Congruence in personality between clinician and client: relationship to ratings of voice treatment.

M L Andrews, C P Schmidt
Author Information
  1. M L Andrews: Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington 47405, USA.

Abstract

This study examined relationships between ratings of voice therapy sessions and clinician and client personality characteristics as measured by the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. Nineteen clinician-client pairs were rated on behaviors demonstrated in two therapy sessions. Results indicated that client variables of thinking-feeling and judgment-perception were related to amount of clinician feedback, client eye contact, ratio of clinician-client eye contact and amount of clinician explanation, clarity of explanation, clinician's initiative, and client eye contact, respectively. Clinicians' sensing-intuition was related to the amount of feedback to client and quality of the task sequence. Clinician's judgment-perception was related to amount of explanation and client's attention to clinician. Similarity in clinician-client sensing-intuition was related with task involvement of the client, clinician's attention to client, and clinician eye contact. Similarity in judgment-perception was related to greater use of counseling. Similarity in thinking-feeling was related to low amounts of clinician eye contact.

MeSH Term

Humans
Personality
Physician-Patient Relations
Voice Disorders
Voice Training

Word Cloud

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