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Relationship of patient shame to working alliance and satisfaction: a preliminary investigation
by
Proeve, Michael J
, Carabellese, Daniel J
, Roberts, Rachel M
in
Alliances
/ Communication
/ Empathy
/ Family physicians
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health services
/ Mediation
/ Medical Services
/ Meta Analysis
/ Modeling (Psychology)
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Patients
/ Physicians
/ Practitioner patient relationship
/ Psychological Studies
/ Psychotherapy
/ Quality of care
/ Rejection (Psychology)
/ Resistance (Psychology)
/ Satisfaction
/ Shame
/ Stigma
/ Therapeutic alliances
/ Variants
2019
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Relationship of patient shame to working alliance and satisfaction: a preliminary investigation
by
Proeve, Michael J
, Carabellese, Daniel J
, Roberts, Rachel M
in
Alliances
/ Communication
/ Empathy
/ Family physicians
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health services
/ Mediation
/ Medical Services
/ Meta Analysis
/ Modeling (Psychology)
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Patients
/ Physicians
/ Practitioner patient relationship
/ Psychological Studies
/ Psychotherapy
/ Quality of care
/ Rejection (Psychology)
/ Resistance (Psychology)
/ Satisfaction
/ Shame
/ Stigma
/ Therapeutic alliances
/ Variants
2019
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Relationship of patient shame to working alliance and satisfaction: a preliminary investigation
by
Proeve, Michael J
, Carabellese, Daniel J
, Roberts, Rachel M
in
Alliances
/ Communication
/ Empathy
/ Family physicians
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health services
/ Mediation
/ Medical Services
/ Meta Analysis
/ Modeling (Psychology)
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Patients
/ Physicians
/ Practitioner patient relationship
/ Psychological Studies
/ Psychotherapy
/ Quality of care
/ Rejection (Psychology)
/ Resistance (Psychology)
/ Satisfaction
/ Shame
/ Stigma
/ Therapeutic alliances
/ Variants
2019
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Relationship of patient shame to working alliance and satisfaction: a preliminary investigation
Journal Article
Relationship of patient shame to working alliance and satisfaction: a preliminary investigation
2019
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Overview
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship of two distinct variants of dispositional shame (internal and external shame) with collaborative, purpose-driven aspects of the patient–provider relationship (working alliance) and patient satisfaction. The aim of this research was to conduct a preliminary investigation into the relevance of dispositional shame in a general healthcare population.
Design/methodology/approach
In total, 127 community members (mean age 25.9 years) who reported that they had regularly seen a GP over the past year were recruited at an Australian university. Participants were asked to reflect on their relationship with their GP, and completed instruments assessing various domains of shame, as well as working alliance and patient satisfaction.
Findings
Non-parametric correlations were examined to determine the direction and strength of relationships, as well as conducting mediation analyses where applicable. Small, negative correlations were evident between external shame and working alliance. Both external and internal shame measures were also negatively correlated with patient satisfaction. Finally, the relationship of external shame to patient satisfaction was partially mediated by working alliance.
Practical implications
Both the reported quality of patient–provider working alliance, and level of patient satisfaction are related to levels of dispositional shame in patients, and working alliance may act as a mediator for this relationship.
Originality/value
The findings from this preliminary study suggest that internal and external shame are important factors to consider in the provision of medical care to maximise the quality of patient experience and working alliance.
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