RESUMO
The delivery of primary health care involves complex interactive communication between the provider and patient. Describing the manner or style of this communication is important to more completely understand the delivery of primary health care. The purpose of this study was to examine provider's style of interaction with the patient and to compare the styles of nurse practitioners and physicians in joint practice. A total of 412 provider/patient clinic visits including 276 with physicians and 136 with nurse practitioners were videotaped and analyzed using a content-based interactive analysis system. Five provider style dimension indices were constructed including affiliation, control, somatic, psychosocial, and information indices. The results of this study show that the development of a content-based interactional analysis system which focuses on clinician activities can be useful in describing important aspects of the provider/patient encounter. Overall, there was little difference between nurse practitioner and physician style of interaction. Nurse practitioners, however, exhibited significantly more concern with psychosocial issues than physicians. Type of visit and visit history were also factors associated with provider style. Using the style dimension indices constructed for this study a typology of provider styles was developed.
Assuntos
Comunicação , Relações Enfermeiro-Paciente , Relações Médico-Paciente , Atenção Primária à Saúde , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Profissionais de Enfermagem , Estados UnidosRESUMO
The delivery of primary health care involves a complex interactive process between the provider and patient. One important feature of this interaction is provider concern for psychosocial issues. A study was undertaken to examine provider's actions with the patient and to describe the factors influencing the provider's concern with psychosocial issues. A total of 412 provider-patient clinic visits, including 276 with physicians and 136 with nurse practitioners, were videotaped and analyzed using a provider psychosocial concern index developed specifically for this study. Data from exit and follow-up interviews with patients plus a provider questionnaire were analyzed to identify factors associated with a provider's psychosocial concern. The results show that an interactional analysis focusing on clinician activities can be useful in describing important process-outcome relationships such as psychosocial concern. Factors such as type of visit, visit history, type of provider, and sex of patient and provider were associated with the amount of psychosocial concern displayed by providers and perceived by patients.