Fibromyalgia Patients’ Communication of Cues and Concerns : Interaction Analysis of Pain Clinic Consultations
Eide, Hilde; Sibbern, Tonje; Egeland, Thore; Finset, Arnstein; Johannessen, Tone; Miaskowski, Christine; Rustøen, Tone
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Postprint version of published article. original available at u r l: http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ a j p.0b013e3182102872
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Date
2011-03Metadata
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Original version
Eide, H., Sibbern, T., Egeland, T., Finset, A., Johannessen, T, Miaskowski, C. & Rustøen, T. (2011). Fibromyalgia Patients’ Communication of Cues and Concerns : Interaction Analysis of Pain Clinic Consultations. Clinical Journal of Pain, Online First http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AJP.0b013e3182102872Abstract
Objectives: Clinicians’ recognition of patients’ concerns is an
important component of effective treatment and care. During a
consultation, patients often do not express their concerns directly,
but rather present them indirectly as hints or cues. The aim of this
study was to explore the types of concerns and cues patients
expressed in an initial consultation with a nurse at a pain clinic,
how and who initiated these cues and concerns, and predictors of
these expressions.
Methods: Initial consultations between patients with fibromyalgia
[n=58, 85% female, duration 30 minutes, mean age 47.8 y (SD
10.7)] and clinical nurse specialists (n=5) were videotaped.
Patients’ cues and concerns were coded using the Verona Coding
Definitions of Emotional Sequences. Nurses’ responses to patients’
cues and concerns were evaluated using the Hierarchical Coding
Scheme of Comforting Strategies. In addition, pain intensity and
duration, overall evaluation of health, affect at the start of the
consultation, and psychological distress were evaluated.
Results: Patients expressed more cues than concerns, mostly about
pain, interpersonal relationships, and/or emotional reactions. Both
the lack of empathic responding and unspecific empathic responding
were associated with the expression of an increased number of
cues in the consultation, whereas higher evaluation of health was
associated with less cues. More concerns were expressed by patients
when nurses exhibited a high level of empathic responding and
when the patient entered the consultation with a higher level of
negative effect.
Discussion: Findings from this study highlight the importance of a
patient centered communication style to facilitate the expression of
cues and concerns.