Building trust and rapport early in the new doctor-patient relationship: a longitudinal qualitative study

BackgroundNew patients are a particularly vulnerable population because they are at high risk of missing a subsequent visit or dropping out of care completely. However, few data exist on what new patients value in the beginning of a relationship with a new provider. Persons with HIV infection may be an ideal population to study the drivers of a positive initial patient-provider relationship, as it is a chronic and serious condition that requires a reliable, ongoing relationship with a provider. Informed by patients’ real experiences, this study aims to identify what patients see as the most critical elements for building trust and rapport from the outset.MethodsWe conducted longitudinal, in-person interviews with 21 patients new to the HIV clinic at the Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Houston, Texas, from August 2013 to March 2015. Patients were interviewed across three time points: once before their first provider visit, a second time within two weeks after the first visit, and a third time at 6 to 12 months after the first provider visit.ResultsWe conducted 61 h of patient interviews. The mean age was 53 years; 52% were non-Hispanic white, 23% were non-Hispanic black and 19% were Hispanic. Patients described significant anxiety and vulnerability not just from HIV itself, but also in starting a relationship as a new patient to a new provider. Our analysis of these experiences revealed five actions providers can take to reduce their patients’ anxiety and build trust early in the first visit: 1) provide reassurance to patients, 2) tell patients it’s okay to ask questions, 3) show patients their lab results and explain what they mean, 4) avoid language and behaviors that are judgmental of patients, and 5) ask patients what they want [i.e., treatment goals and preferences].ConclusionsOur study incorporates direct input from patients and highlights the unique psychological challenges that patients face in seeking care from a new provider. The actionable opportunities cited by patients have the potential to mitigate patients’ feelings of anxiety and vulnerability, and thereby improve their overall health care experience.

[1]  Kenneth R. Evans,et al.  How first impressions of a customer impact effectiveness in an initial sales encounter , 2000 .

[2]  R. Frankel,et al.  Can teaching agenda-setting skills to physicians improve clinical interaction quality? A controlled intervention , 2008, BMC medical education.

[3]  T. Pincus,et al.  Effective Reassurance in Primary Care of Low Back Pain: What Messages From Clinicians are Most Beneficial at Early Stages? , 2015, The Clinical journal of pain.

[4]  P. Corrigan,et al.  Mental health stigma and primary health care decisions , 2014, Psychiatry Research.

[5]  Antonio Gasparrini,et al.  Reducing and meta-analysing estimates from distributed lag non-linear models , 2013, BMC Medical Research Methodology.

[6]  P. Corrigan,et al.  Influence of schizophrenia diagnosis on providers' practice decisions. , 2015, The Journal of clinical psychiatry.

[7]  D. Bangsberg,et al.  Impact of HIV-related stigma on treatment adherence: systematic review and meta-synthesis , 2013, Journal of the International AIDS Society.

[8]  J. Cornuz,et al.  Physician Response to “By-the-Way” Syndrome in Primary Care , 2009, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[9]  Jacqueline A Pugh,et al.  Audit and feedback and clinical practice guideline adherence: Making feedback actionable , 2006, Implementation science : IS.

[10]  P. Cram,et al.  Mentally ill Medicare patients less likely than others to receive certain types of surgery. , 2011, Health affairs.

[11]  S. Loue,et al.  Mental illness and use of screening mammography among Medicaid beneficiaries. , 2012, American journal of preventive medicine.

[12]  R. Street,et al.  A 3-stage model of patient-centered communication for addressing cancer patients' emotional distress. , 2014, Patient education and counseling.

[13]  L. Robins,et al.  Effectiveness of Intensive Physician Training in Upfront Agenda Setting , 2011, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[14]  T. Lawrie,et al.  Communication skills training for healthcare professionals working with people who have cancer. , 2013, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[15]  A. Green,et al.  Helping medical learners recognise and manage unconscious bias toward certain patient groups , 2012, Medical education.

[16]  C. Burton,et al.  Reassurance after diagnostic testing with a low pretest probability of serious disease: systematic review and meta-analysis. , 2013, JAMA internal medicine.

[17]  M. Dimatteo,et al.  Physician Communication and Patient Adherence to Treatment : A Meta-analysis , 2018 .

[18]  A. Hopkins,et al.  Problems in the conceptual framework of patient satisfaction research: an empirical exploration. , 1983, Sociology of health & illness.

[19]  Hsiu-Fang Hsieh,et al.  Three Approaches to Qualitative Content Analysis , 2005, Qualitative health research.

[20]  R. Westbrook,et al.  Retaining HIV Patients in Care: The Role of Initial Patient Care Experiences , 2016, AIDS and Behavior.

[21]  G. Moseley,et al.  Effect of Primary Care-Based Education on Reassurance in Patients With Acute Low Back Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. , 2015, JAMA internal medicine.

