Abstract
Background Good communication skills are integral to successful doctor–patient relationships. Communication may be verbal or non-verbal, and touch is a significant component, which has received little attention in the primary care literature. Touch may be procedural (part of a clinical task) or expressive (contact unrelated to a procedure/examination).
Aim To explore GPs’ and patients’ experiences of using touch in consultations.
Design and setting Qualitative study in urban and semi-rural areas of north-west England.
Method Participating GPs recruited registered patients with whom they felt they had an ongoing relationship. Data were collected by semi-structured interviews and subjected to constant comparative qualitative analysis.
Results All participants described the importance of verbal and non-verbal communication in developing relationships. Expressive touch was suggested to improve communication quality by most GPs and all patients. GPs reported a lower threshold for using touch with older patients or those who were bereaved, and with patients of the same sex as themselves. All patient responders felt touch on the hand or forearm was appropriate. GPs described limits to using touch, with some responders rarely using anything other than procedural touch. In contrast, most patient responders believed expressive touch was acceptable, especially in situations of distress. All GP responders feared misinterpretation in their use of touch, but patients were keen that these concerns should not prevent doctors using expressive touch in consultations.
Conclusion Expressive touch improves interactions between GPs and patients. Increased educational emphasis on the conscious use of expressive touch would enhance clinical communication and, hence, perhaps patient wellbeing and care.
INTRODUCTION
The consultation is the cornerstone of general practice.1 Over the past 50 years, there has been a shift from the traditional doctor-centred consultation approach to a more patient-centred approach.2 At the heart of this is the value of developing an ongoing doctor–patient relationship, which is integral to the ideals of contemporary primary care.3
The importance of good communication skills and their ability to shape the doctor–patient relationship are well established.4 Communication training and teaching tools such as the Calgary Cambridge framework5 are integral components of undergraduate medical curricula and general practice training.6,7 Although models provide a framework for teaching and learning, throughout undergraduate medical training and continuing into general practice training, emphasis is placed on learning to implement a variety of communication skills in differing situations.8 Learners are not restricted to the confines of one rigid checklist, but are taught to develop their own consulting style and to adapt or combine elements of different models to suit both clinical context, patients’ needs, and clinicians’ individual preferences. Within this training, students and GPs are taught how to communicate using verbal and non-verbal techniques, and how to pick up on cues from patients in order to more effectively gather information, show active listening, and display empathy.
Non-verbal communication influences the interpretation of verbal messages9 and may affect patient satisfaction and anxiety, adherence to treatment, health service utilisation, and appointment keeping.10–12 Touch is a significant component of non-verbal communication: a ‘silent language’13 that is essential for human development and wellbeing,14 bridging both physical and emotional distance between individuals.15 The General Medical Council expects medical graduates to ‘appreciate the significance of non-verbal communication in the medical consultation’.16
Although touch is one of the most fundamental forms of human interaction, it has received little focus in the literature, either in the study of the consultation or as a communication tool in primary care. There is a small body of literature in nursing journals reporting both nurses’ and patients’ perceptions of the use of touch in nurse–patient interactions.17–19 Touch has been described as either procedural/task orientated (physical contact that occurs while a task is being performed) and expressive (spontaneous contact, which is not required as part of a task or clinical examination).13,20 The aim of the study reported in this article was to explore the use of touch in primary care consultations from both doctors’ and patients’ perspectives, focusing particularly on the role of touch in consultations where an ongoing doctor–patient relationship had already been established.
How this fits in
Non-verbal communication influences the interpretation of verbal messages and may affect patient satisfaction and anxiety, adherence to treatment, health service utilisation and appointment keeping. Touch is a significant component of doctor–patient communication, which has received little attention in the primary care literature; it may be procedural (part of a clinical task) or expressive (physical contact unrelated to a procedure). Most doctors and all patients in this study reported that expressive touch improved communication quality. GPs described limits to using expressive touch, but most patient responders believed these fears should not prevent doctors utilising expressive touch. Raising doctors’ awareness about the potential for consciously using expressive touch as a communication tool during primary care consultations may help clinicians improve the doctor–patient relationship.
