – Acute Medical Issue • Physician‘s frequency of gaze -- low (72%) -- Characterized – ―Brief‖ episode • Patients frequency of gaze -- continuous (95%) -- Characterized as ―Sustained‖ episode -- Establish ―engagement frame‖ 10
  • 11. Anxiety-provoking Communication Example – Cancer • Physician -- low eye contact (60%) • Patient -- high eye contact (90%) - tries to establish ―engagement frame‖ 11
  • 12. Characteristics of Physician ―Looking & Listening‖ Table 3: Comparison of Anxiety-provoking & Routine Visits EYE CONTACT BY TYPE OF INTERACTION ANXIETY-PROVOKING VISITS ROUTINE Cancer Depression/ Behavioral Acute VISITS (n= 8) (n=14) Suicide (n=7) (n=7) Medical CHARACTERISTICS OF SEGMENTS Avg Segment Length 3.54 8:01 3:41 3:53 6.23 (Range) (minutes) (0.17-12.58) (1:50-21:00) (0:28 - 6:39) (1:41 - 6:41) (3.36 - 11.00) Eye contact Duration (minutes) 0.17 1:02 0:25 0:12 3.15 TYPE OF EYE CONTACT Number of Brief Episodes 47 15 28 58 35 Number of Sustained Episodes 25 17 17 13 15 Number of Brief Episodes/ Visit 3.1 2.5 4 7.25 4.4 Number of Sustained Episodes/ Visit 1.9 2.7 2.3 1.6 1.9 12
  • 13. Results – Communication Table 4: Nonverbal & Verbal Communication between Physicians and Older-patients in Different Types of Anxiety-provoking Visits Communication Ratios of "Looking" and "Talking" (%) Cancer Depression/ Behavioral Acute Medical (n =14) Suicide (n = 7) Issues (n =7) Issues (n =9) NONVERBAL Ratio of frequency of "Looking" to "Not-Looking" (%) Physician 2.7 (73%) 22.5 (96%) 12 (92%) 3 (72%) Patient 8.5 (90%) 1.2 (54%) 8 (89%) 18 (95%) VERBAL Ratio of frequency of "Talking" to "Not-Talking" (%) Physician 2.3 (70%) 1.1 (51%) 1 (56%) 1.4 (58%) Patient 1 (48%) 1.4 (48%) 1 (48%) 1.3 (57%) 13
  • 14. Results – ―Looking‖ and ―Talking‖ Table 5: Comparison of ―Looking‖ and ―Talking‖ in Anxiety-provoking and Routine Visits Anxiety-Provoking Routine Communication visits (%) visits (%) (n = 8) (n = 8) Ratio of Looking to Not-looking Physician 5 ( 83%) 2 (65%) Patient 2 ( 68%) 60 ( 98%) Ratio of Talking to Not-talking Physician 1.4 ( 58%) 2 (66%) Patient 1.2 (55%) 1 (47%) 14
  • 15. Summary and Conclusions - 1 In Verbal Communication: • In Anxiety-provoking and Routine interactions – Frequency of occurrence of ―talking‖ for physicians and patients is similar. Physicians and Patients ―accommodate‖, i.e. ‗complement‘ one another in terms of the functions of their respective utterances (Street, 1991). In Nonverbal Communication (Eye contact): • In anxiety-provoking interactions—physicians seek patients gaze to establish ‗engagement frame‘ - patients reciprocate to some extent (Table 5). • In routine interactions, patients seek physicians gaze to establish ‗engagement frame‘ - physicians show little reciprocal behavior (Table 5) 15
  • 16. Conclusions and Implications -- 2 • 1. Nonverbal dimension of Eye contact – an essential foundation for patient-centered communication -- used differentially in routine and anxiety-provoking interactions by physicians • 2. When a prescriptive resolution of patients‘ chief complaint is possible, physicians may not invoke eye contact to complement verbal communication. E.g. acute medical issues, routine visits, prostate cancer. • 3. When no prescriptive resolution of patients‘ chief complaint is conceivable, physicians generally invoke eye contact to complement their verbal communication. E.g. suicidal ideation, depression. • 4. To make interaction patient-centered, physician education should emphasize that physicians‘ invoke eye contact to complement verbal communication and establish an ‗engagement frame‘ with patients. 16
  • 17. References • Finset A. Nonverbal communication—an important key to in-depth under- standing of provider-patient interaction (Editorial). Patient Educ Couns 2007;66:127–8. • Teresi JA, Ramirez M, Ocepek-Welikson K, Cook MA. The development and psychometric analyses of ADEPT: an instrument for assessing the interactions between doctors and their elderly patients. Ann Behav Med 2005;30: 225–42 • Gorawara-Bhat R, Cook MA, Sachs GA. Nonverbal communication in doctor– elderly patient transactions (NDEPT): development of a tool. Patient Educ Couns 2007; 66:223–34. • Gorawara-Bhat R, Cook MA. Eye contact in Patient-centered Communication. Patient Educ Couns 2011; 82: 442-447. • Ruusvuori J. Looking means listening: coordinating displays of engagement in doctor–patient interaction. Soc Sci Med 2001;52:1093–108. • Robinson JD. Getting down to business: talk, gaze and body orientation during openings of doctor–patient consultations. Health Commun 1998;25: 97–123. 17