Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
Qing Wu, Zheyu Jin, Pei Wang
Summary: This study examines the relationship between physician empathy, patient trust, and the physician-patient relationship. The findings suggest that patients' perception of physician empathy directly and indirectly influences their evaluation of the physician-patient relationship, particularly through trust in the physician's benevolence.
JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
(2022)
Article
Oncology
Amir Henny, Levi Sivan, Goldzweig Gil, Braun Michal
Summary: The study found an association between patients' and oncologists' attachment orientations and patients' working alliance experience, mediated by patients' feelings of being unsupported by their oncologists. The results indicate that attachment-related attitudes towards oncologists influence the working alliance experience between patients and oncologists.
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Arielle Toporovsky, Jairo N. Fuertes, Michael T. Moore, Prachi Anand, Francis Chalas Hungria
Summary: The physician-patient working alliance (PPWA) is an important factor in patients' and physicians' ratings of adherence and satisfaction. This study also indicates that the perception of the PPWA in one member of the medical dyad impacts the other member's perception, highlighting the importance of considering both parts of the medical dyad in future research and clinical practice.
BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Applied
Seungbin Oh, Catherine Y. Chang, Amanda Priest, Daun Kwag
Summary: This study examined the relationship between an orientation toward multicultural counseling competence, multicultural competent behaviors, and the working alliance from the perspective of client participants in various therapeutic dyads. The results showed a positive relationship between clients' perspectives on counselors' multicultural orientation, counselors' multicultural competent behavior, and working alliance. Multicultural competent behaviors mediated the relationship between an orientation toward multicultural competence and working alliance, although the mediated effect varied across different racial/ethnic therapeutic dyads.
JOURNAL OF COUNSELING AND DEVELOPMENT
(2023)
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Nicole Roettele, Christian Schlett, Mirjam Koerner, Erik Farin-Glattacker, Andrea C. Schoepf-Lazzarino, Sebastian Voigt-Radloff, Markus A. Wirtz
Summary: This study examined the impact of different measurement conditions and rater perspectives on the variance of physician-patient communication ratings. The results suggest that the ratings primarily reflect unique combinations of rater perspectives and communication dimensions.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Siyue Li, Kexin Wang
Summary: This study examined the ways in which Chinese patients share online health information with physicians and the subsequent impact on the physician-patient relationship. The results indicated that patients with lower communication apprehension tend to share information more directly with their physicians, which can positively affect their perceived reactions and satisfaction. However, eHealth literacy was not found to be associated with patients' sharing of online information.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Medicine, General & Internal
Luyu Xie, Jaime P. Almandoz, M. Sunil Mathew, Jeffrey N. Schellinger, Olivia Kapera, Sophia Ngenge, Elisa Morales Marroquin, Carrie McAdams, Sachin Kukreja, Benjamin Schneider, Sarah E. Messiah
Summary: There is an association between patient satisfaction with the patient-physician relationship and the decision to complete metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS), regardless of race and ethnicity.
Article
Anesthesiology
Katherine T. Forkin, Lauren K. Dunn, Naveen C. Kotha, Allison J. Bechtel, Amanda M. Kleiman, Julie L. Huffmyer, Stephen R. Collins, Genevieve R. Lyons, Jennie Z. Ma, Edward C. Nemergut
Summary: The study found that patients prefer older anesthesiologists, considering them more confident, intelligent, and leaders. Additionally, patients also tend to choose female anesthesiologists to care for their family members.
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Michelle Anne Reyes, Heather D. Vance-Chalcraft
Summary: This study evaluates the frequency of eHealth use, perceptions of eHealth literacy, and views on patient-provider relationships among undergraduate students. The findings show that students commonly use eHealth but are skeptical of telehealth appointments. While they feel capable of finding and interpreting eHealth sources, they lack strong confidence in their ability to do so. Students desire their physicians to act as counselors or advisors rather than just guardians. Additionally, minority students are more likely to use eHealth and student comfort with their providers varies by race, ethnicity, and gender identity.
Article
Education & Educational Research
Lucie Bosmean, Philippe Chaffanjon, Alexandre Bellier
Summary: This study investigates the impact of physician-patient relationship training on medical students' interpersonal skills. The results demonstrated that students who had undergone training courses showed improvement in their interpersonal skills, particularly those who had completed multiple courses. Therefore, physician-patient relationship training is effective in initial education, but repetition of the training is necessary to increase its impact.
BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION
(2022)
Article
Otorhinolaryngology
Janet S. Choi, James H. Kim, Soyun Park, Matthew Lin, Faiz Abdur-Rahman, Wendy J. Mack, Courtney C. J. Volker
Summary: The study found that patient satisfaction with telemedicine during COVID-19 was not worse than in-person encounters before the pandemic, while physician satisfaction with telemedicine was slightly lower compared to in-person encounters.
OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD AND NECK SURGERY
(2022)
News Item
Medicine, General & Internal
Rita Rubin
Summary: Open visit notes have a positive impact on patient care.
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
(2021)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Jessica A. Eigeland, Liz Jones, Nicola Sheeran, Robyn L. Moffitt
Summary: This study aimed to identify physician behaviors contributing to good physician-patient relationship in patients with chronic conditions. The results revealed 65 behaviors grouped into six overarching domains. Patients showed a broader conceptualization of the physician-patient relationship, identifying additional behaviors not captured in existing models.
PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING
(2022)
Article
Rehabilitation
Mary Beth Holmes, Amanda Scott, James Camarinos, Lee Marinko, Steven Z. George
Summary: This study examined the relationship between working alliance and therapeutic outcomes for patients receiving physical therapy for acute and chronic musculoskeletal pain conditions. The results showed that patients who rated the working alliance higher were more likely to experience improvements in disability and pain intensity.
DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION
(2023)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Yvonne Treusch, Luis Moeckel, Karin Kohlstedt
Summary: This study investigates the job satisfaction, work-related factors, responsibilities, and mental health of physician assistants (PAs) in Germany. The results show that PAs generally have good overall job satisfaction, but there are variations across different facets. Factors such as salary, autonomy, and development opportunities significantly influence job satisfaction. Additionally, there is a negative association between job satisfaction and depression, anxiety, and stress scores among PAs. Interventions should be implemented to improve job satisfaction, mental health, and retention of PAs.
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
(2023)
Editorial Material
Clinical Neurology
Laura S. Boylan, Lambros Messinis
Letter
Medicine, General & Internal
Laura S. Boylan
Editorial Material
Clinical Neurology
Laura S. Boylan
Editorial Material
Clinical Neurology
Laura S. Boylan, Vladimir S. Kostic
Letter
Clinical Neurology
Laura S. Boylan, Joshua J. Gagne
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY
(2012)
Letter
Clinical Neurology
Eva Feldman
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY
(2012)
Letter
Pharmacology & Pharmacy
L. S. Boylan
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS
(2010)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
J. M. DuBois, L. S. Boylan, M. Shiyko, W. B. Barr, O. Deyinsky
EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR
(2010)
Correction
Clinical Neurology
T. Monteith, L. Boylan
Editorial Material
Clinical Neurology
Laura S. Boylan
Editorial Material
Clinical Neurology
Laura S. Boylan, Adriano Chio
Article
Clinical Neurology
Marco Onofrj, Angelo Di Iorio, Claudia Carrarini, Mirella Russo, Raffaella Franciotti, Alberto J. Espay, Laura S. Boylan, John-Paul Taylor, Massimo Di Giannantonio, Giovanni Martinotti, Enza M. Valente, Astrid Thomas, Laura Bonanni, Stefano Delli Pizzi, Fedele Dono, StefanoL Sensi
Summary: Patients with bipolar spectrum disorders (BSDs) have an increased risk of Parkinson's disease (PD). This study found that patients with BSD-PD have significant differences in family history, impulse control disorders, functional disorders, early occurrence of delusions or mild dementia, and mortality compared to PD patients. The presence of BSDs as a prodrome to PD negatively affects the course of the disease and is associated with detrimental neuropsychiatric features and treatment outcomes.
MOVEMENT DISORDERS
(2021)
Retraction
Clinical Neurology
LS. Boylan
Meeting Abstract
Psychiatry
Alla Landa, Anthony Bossis, Laura Boylan, Andrew Hartz, John Dall'Aglio, Philip Wong
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
(2019)
Article
Clinical Neurology
Alla Landa, Anthony P. Bossis, Laura S. Boylan, Philip S. Wong
JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE
(2012)