The impact of clinicians' personality and their interpersonal behaviors on the quality of patient care: asystematic review

Purpose. To review systematically the impact of clinicians' personality and observed interpersonal behaviors on the quality of their patient care. Data sources. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE and PsycINFO from inception through January 2014, using both free text words and subject headings, without...

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Published inInternational journal for quality in health care Vol. 26; no. 4; pp. 426 - 481
Main Authors BOEREBACH, BENJAMIN C.M., SCHEEPERS, RENÉE A., VAN DER LEEUW, RENÉE M., HEINEMAN, MAAS JAN, ARAH, ONYEBUCHI A., LOMBARTS, KIKI M.J.M.H.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford University Press 01.08.2014
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Summary:Purpose. To review systematically the impact of clinicians' personality and observed interpersonal behaviors on the quality of their patient care. Data sources. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE and PsycINFO from inception through January 2014, using both free text words and subject headings, without language restriction. Additional hand-searching was performed. Study selection. The PRISMA framework guided (the reporting of) study selection and data extraction. Eligible articles were selected by title, abstract and full text review subsequently. Data extraction. Data on study setting, participants, personality traits or interpersonal behaviors, outcome measures and limitations were extracted in a systematic way. Results of data synthesis. Our systematic search yielded 10 476 unique hits. Ultimately, 85 studies met all inclusion criteria, 4 on clinicians' personality and 81 on their interpersonal behaviors. The studies on interpersonal behaviors reported instrumental (n = 45) and affective (n = 59) verbal behaviors or nonverbal behaviors (n = 20). Outcome measures in the studies were quality of processes of care (n = 68) and patient health outcomes (n = 35). The above categories were non-exclusive. The majority of the studies found little or no effect of clinicians' personality traits and their interpersonal behaviors on the quality of patient care. The few studies that found an effect were mostly observational studies that did not address possible uncontrolled confounding. Conclusions. There is no strong empirical evidence that specific interpersonal behaviors will lead to enhanced quality of care. These findings could imply that clinicians can adapt their interactions toward patients' needs and preferences instead of displaying certain specific behaviors per se.
ISSN:1353-4505
1464-3677