School of Medicine and Surgery, University of Milano-Bicocca, Monza (MB), Italy.
Department of Mental Health, Clinical Psychology Unit, San Gerardo Hospital, ASST-Monza, Monza (MB), Italy.
J Clin Psychol. 2023 Apr;79(4):1178-1191. doi: 10.1002/jclp.23468. Epub 2022 Dec 2.
Facial emotion recognition is a key component of human interactions, and in clinical relationships contributes to building and maintaining the therapeutic alliance with patients. The introduction of facemasks has reduced the availability of facial information in private and professional relationships. This study aimed to assess the impact of facemasks on clinicians' perception of clinical interactions as well as their ability to read facial expressions.
In this cross-sectional study, a purposive sample of 342 clinical psychologists or psychotherapists completed an online survey including the assessment of burnout, alexithymia, emotion dysregulation, and self-perceived ability to build effective relationships and communication with patients with/without facemasks. Participants were randomly assigned to the standardized facial emotion recognition task Diagnostic Analysis of Nonverbal Accuracy FACES 2-Adult Faces including 24 faces representing anger, fear, sadness, and happiness.
Facemasks impaired the self-perceived ability of clinicians to build effective relationships and communicate with patients and reduced satisfaction in clinical encounters. The ability of clinicians to recognize facial emotions is significantly reduced for masked happy and angry faces, but not for sad and afraid ones. The perceived difficulty in building good relationships and communication with patients had a positive correlation with alexithymia and emotion dysregulation; higher levels of discomfort when wearing facemasks had a positive correlation with burnout and emotion dysregulation.
Facemasks reduced clinicians' self-confidence in clinical encounters with patients wearing facemasks, but their facial emotion recognition performance was only partially impaired.
面部表情识别是人际互动的关键组成部分,在临床关系中有助于与患者建立和维持治疗联盟。面罩的引入减少了私人和职业关系中面部信息的可用性。本研究旨在评估面罩对面诊医生对临床互动的感知以及他们读取面部表情的能力的影响。
在这项横断面研究中,342 名临床心理学家或心理治疗师作为目的抽样,完成了一项在线调查,包括评估倦怠、述情障碍、情绪调节,以及自我感知与戴/不戴口罩的患者建立有效关系和沟通的能力。参与者被随机分配到标准化的面部情绪识别任务——诊断性非言语准确性分析 FACES 2-成人面孔,包括 24 张代表愤怒、恐惧、悲伤和幸福的面孔。
面罩会影响临床医生自我感知与患者建立有效关系和沟通的能力,并降低临床接触的满意度。面罩会显著降低临床医生识别戴口罩的快乐和愤怒面孔的情绪能力,但对悲伤和害怕的面孔没有影响。与患者建立良好关系和沟通的感知难度与述情障碍和情绪调节呈正相关;戴口罩时的不适感与倦怠和情绪调节呈正相关。
面罩会降低临床医生与戴口罩患者的临床互动中的自信,但他们的面部表情识别能力仅部分受损。