Abstract

IntroductionOveractive bladder (OAB) and urinary incontinence are common problems that have significant impact on quality of life (QOL). Less than half of sufferers seek help from their physicians; many who do are dissatisfied with treatment and their physicians’ understanding of their problems. Little is known about the sociolinguistic characteristics of physician-patient communication about OAB in community practice.MethodsAn IRB-approved observational sociolinguistic study of dialogues between patients with OAB and treating physicians was conducted. Study design included semi-structured post-visit interviews, post-visit questionnaires, and follow-up phone calls. Conversations were analyzed using techniques from interactional sociolinguistics.ResultsCommunication was physician- rather than patient-centered. Physicians spoke the majority of words and 83% of questions were closed-ended. The impact of OAB on QOL and concerns about and adherence to treatment were infrequently addressed by physicians, who were poorly aligned with patients in their understanding. These topics were addressed more frequently when open-ended questions successfully eliciting elaborated responses were used in ask-tell-ask or ask-tell sequences.DiscussionClinical dialogue around OAB is physician-centered; topics critical to managing OAB are infrequently and inadequately addressed. The use of patient-centered communication is correlated with more discussion of critical topics, and thus, more effective management of OAB.

Highlights

  • Overactive bladder (OAB) and urinary incontinence are common problems that have significant impact on quality of life (QOL)

  • The impact of OAB on QOL and concerns about and adherence to treatment were infrequently addressed by physicians, who were poorly aligned with patients in their understanding

  • Our observations demonstrate that clinical dialogue between patients with OAB and their physicians is physician-centered

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Summary

Objectives

In this study our goal was to identify ask-tell-ask, ask-tell and tell-ask sequences even when the elements might be dispersed throughout the encounter and we achieved this goal by tracking asks and tells by content theme across the entire encounter

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