Ventres William
Institute for Studies in History, Anthropology, and Archeology, University of El Salvador, San Salvador, El Salvador Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon
Ann Fam Med. 2015 May-Jun;13(3):276-8. doi: 10.1370/afm.1755.
Professional discussions about communication in medical settings often ignore the various personal identities that doctors and patients bring to their clinical encounters. From my 26 years as a family physician, and informed by literature from other professional disciplines, I propose an alternate understanding: to think of doctors and patients as a collection of individual identities, each formed by a discrete presentation of self. I describe how at least 5 important presentations of self arise in clinical encounters, including those relating to meaning, community, agency, anxiety, and organism. I frame these presentations of self with the mnemonic ABCDE, briefly review key dimensions of each, and suggest how physicians can reflect on these dimensions in order to find equilibrium in their interactions with patients. Lastly, I submit that finding this balance can reduce relational challenges with patients and enhance the therapeutic effectiveness of doctor-patient communication.
在医学环境中,关于沟通的专业讨论往往忽略了医生和患者在临床接触中所展现的各种个人身份。在我26年的家庭医生职业生涯中,并参考其他专业学科的文献,我提出了另一种理解方式:将医生和患者视为一系列个人身份的集合,每个身份都由独特的自我呈现构成。我描述了在临床接触中至少会出现的5种重要的自我呈现方式,包括与意义、群体、能动性、焦虑和机体相关的呈现。我用记忆法ABCDE来构建这些自我呈现方式,简要回顾每种方式的关键维度,并提出医生如何思考这些维度,以便在与患者的互动中找到平衡。最后,我认为找到这种平衡可以减少与患者的关系挑战,并提高医患沟通的治疗效果。