METHOD
Study design
The study was conducted in north-west England (Greater Manchester and North Derbyshire). GPs practising in urban and semi-rural areas were invited to participate in the study. Each doctor participant was interviewed and asked to identify and contact one or two patients with a long-term condition, with whom they considered they had an ongoing relationship. These patients were then invited to be interviewed by a different researcher.
Recruitment and sampling
Seven GPs agreed to be interviewed after an email was sent to all 37 GPs, who had been in practice for over 5 years in a semi-rural area of North Derbyshire. In urban Manchester, 11 GPs were invited to participate by email; eight agreed to be interviewed. Responders to the initial email received invitations and information sheets followed by email/telephone contact to obtain preliminary verbal consent. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with written consent at responders’ practices.
Patients were recruited by the GPs who had been interviewed. After having been contacted initially by the GPs and giving verbal consent to be approached by researchers, patients were sent an invitation letter and response slip, information sheet, and reply-paid envelope. Once the response slip had been returned, patients were contacted by telephone to obtain preliminary verbal consent. Semi-structured interviews took place in either responders’ homes or their GP surgery. Every patient invited by their GP (11 in total) agreed to participate.
Data collection and analysis
Data were collected in the spring and summer of 2011. Interviews were audiotaped with consent. Interview topic guides were developed by the authors through discussion, taking account of previous work21,22 and relevant literature. The doctor interview topic guide included questions exploring GPs’ views on managing people with long-term conditions, and the use of touch in consultations. Patient interview topics included their understanding and experiences of an ongoing doctor–patient relationship, focusing primarily on the use of non-verbal communication and touch in the context of medical interactions.
Prompts allowed discussion about the topic guide, but enabled broader dialogue to develop. Interviews were transcribed to form the data that were subject to analysis. Transcripts were coded, indexed, and analysed according to the constant comparative method of Strauss and Corbin.23 Initial transcript analysis was undertaken independently by the authors, and categories were agreed through discussion; interview schedule modification was allowed as new themes emerged. Recruitment continued until category saturation was reached. Tapes were deleted after transcription, and transcripts were anonymised.
Communication in ongoing doctor–patient relationships
In the context of long-term conditions, both patients and doctors described the importance of communication within established doctor–patient relationships, emphasising the value of patients consulting familiar doctors, who accompanied them on their illness journey:
‘That’s important ... seeing the same doctor. I mean when you’ve got a long-term illness you don’t really want to be going to a different doctor all the time. It’s important because they know your history, and you can’t really summarise ... it’s been since 1989 this has been going on in one form or another …’
(P 10)
‘Continuity is very useful for us because if you’re forever seeing people that you’ve never met before, then you’re having to go through all the history to make an informed decision about things. It just doesn’t work, you can’t do it in 10 minutes … And also you’re not able to offer that overall holistic approach to somebody because you don’t know a lot about their social setup and their circumstances.’
(GP 8)
For patients, a sense of partnership, built on trust and working together, combined with good listening and explaining skills (both verbal and non-verbal), enhanced both personal care and validation of health concerns:
‘They seem to care … you can get some that are quite brisk, and give you details matter of fact, but ... both of these listen and when they’re explaining things they look at you and make sure you understand, they talk to you as if ... it’s personal.’
(P 3)
Patients described non-verbal empathic listening as particularly important, providing encouragement at the start of the consultation. A sense of welcoming and an attentive manner with good eye contact and space to talk was also important:
‘I think they’ve got very good non-verbal cues ... they’re not writing a prescription when you come in or distracted or constantly looking at the screen or at a watch ... they’re very focused ... and they’re very interested in what you have to say.’
