Differences in Physicians' Verbal and Nonverbal Communication With Black and White Patients at the End of Life
Affiliations
- Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Affiliations
- Department of Consumer Sciences, College of Health and Human Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA
Affiliations
- Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Affiliations
- Department of Critical Care Medicine, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Affiliations
- Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
- Center for Research on Health Care, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
- University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Correspondence
- Address correspondence to: Amber E. Barnato, MD, MPH, MS, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, 230 McKee Place, Suite 600, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Correspondence information about the author MD, MPH, MS Amber E. BarnatoAffiliations
- Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
- Center for Research on Health Care, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
- University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Correspondence
- Address correspondence to: Amber E. Barnato, MD, MPH, MS, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, 230 McKee Place, Suite 600, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Article Info
Fig. 1
Images used to code nonverbal communication behaviors. This illustrates the angles of the two cameras in each simulation room. The left panel shows the camera mounted on the wall behind the surrogate to the left of the patient. The right panel shows a view from a camera mounted on the wall across from the foot of the patient's bed.
Fig. 2
Illustration of several measures of nonverbal communication. The physician to the left is standing >12" from the patient body's lateral most plane (each tile 12"), is standing at the knee while the actor/wife of the patient is at the chest (evident by the arm rail and patient's posture/flexion at the hip) and touching the bed. The physician is using closed body language (chart in front of body between himself and the patient) and is looking at the patient (although this information is obscured by the de-identifying box over the subject's face).
Abstract
Context
Black patients are more likely than white patients to die in the intensive care unit with life-sustaining treatments. Differences in patient- and/or surrogate-provider communication may contribute to this phenomenon.
Objectives
To test whether hospital-based physicians use different verbal and/or nonverbal communication with black and white simulated patients and their surrogates.
Methods
We conducted a randomized factorial trial of the relationship between patient race and physician communication using high-fidelity simulation. Using a combination of probabilistic and convenience sampling, we recruited 33 hospital-based physicians in western Pennsylvania who completed two encounters with prognostically similar, critically and terminally ill black and white elders with identical treatment preferences. We then conducted detailed content analysis of audio and video recordings of the encounters, coding verbal emotion-handling and shared decision-making behaviors, and nonverbal behaviors (time interacting with the patient and/or surrogate, with open vs. closed posture, and touching the patient and physical proximity). We used a paired t-test to compare each subjects' summed verbal and nonverbal communication scores with the black patient compared to the white patient.
Results
Subject physicians' verbal communication scores did not differ by patient race (black vs. white: 8.4 vs. 8.4, P-value = 0.958). However, their nonverbal communication scores were significantly lower with the black patient than with the white patient (black vs. white: 2.7 vs. 2.9, P-value 0.014).
Conclusion
In this small regional sample, hospital-based physicians have similar verbal communication behaviors when discussing end-of-life care for otherwise similar black and white patients but exhibit significantly fewer positive, rapport-building nonverbal cues with black patients.
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