Journal
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOTHERAPY
Volume 58, Issue 2, Pages 77-87Publisher
AUSTRALIAN PHYSIOTHERAPY ASSOC
DOI: 10.1016/S1836-9553(12)70087-5
Keywords
Communication; Systematic review; Professional-patient relations; Behavior
Categories
Funding
- CAPES Foundation, Ministry of Education, Brazil
- Australian Research Council
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Question: During the patient-therapist encounter, which communication factors correlate with constructs of therapeutic alliance? Design: Systematic review. Participants: Clinicians and patients in primary, secondary or tertiary care settings. Measures: Studies had to investigate the association between communication factors (interaction styles, verbal factors or non-verbal factors) and constructs of the therapeutic alliance (collaboration, affective bond, agreement, trust, or empathy), measured during encounters between health practitioners and patients. Results: Among the twelve studies that met the inclusion criteria, 67 communication factors were identified (36 interaction styles, 17 verbal factors and 14 non-verbal factors). The constructs of therapeutic alliance in the included studies were rapport, trust, communicative success and agreement. Interaction styles that showed positive large correlations with therapeutic alliance were those factors that help clinicians to engage more with patients by listening to what they have to say, asking questions and showing sensitivity to their emotional concerns. Studies of verbal and non-verbal factors were scarce and inconclusive. Conclusions: The limited evidence suggests patient-centred interaction styles related to the provision of emotional support and allowing patient involvement in the consultation process enhance the therapeutic alliance. Clinicians can use this evidence to adjust their interactions with patients to include communication strategies that strengthen the therapeutic alliance. [Pinto RZ, Ferreira ML, Oliveira VC, Franco MR, Adams R, Maher CG, Ferreira PH (2012) Patient-centred communication is associated with positive therapeutic alliance: a systematic review. Journal of Physiotherapy 58: 77-87]
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