(P 4)
Communicating using touch
Using touch was suggested to improve communication quality for all patient responders and for most GPs. Some GPs said it showed an empathic and helpful ‘instinctive’ (GP 11) response, or was ‘a human thing to do’ (GP 13):
‘[Being touched made me feel ...] that they understood, but that they really understood, they weren’t just going through the motions of saying “I understand”. You get some GPs that say “yes I understand” and you can tell by the voice, they’re going through the motions — these don’t.’
(P 1)
‘Even if it’s just putting a hand out ... I think touch, often it can say much more than words, it can be very reassuring.’
(P 4)
‘If somebody’s crying, then not saying anything and resting a hand on their arm, showing that you’re there in that moment with them through touch, I think, is very therapeutic and is acceptable.’
(GP 7)
Using touch was reported by GPs to signify politeness, welcoming, and warmth, helping to make the clinical encounter more relaxed, especially handshaking as a greeting at the beginning or farewell at the end of a consultation:
‘A little frail, old lady who’s had to lie down for me to examine her abdomen, I will just help her sit up and steady her or hold her stick out, help her put her coat back on … I think, first of all, you’re a human being, the same as you would do helping somebody at home or cross the street or whatever. Your first thing is that you’re a human and not a machine.’
(GP 13)
Most GPs clearly distinguished between expressive and procedural touch. Touching as part of a clinical task was noted as helpful, reassuring, and often both procedural and expressive. GP responders felt that was a particularly appropriate form of touch and was a way of avoiding concerns about intimacy, which might otherwise have been a barrier:
‘You’re performing a practical task for them to help them, other than just trying to comfort them. And, although it may be helpful, you know, in a way it’s reassuring to them … because it’s a task you’re achieving isn’t it? You’re doing something to help them. You’re helping them with a task, you’re not just making physical contact with them.’
(GP 11)
‘I’d had an examination and he said something once and touched me on the shoulder ... I suppose it’s just a sign of trying to put your mind at rest isn’t it?’
(P 10)
Limits to the use of touch
Factors influencing with whom expressive touch was used were age, sex, and end-of-life or bereavement situations. GPs reported a lower threshold for using touch with older patients or those who were bereaved, and with patients who were the same sex as themselves. Male and female patients described feeling less comfortable with touch from male GPs:
‘I think I would be more cautious [touching a patient] if it was a woman and if it was a young woman. I really wouldn’t want to be put in the situation of being accused of touching a woman.’
(GP 15, male)
‘I’d be a bit embarrassed if a man hugged me, because I’m an ex-serviceman. You can imagine.’
(P 9)
‘[Older people] respond, or seem to benefit from, skin to skin. Just holding hands while you talk about how they’re feeling, particularly.’
(GP 2)
Where people can be touched by their GP was clear from patient responders; all felt that touch on the hand or forearm was acceptable, but not elsewhere. GPs described limits to the use of touch. For some, the use of anything other than purely procedural touch had situational limits and was infrequent:
‘I wouldn’t do it [touch] willy nilly — it would be very selective … It would be people that I had known a long time and I’d established a relationship [with], and I know that that wouldn’t be taken inappropriately. I wouldn’t do it with somebody I didn’t know, I’d be very careful about that.’
(GP 15)
This contrasted with the majority of patient responders, who believed touch would be well received, especially in situations of distress:
‘Touch can say much more than words, it can be very reassuring, for a lot of people it can be the only recognition they have ... for me ... it’s important because it’s a connection. Probably it’s important for most patients [depending] what the situation requires.’
(P 4)
Some doctors reflected that their personality precluded using touch, with many describing maintaining a boundary between themselves and patients:
‘I’m not a touchy-feely sort of person.’
(GP 8)
‘Touching … I’m just aware there has to be a professional boundary.’
(GP 4)
All GP responders feared misinterpretation or ‘getting it wrong’ (GP 1) when using touch:
‘You have to be careful with it. You don’t want it to be misconstrued so I wouldn’t take it further, I wouldn’t go giving hugs or, you know. I might do a pat on the hand but I wouldn’t reach across and give them a big hug. So I do think physical contact is important but you do have to be slightly aware of what you’re doing.’
