Physician gaze shifts in patient-physician interactions: functions, accounts and responses

Chiara Jongerius*, Marij A. Hillen, Johannes A. Romijn, Ellen M. A. Smets, Tom Koole

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
98 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Objectives
Physician gaze towards patients is fundamental for medical consultations. Physicians’ use of Electronic Health Records (EHR) affects their gaze towards patients, and may negatively influence this interaction. We aimed to study conversation patterns during gaze shifts of physicians from the patient towards the EHR.

Methods
Outpatient consultations (N=8) were eye-tracked. Interactions around physician gaze shifts towards the computer were transcribed.

Results
We found that physician gaze shifts have different interactional functions, e.g., introducing a topic switch or entering data into the EHR. Furthermore, physicians differ in how they account for their gaze shifts, i.e., both implicitly and explicitly. Third, patients vary in treating the gaze shift as an indication to continue their turn or not.

Conclusions
Our results suggest that physician gaze shifts vary in function, in how physicians account for them, and in how they influence the conversation. Future research should take into account distinctions when relating gaze to patient outcomes.

Practice implications
Physicians may be aware of the interactional context of their gaze behaviour. Patients respond differently to various types of gaze shifts. How physicians handle gaze shifts can therefore have different consequences for the interaction.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2116-2129
Number of pages14
JournalPatient Education and Counseling
Volume105
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul-2022

Keywords

  • Conversation Analysis, physician gaze shifts, physician-patient interaction, eye-tracking, Electronic Health Record

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