PMID: 6979980Jun 1, 1982Paper

How long should we talk to patients? A study in doctor-patient communication

Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
V WrightK Burton

Abstract

The 13 questions to which 173 rheumatic outpatients most frequently wished to know the answer were made the basis of a structured interview. Two lengths of interview were conducted in a controlled trial (short being of 2 minutes' duration, long ranging from 4 to 11 minutes). Sixty patients referred directly from their general practitioners, and not being in any of the remedial professions, were randomly assigned to one of the 2 groups. They were tested by an independent observer immediately after interview, and one month later at their return appointment, by means of a questionnaire that covered the 13 items of information given to all the patients. The longer interview resulted in significantly more information being retained. Of individual questions only 3 scored significantly better with the longer interview--that about the reasons for x-rays immediately after interview, and the role of heredity and the place of rest at delayed recall.

References

Jan 21, 1977·European Journal of Pharmacology·N E van de PollB Bermond
May 1, 1977·Rheumatology and Rehabilitation·V Wright, R Hopkins
Feb 1, 1979·Rheumatology and Rehabilitation·J L AndersonA Fleming
Jun 24, 1978·British Medical Journal·M Reynolds
Jun 1, 1965·The British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology·P Ley, M S Spelman
May 1, 1980·Rheumatology and Rehabilitation·V WrightM Jackson

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Citations

Jun 1, 1991·Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Jun 1, 1991·Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases·V Wright, P S Helliwell
Dec 1, 1987·Baillière's Clinical Rheumatology·I Haslock
Mar 28, 2018·Rheumatology International·Sofia GeorgopoulouDavid P D'Cruz

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