Campbell Catherine, Scott Kerry, Skovdal Morten, Madanhire Claudius, Nyamukapa Constance, Gregson Simon
Department of Social Psychology, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, WC2A 2AE, London, UK.
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Infect Dis. 2015 Sep 30;15:404. doi: 10.1186/s12879-015-1139-x.
While patient-provider interactions are commonly understood as mutually constructed relationships, the role of patient behaviour, participation in interactions, and characteristics, particularly ideals surrounding notions of 'good' and 'bad' patients, are under-examined. This article examines social representations of 'a good patient' and how these representations affect patient-healthcare provider relationships and antiretroviral treatment (ART) for people living with HIV.
Using thematic network analysis, we examined interview and focus group transcripts involving 25 healthcare staff, 48 ART users, and 31 carers of HIV positive children, as well as field notes from over 100 h of ethnographic observation at health centres in rural Zimbabwe.
Characteristics of a good patient include obedience, patience, politeness, listening, enthusiasm for treatment, intelligence, physical cleanliness, honesty, gratitude and lifestyle adaptations (taking pills correctly and coming to the clinic when told). As healthcare workers may decide to punish patients who do not live up the 'good patient persona', many patients seek to perform within the confines of the 'good patient persona' to access good care and ensure continued access to ART.
The notion of a 'good ART patient' can have positive effects on patient health outcomes. It is one of the only arenas of the clinic experience that ART patients can influence in their favour. However, for people not conforming to the norms of the 'good patient persona', the productive and health-enabling patient-nurse relationship may break down and be detrimental to the patient.
We conclude that policy makers need to take heed of the social representations that govern patient-nurse relationships and their role in facilitating or undermining ART adherence.
虽然医患互动通常被理解为相互构建的关系,但患者行为、在互动中的参与度以及特征,尤其是围绕“好”与“坏”患者概念的理想观念,却未得到充分研究。本文探讨了“好患者”的社会表征,以及这些表征如何影响艾滋病毒感染者的医患关系和抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)。
我们运用主题网络分析法,研究了涉及25名医护人员、48名接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的患者以及31名艾滋病毒阳性儿童照料者的访谈和焦点小组记录,以及在津巴布韦农村健康中心超过100小时的人种志观察所做的实地记录。
好患者的特征包括顺从、耐心、礼貌、倾听、对治疗充满热情、聪明、身体清洁、诚实、感恩以及适应生活方式(正确服药并按要求前往诊所)。由于医护人员可能会决定惩罚那些不符合“好患者形象”的患者,许多患者为了获得良好的护理并确保持续接受抗逆转录病毒治疗,会试图在“好患者形象”的范围内表现自己。
“优秀的抗逆转录病毒治疗患者”这一概念可能对患者的健康结果产生积极影响。这是临床体验中患者能够对自己有利地施加影响的少数领域之一。然而,对于那些不符合“好患者形象”规范的人来说,富有成效且有益于健康的护患关系可能会破裂,对患者不利。
我们得出结论,政策制定者需要留意那些支配护患关系的社会表征及其在促进或破坏抗逆转录病毒治疗依从性方面的作用。