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How to modify Doctors'non-verbal behaviour in consultations: look at the patient online

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Nonverbal cues can affect rapport, patient trust, the willingness of the patient to adhere to the plan of care and the patients satisfaction with the doctor-patient relationship.
Good observational skills are necessary to detect (non-)verbal signals indicating how to interpret the patients story. By demonstrating non-verbal, paralingual and verbal listening behaviour,he can show patients that he is paying attention to them.
Even gestures as simple as squeezing a patients hand can be effective tools for communicating with non-verbal patients. Other examples of non-verbal communication are gestures, movements, twitches, eye movements, and other instinctive responses that occur when a patient feels pain, surprise, shock, or discomfort.
Pain severity assessment for a nonverbal patient may include documentation about intensity of nonverbal expressions of pain or protective body movements such as bracing and guarding. It could also include documentation of severity using a nonverbal standardized rating scale, such as the Wong Baker or PAINAD scales.
Facial Expression includes the eye, brow, and mouth movements that people use as nonverbal cues. For example, frowning, furrowing ones brow, and rolling ones eyes are all examples of facial expressions that convey meaning. Eye Contact is the use of the gaze, or looking into someones eyes, to communicate.
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Observe Nonverbal Cues Nonverbal cues can include eye movement, restlessness, facial expressions, rigid limbs and even moaning. Sometimes these nonverbal cues can give you even more insight into what your patient needs rather than just what they tell you.
One of the most important parts of being a doctor is communicating with your patients. Even diagnosing and treating patients relies on communication with them to find out what they need. Any specialty you choose will have some degree of patient interaction.
Behaviors such as open body position, eye contact, smile, and touch express positive affect, involvement, availability, attention, warmth, encouragement, respect, understanding, empathy, and affiliation with the patient. They are considered building blocks of physicianpatient relationships.
Non-verbal communication helps to build the relationship, provides cues to underlying unspoken concerns and emotions, and helps to reinforce or contradict our verbal comments. Non-verbal communication is at its most docHub in the medical interview if it contradicts the message from verbal communication.
Patients reflect different emotions using body language. Being alert to the patients nonverbal cues enables you to probe a little deeper, rather than simply accepting verbal responses at face value. Use caution when interpreting nonverbal communication or relying on it as your sole source of information.

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