Doctors expressions of uncertainty and patient confidence.

Although recent work has encouraged doctors to express their uncertainty to patients as a means to improve communication the potential impact of this on patients remains unclear. The present study first explored the impact of the way in which uncertainty was expressed (behaviourally versus verbally) on doctor's and patient's beliefs about patient confidence. Second the study examined the role of the patient's personal characteristics and knowledge of their doctor as a means to address the broader context. Matched questionnaires were completed by GPs (n=66, response rate=92%) and patients (n=550, response rate=88%) from practices in the south-east of England. The results showed that the majority of GPs and patients viewed verbal expressions of uncertainty such as 'Let's see what happens' as the most potentially damaging to patient confidence and both GPs and patients believed that asking a nurse for advice would have a detrimental effect. In contrast, behaviours such as using a book or computer were seen as benign or even beneficial activities. When compared directly, GPs and patients agreed about behavioural expressions of uncertainty, but the patients rated the verbal expressions as more detrimental to their confidence than anticipated by the doctors. In terms of the context, patients who indicated that both verbal and behavioural expressions of uncertainty would have the most detrimental impact upon their confidence were younger, lower class and had known their GP for less time. To conclude, patients' reactions to uncertainty occur within the context of the patient's own background and experience, however, some consistent responses can be found. In particular, whilst behavioural expressions of uncertainty may have a positive impact upon patient confidence, verbal expressions have a consistently detrimental effect which is underestimated by GPs.

[1]  Renée A. Irvin,et al.  Citizen Participation in Decision Making: Is It Worth the effort? , 2004 .

[2]  A. Suchman,et al.  Uncertainty and control: learning to live with medicine's limitations. , 1993, Humane medicine.

[3]  J. Najman,et al.  A comparative analysis of Australian health policy in the 1970s. , 1984, Social science & medicine.

[4]  Susanne Haselgrove The Student Experience , 1994 .

[5]  P. Atkinson Training for certainty. , 1984, Social science & medicine.

[6]  E. Guadagnoli,et al.  Patient participation in decision-making. , 1998, Social science & medicine.

[7]  D. C. Tosteson,et al.  New Pathways to Medical Education: Learning To Learn at Harvard Medical School. , 1994 .

[8]  Angela Coulter,et al.  Paternalism or partnership? , 1999, BMJ.

[9]  G. Gordon,et al.  Physician expressions of uncertainty during patient encounters. , 2000, Patient education and counseling.

[10]  J. Katz,et al.  Why doctors don't disclose uncertainty. , 1984, The Hastings Center report.

[11]  R. Fox,et al.  The evolution of medical uncertainty. , 1980, The Milbank Memorial Fund quarterly. Health and society.

[12]  P. Bower,et al.  Patient-centredness: a conceptual framework and review of the empirical literature. , 2000, Social science & medicine.