(GP 13)
‘I almost never use physical contact, because I think it can be misinterpreted. You’re putting yourself at risk of something being misinterpreted, so I strongly avoid it.’
(GP 5)
However, no patient or doctor responders divulged any personal experiences when touch had seemed inappropriate. Patients acknowledged such fears but some felt these concerns should not be a barrier to using touch:
‘I think that it’s a very grey area because it can be misconstrued by people and I think it’s something that can only develop or can only happen if the doctor and the patient have a trusting relationship and also are aware of the boundaries … It’s a dangerously grey area.’
(P4)
‘If he was a strange doctor I would think, “Well he’s a strange doctor to me, but what a nice doctor he is, he’s got sympathy”. No I wouldn’t think anything bad.’
(P 5)
DISCUSSION
Summary
Doctors valued procedural touch as appropriate and often also therapeutic; it was considered to be a reassuring practical process, such as helping someone up from the examination couch. Touch at the beginning or end of a consultation (handshaking, greeting, helping with coat) was seen to signify politeness and warmth. GPs reported a lower threshold for using expressive touch with older patients, patients of the same sex as themselves, and when dealing with end-of-life situations. Patients of both sexes were less comfortable with touch from a male GP, but most GPs and patients were comfortable with touch with someone they knew well. Patient responders noted that being unfamiliar with the doctor should not act as a barrier to expressive touch, especially in situations of severe distress.
Most patient responders believed expressive touch to be positive. A few doctors reported never using anything other than procedural touch, citing reasons of their own personality or concern about professional boundaries; other GPs reported using expressive touch frequently in their consultations. Patients and doctors alike acknowledged the possibility of ‘getting touch wrong’, although none reported involvement in such a situation. Most patients were keen that these fears should not prevent the use of expressive touch by doctors in consultations.
Strengths and limitations
This study is the first to investigate using touch within ongoing doctor–patient relationships from both patients’ and GPs’ perspectives. Using semi-structured interviews for data collection, rather than focus groups or questionnaires, enabled responders to divulge private accounts, which might not have emerged in group or written responses. Sampling in both urban and semi-rural locations enabled recruitment of a varied participant group. Nevertheless, participant variability was restricted as all patient participants were aged >50 years, and most GPs and all patients were white British or of other white origin. This limits this study’s relevance to other age groups and ethnic/linguistic backgrounds.
Patient recruitment relied on GPs inviting suitable patient participants with long-term conditions, with whom they had an ongoing relationship and some GPs did not wish to invite their patients to participate. In addition, although category saturation of data was achieved, the fact that the sample was small, from one geographical area and, mostly, from teaching practices limits the conclusions that can be drawn from the data.
All GPs were from north-west England and known personally to one of two of the researchers: it is possible they may have shared similar views to these researchers or were more cautious of what they said as a result of being acquainted, and so may have given ‘public accounts’ rather than sharing more personal thoughts. There is also a possibility that GP responders viewed the interviewers, who were medical students at the time, as someone they needed to educate, and so did not fully open up or give truly honest answers.24 Responders may also have been worried about the implications of what they were saying, given that issues around touch are so often misconstrued; GPs are all too aware of the potential for litigation in this area and several responders made comments regarding this.