[22]  G. Devins Using the illness intrusiveness ratings scale to understand health-related quality of life in chronic disease. , 2010, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[23]  M K Marvel,et al.  Soliciting the patient's agenda: have we improved? , 1999, JAMA.

[24]  S. Morley,et al.  Medical reassurance and patients' responses. , 1998, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[25]  Glyn Elwyn,et al.  Authoritarian physicians and patients' fear of being labeled 'difficult' among key obstacles to shared decision making. , 2012, Health affairs.

[26]  Lesley Fallowfield,et al.  Efficacy of a Cancer Research UK communication skills training model for oncologists: a randomised controlled trial , 2002, The Lancet.

[27]  M. Suarez‐Almazor,et al.  Retention in care: a challenge to survival with HIV infection. , 2007, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[28]  Alexander L. Miller,et al.  Patterns of primary care and mortality among patients with schizophrenia or diabetes: a cluster analysis approach to the retrospective study of healthcare utilization , 2009, BMC health services research.

[29]  A. Molassiotis,et al.  Developing longitudinal qualitative designs: lessons learned and recommendations for health services research , 2013, BMC Medical Research Methodology.

[30]  T. Pincus,et al.  Reassurance during low back pain consultations with GPs: a qualitative study. , 2015, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[31]  Caroline E. Mann In a Stranger's Shoes: Reducing mental illness stigma through perspective-taking , 2010 .

[32]  M. Parchman,et al.  Continuity of Care, Self‐Management Behaviors, and Glucose Control in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes , 2002, Medical care.

[33]  K Kroenke,et al.  Predictors of patient satisfaction. , 2001, Social science & medicine.

[34]  Amy P Abernethy,et al.  Enhancing Communication Between Oncologists and Patients With a Computer-Based Training Program , 2011, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[35]  Allard J van der Beek,et al.  Effective training strategies for teaching communication skills to physicians: an overview of systematic reviews. , 2011, Patient education and counseling.

[36]  D. Grossoehme,et al.  Analyzing longitudinal qualitative data: the application of trajectory and recurrent cross-sectional approaches , 2016, BMC Research Notes.

[37]  Iris Usach,et al.  Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors: a review on pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety and tolerability , 2013, Journal of the International AIDS Society.

[38]  Jeffrey D. Robinson,et al.  Agenda-setting revisited: When and how do primary-care physicians solicit patients' additional concerns? , 2016, Patient education and counseling.

[39]  B. Turan,et al.  HIV-Related Stigma Among Healthcare Providers in the Deep South , 2015, AIDS and Behavior.

[40]  P. Butow,et al.  Physician-identified factors affecting patient participation in reaching treatment decisions. , 2008, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[41]  G. McCollum "I" is for "innovation". , 2013, Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

[42]  Martin Underwood,et al.  Cognitive and affective reassurance and patient outcomes in primary care: A systematic review , 2013, PAIN®.

[43]  E. McColl Cognitive Interviewing. A Tool for Improving Questionnaire Design , 2006, Quality of Life Research.

[44]  R. Frankel,et al.  The effect of physician behavior on the collection of data. , 1984, Annals of internal medicine.

[45]  Richard L. Street,et al.  Patient-centered communication in cancer care: Promoting healing and reducing suffering , 2007 .

[46]  J. Holland,et al.  Trajectories of psychological distress after colorectal cancer , 2013, Psycho-oncology.

[47]  S. Harris,et al.  ‘Being known’: patients' perspectives of the dynamics of human connection in cancer care , 2005, Psycho-oncology.

[48]  Annett Wechsler,et al.  Cognitive Interviewing A Tool For Improving Questionnaire Design , 2016 .

[49]  M. J. Harris,et al.  You never get a second chance to make a first impression: Behavioral consequences of first impressions. , 2008 .

[50]  K. Alexanderson,et al.  Trajectories of Anxiety Among Women with Breast Cancer: A Proxy for Adjustment from Acute to Transitional Survivorship , 2015, Journal of psychosocial oncology.

[51]  A. Detsky,et al.  Encouraging patients to ask questions: how to overcome "white-coat silence". , 2013, JAMA.

[52]  Aneil Mishra,et al.  Trust in physicians and medical institutions: what is it, can it be measured, and does it matter? , 2001, The Milbank quarterly.

[53]  R. Frankel,et al.  Getting the most out of the clinical encounter: the four habits model. , 1999, The Journal of medical practice management : MPM.

[54]  Jeffrey D. Robinson,et al.  How patients understand physicians’ solicitations of additional concerns: implications for up-front agenda setting in primary care , 2016, Health communication.

[55]  Chelsea A. Heuer,et al.  Obesity stigma: important considerations for public health. , 2010, American journal of public health.