Charlene Chao-Li Kuo, Pamela A Saunders, Hsinyi Hsiao, Suh Chen Hsiao, Tian Han, Judy Huei-Yu Wang
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When bringing up emotions with oncologists, NHW patients brought up social and personal life topics, whereas CA patients only brought up biomedical topics. We also observed that oncologists initiated discussions about emotions with only English-speaking patients of both racial groups. There were no observed differences in how oncologists remained neutral to or turned away from both CA and NHW patients' emotional expressions. When oncologists turned away from patients' emotions, they did so to solve administrative or biomedical problems. In conclusion, the findings suggest that CA patients' racial backgrounds and the language spoken during the encounters may influence how patients and oncologists initiate discussion about patients' emotions. Furthermore, the findings suggest that oncologists remain neutral and turn away from CA and NHW patients' emotions in similar ways. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这项定性研究分析了美籍华人(CA)和非西班牙裔白人(NHW)乳腺癌患者及其肿瘤医生如何就患者的情感问题进行沟通。研究数据包括肿瘤学家与四名美籍华人和八名非西班牙裔白人乳腺癌新确诊患者在 2013 年至 2015 年间的 24 次临床接触录音。我们采用互动社会语言学方法进行话语分析,研究了长者和非长者患者与肿瘤医生如何就患者的情绪展开对话。我们还对肿瘤学家的反应进行了分类,即肿瘤学家对患者的情绪是转向、回避还是保持中立。在与肿瘤医生谈论患者情绪时,NHW 患者提到了社会和个人生活话题,而 CA 患者只提到了生物医学话题。我们还观察到,肿瘤学家只与两个种族群体中讲英语的患者讨论情绪问题。在肿瘤学家对长者和非长者患者的情绪表达保持中立或回避方面,我们没有观察到任何差异。当肿瘤学家回避病人的情绪时,他们是为了解决行政或生物医学问题。总之,研究结果表明,CA 患者的种族背景和会面时的语言可能会影响患者和肿瘤学家如何开始讨论患者的情绪。此外,研究结果表明,肿瘤学家对 CA 和 NHW 患者的情绪保持中立和回避的方式相似。这项研究为更全面地调查亚裔美国人癌症患者与他们的医疗服务提供者在情绪和治疗决定方面的实际沟通情况提供了初步数据,从而提高患者与医疗服务提供者之间的沟通质量。
Discussion of Emotions Among Newly Diagnosed Non-Hispanic White and Chinese American Patients With Breast Cancer and Their Oncologists.
This qualitative study analyzed how Chinese American (CA) and non-Hispanic White (NHW) breast cancer patients and their oncologists communicated about patients' emotional concerns. Data included twenty-four recordings of clinical encounters between oncologists and four CA and eight NHW women with a new breast cancer diagnosis between 2013 and 2015. Using an interactional sociolinguistics approach to discourse analysis, we examined how CA and NHW patients and their oncologists initiated conversations about patients' emotions. We also categorized oncologists' responses by whether oncologists turned toward, turned away, or remained neutral to patients' emotions. When bringing up emotions with oncologists, NHW patients brought up social and personal life topics, whereas CA patients only brought up biomedical topics. We also observed that oncologists initiated discussions about emotions with only English-speaking patients of both racial groups. There were no observed differences in how oncologists remained neutral to or turned away from both CA and NHW patients' emotional expressions. When oncologists turned away from patients' emotions, they did so to solve administrative or biomedical problems. In conclusion, the findings suggest that CA patients' racial backgrounds and the language spoken during the encounters may influence how patients and oncologists initiate discussion about patients' emotions. Furthermore, the findings suggest that oncologists remain neutral and turn away from CA and NHW patients' emotions in similar ways. This study provides preliminary data for more comprehensive investigations of Asian American cancer patients' actual communication with their providers regarding emotions and treatment decisions to facilitate patient-provider communication quality.