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. 2016 Jan;99(1):85-91.
doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2015.07.020. Epub 2015 Jul 22.

Clients' psychosocial communication and midwives' verbal and nonverbal communication during prenatal counseling for anomaly screening

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Free article

Clients' psychosocial communication and midwives' verbal and nonverbal communication during prenatal counseling for anomaly screening

Linda Martin et al. Patient Educ Couns. 2016 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

Objectives: This study focuses on facilitation of clients' psychosocial communication during prenatal counseling for fetal anomaly screening. We assessed how psychosocial communication by clients is related to midwives' psychosocial and affective communication, client-directed gaze and counseling duration.

Methods: During 184 videotaped prenatal counseling consultations with 20 Dutch midwives, verbal psychosocial and affective behavior was measured by the Roter Interaction Analysis System (RIAS). We rated the duration of client-directed gaze. We performed multilevel analyses to assess the relation between clients' psychosocial communication and midwives' psychosocial and affective communication, client-directed gaze and counseling duration.

Results: Clients' psychosocial communication was higher if midwives' asked more psychosocial questions and showed more affective behavior (β=0.90; CI: 0.45-1.35; p<0.00 and β=1.32; CI: 0.18-2.47; p=0.025, respectively). Clients "psychosocial communication was not related to midwives" client-directed gaze. Additionally, psychosocial communication by clients was directly, positively related to the counseling duration (β=0.59; CI: 0.20-099; p=0.004).

Conclusions: In contrast with our expectations, midwives' client-directed gaze was not related with psychosocial communication of clients.

Practice implications: In addition to asking psychosocial questions, our study shows that midwives' affective behavior and counseling duration is likely to encourage client's psychosocial communication, known to be especially important for facilitating decision-making.

Keywords: Affective communication; Client-directed gaze; Nonverbal behavior; Prenatal genetic counseling; Psychosocial-communication; Video recording.

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