Humble doctors, healthy patients? Exploring the relationships between clinician humility and patient satisfaction, trust, and health status.

Ho Phi Huynh, Amy Dicke-Bohmann
Author Information
  1. Ho Phi Huynh: Texas A&M University, San Antonio, United States. Electronic address: hhuynh@tamusa.edu.
  2. Amy Dicke-Bohmann: Texas A&M University, San Antonio, United States.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In medicine, numerous commentaries implore clinicians (e.g., physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners) to display more humility. However, given the complex power dynamics between patients and clinicians, one should not presume that patients desire and appreciate humble clinicians. This paper examines the relationship between clinician humility and patient outcomes, and aims to provide empirical evidence for the significance of clinician humility.
METHODS: In two studies, patients (N = 497) recalled their most recent visit to a clinician through an online survey platform (Qualtrics). Patients rated their clinician's humility, satisfaction and trust with their clinician, and health status. They also provided demographic information (e.g., gender, race, subjective SES), details about their clinician (e.g., gender, race, professional status) and information about their last medical visit with this clinician (e.g., purpose of visit, wait time during visit).
RESULTS: Through hierarchical multiple regression, we demonstrated that clinician humility positively predicted patient satisfaction, trust, and self-report health (only in Study 2) above and beyond patient, clinician, and visit characteristics.
CONCLUSION: The results demonstrated that clinician humility can predict important patient outcomes above and beyond objective characteristics of the medical interaction.
PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: These findings may shape clinician-patient interactions by validating the pursuit of humility during medical encounters.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Health Status
Humans
Patient Satisfaction
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Trust

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0humilityclinicianpatientvisitegsatisfactionstatusclinicianspatientsrelationshiptrusthealthmedicaloutcomesinformationgenderracedemonstratedbeyondcharacteristicsClinicianOBJECTIVE:medicinenumerouscommentariesimplorephysiciansphysicianassistantsnursepractitionersdisplayHowevergivencomplexpowerdynamicsonepresumedesireappreciatehumblepaperexaminesaimsprovideempiricalevidencesignificanceMETHODS:twostudiesN = 497recalledrecentonlinesurveyplatformQualtricsPatientsratedclinician'salsoprovideddemographicsubjectiveSESdetailsprofessionallastpurposewaittimeRESULTS:hierarchicalmultipleregressionpositivelypredictedself-reportStudy2CONCLUSION:resultscanpredictimportantobjectiveinteractionPRACTICEIMPLICATIONS:findingsmayshapeclinician-patientinteractionsvalidatingpursuitencountersHumbledoctorshealthypatients?ExploringrelationshipsDoctorHealthHumilityPatientPhysicianTrust

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