Rey Velasco Elena, Pedersen Hanne Sæderup, Skinner Timothy
Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Liva Healthcare, Copenhagen, Denmark.
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Dec 20;6(12):e40058. doi: 10.2196/40058.
Lifestyle-related diseases are among the leading causes of death and disability. Their rapid increase worldwide has called for low-cost, scalable solutions to promote health behavior changes. Digital health coaching has proved to be effective in delivering affordable, scalable programs to support lifestyle change. This approach increasingly relies on asynchronous text-based interventions to motivate and support behavior change. Although we know that empathy is a core element for a successful coach-user relationship and positive patient outcomes, we lack research on how this is realized in text-based interactions. Systemic functional linguistics (SFL) is a linguistic theory that may support the identification of empathy opportunities (EOs) in text-based interactions, as well as the reasoning behind patients' linguistic choices in their formulation.
This study aims to determine whether empathy and SFL approaches correspond and complement each other satisfactorily to study text-based communication in a health coaching context. We sought to explore whether combining empathic assessment with SFL categories can provide a means to understand client-coach interactions in asynchronous text-based coaching interactions.
We retrieved 148 text messages sent by 29 women who participated in a randomized trial of telecoaching for the prevention of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) and postnatal weight loss. We conducted a pilot study to identify users' explicit and implicit EOs and further investigated these statements using the SFL approach, focusing on the analysis of transitivity and thematic analysis.
We identified 164 EOs present in 42.37% (3478/8209) of the word count in the corpus. These were mainly negative (n=90, 54.88%) and implicit (n=55, 60.00%). We distinguished opening, content and closing messages structures. Most of the wording was found in the content (n=7077, 86.21%) with a declarative structure (n=7084, 86.30%). Processes represented 22.4% (n=1839) of the corpus, with half being material (n=876, 10.67%) and mostly related to food and diet (n=196, 54.92%), physical activity (n=96, 26.89%), and lifestyle goals (n=40, 11.20%).
Our findings show that empathy and SFL approaches are compatible. The results from our transitivity analysis reveal novel insights into the meanings of the users' EOs, such as their seek for help or praise, often missed by health care professionals (HCPs), and on the coach-user relationship. The absence of explicit EOs and direct questions could be attributed to low trust on or information about the coach's abilities. In the future, we will conduct further research to explore additional linguistic features and code coach messages.
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR) ACTRN12620001240932; https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=380020.
与生活方式相关的疾病是导致死亡和残疾的主要原因之一。它们在全球范围内迅速增加,这就需要低成本、可扩展的解决方案来促进健康行为的改变。数字健康指导已被证明在提供经济实惠、可扩展的项目以支持生活方式改变方面是有效的。这种方法越来越依赖基于文本的异步干预来激励和支持行为改变。尽管我们知道同理心是成功的教练-用户关系和积极的患者结果的核心要素,但我们缺乏关于这在基于文本的互动中如何实现的研究。系统功能语言学(SFL)是一种语言学理论,它可能支持在基于文本的互动中识别同理心机会(EOs),以及患者在表达中语言选择背后的推理。
本研究旨在确定同理心和SFL方法是否相互对应并能令人满意地相互补充,以研究健康指导背景下基于文本的沟通。我们试图探索将同理心评估与SFL类别相结合是否能提供一种手段,以理解基于文本的异步指导互动中的客户-教练互动。
我们检索了29名参与预防妊娠糖尿病(GDM)和产后体重减轻的远程指导随机试验的女性发送的148条短信。我们进行了一项试点研究,以识别用户明确和隐含的EOs,并使用SFL方法进一步研究这些陈述,重点是及物性分析和主题分析。
我们在语料库中8209个词数的42.37%(3478/8209)中识别出164个EOs。这些主要是负面的(n = 90,54.88%)和隐含的(n = 55,60.00%)。我们区分了开场、内容和结尾信息结构。大部分措辞出现在内容部分(n = 7077,86.21%),具有陈述结构(n = 7084,86.30%)。过程占语料库的22.4%(n = 1839),其中一半是物质过程(n = 876,10.67%),主要与食物和饮食(n = 196,54.92%)、身体活动(n = 96,26.89%)和生活方式目标(n = 40,11.20%)相关。
我们的研究结果表明同理心和SFL方法是兼容的。我们及物性分析的结果揭示了对用户EOs含义的新见解,例如他们寻求帮助或赞扬,而这些往往被医疗保健专业人员(HCPs)忽视,以及对教练-用户关系的见解。缺乏明确的EOs和直接问题可能归因于对教练能力的信任度低或了解的信息少。未来,我们将进行进一步研究,以探索其他语言特征并对教练信息进行编码。
澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心(ANZCTR)ACTRN12620001240932;https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=380020。