Does the presence of psychosocial "yellow flags" alter patient-provider communication for work-related, acute low back pain?
Keywords
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To determine whether patterns of patient-provider communication might vary depending on psychosocial risk factors for back disability.
METHODS
Working adults (N = 97; 64% men; median age = 38 years) with work-related low back pain completed a risk factor questionnaire and then agreed to have provider visits audiotaped. Verbal exchanges were divided into utterances and coded for content, then compared among low-, medium-, and high-risk patients.
RESULTS
Among high-risk patients only, providers asked more biomedical questions, patients provided more biomedical information, and providers used more language to engage patients and facilitate communication. There were no group differences in psychosocial exchanges.
CONCLUSIONS
Clinicians may recognize the need for more detailed assessment of patients with multiple psychosocial factors, but increases in communication are focused on medical explanations and therapeutic regimen, not on lifestyle and psychosocial factors.