Comparison with existing literature
Non-verbal communication is recognised as significant in medical consultations, patient satisfaction, adherence, and clinical outcome.4,12 These results support previous work that non-verbal communication is an important factor by which patients describe and evaluate their interactions with their GP.10,12 Similarly, these data demonstrate that both patients with long-term conditions and their doctors value interpersonal skills such as listening, empathy, and trust, along with continuity of care, as has been noted elsewhere.25–27 Most doctors noted the empathic use of touch throughout the interaction as instinctive, human, and acceptable. For the patient responders, touch improved empathic clinician–patient communication by enhancing a feeling of being ‘really understood’. This emphasis suggests that touch enhances the ‘genuineness’ of the doctor’s contribution to the interaction;28 for Rogers and Stevens, such congruence — ‘without “front” or façade’ to obstruct communication — is a fundamental essential of listening,28 which may also prove protective when patients are in emotional danger17 and offer a tool to reduce anxiety and stress.29
The well-established distinction, noted earlier, between procedural and expressive touch13,20 was affirmed by all the responders, both doctors and patients, who found expressive touch in the ‘stiff’ context of a procedural task both reassuring and normalising. GPs, who otherwise might not use expressive touch, were able to use touch both expressively and procedurally in the context of a clinical task. Although some doctor responders were clearly consciously aware of this use of expressive touch, others were not. Such expressive touch is fundamental to human social intercourse30 and these data support a previously described educational need for primary care clinicians to be aware of the importance of expressive touch during procedural interactions, and be able to use such touch appropriately.21
In line with the current findings, previous questionnaire evidence31 suggests that patients feel touch is generally welcome and that it is appropriate to be touched on the forearm or hand. Although this conclusion must be seen in the limiting context that both patient populations studied had little ethnic diversity, it supports the suggestion from the nursing literature that patients perceive some zones, such as the arm and shoulder, to be safe for touching.32–33 The nursing literature also reflects the sex–age factors in using expressive touch33 that were noted in this study’s findings: touch by a female clinician is more acceptable than touch by a male, and doctors are generally more comfortable using touch with older patients than younger ones.
The limits to expressive touch noted in this study by some doctors are similar to the boundaries discussed in previous work on the perceptions of doctors21 and patients.12 However, these limits contrast with patients’ reports in these data (touching as an important connection that is missed if absent) and elsewhere (patients ‘would welcome their doctor’s touch’31). The possible absence of expressive touch in a GP–patient interaction31 would be clearly contrary to the overall views of patients identified in this study’s data.
Similarly, doctors concerns about invading patients’ space without permission21 are evident in the current study’s data. Unlike previous work,31 the patient responders did not appear to be concerned about this. This demonstrates the value of a qualitative study over a questionnaire.
Some GP responders reported that, although they prefer not to use expressive touch, they will actively vary this preference occasionally (near end of life, during periods of patient bereavement, or if they know a patient very well). This data echoes previous evidence21 and is an approach supported by the patient responders. Being aware of the possibility of deliberately varying boundaries in this way is an educational option for GPs in training.
In Friedson’s classic work, patients reported that doctors needed both technical competence and a clear interest in the patient, demonstrated by good communication.34 External pressures on the delivery of health care have changed in the intervening half century, but the focus on good communication remains. Expressive touch offers a tool to further improve doctor–patient communication which, these data suggest, is currently underutilised by many doctors.
Implications for practice
This study has confirmed that patients are sensitive to the non-verbal communication skills of their GPs, including the use of expressive touch.12 Raising doctors’ awareness about the potential for consciously using expressive touch in consultations will provide GPs with another tool to improve doctor–patient communication. Such awareness-raising, during under- or postgraduate education, may allow exploration and understanding of doctors’ personal limits in using both expressive touch and other non-verbal behaviours in professional interactions. Once limits are consciously understood, they can be varied as needed in clinical work: these data suggest that both patients and doctors will find this helpful, particularly where clinicians have previously been unaware of their boundaries.
Models of the consultation, such as the Calgary Cambridge framework,5 are widely used in communication education but, generally, make little detailed reference to the use of expressive touch in clinical interactions. These data suggest that increased educational emphasis on the conscious use of expressive touch would enhance clinical communication and, hence, perhaps also improve patient wellbeing and care. Further research might also investigate the phenomenon in a wider geographical area, and take into account ethnic, cultural, age, and sex differences (for doctors or patients) in using expressive touch; it could also involve randomly recruited patients, who do not have long-term health problems.