Patients Feel Judged By Doctors, Study Suggests

Stevens Institute of Technology

When an individual visits their doctor, they aren't supposed to keep secrets. Unless patients are forthcoming about their symptoms, behaviors, and health-related beliefs, it's hard for healthcare professionals to effectively diagnose and treat illnesses—or to advise and educate patients about how to take better care of themselves in the future.

There's only one problem: new research from Stevens Institute of Technology shows that many people believe they may be judged if they share mistaken beliefs with their care team—and that doctors really do take strongly negative views of patients who disclose incorrect or unreasonable beliefs.

"People worry about their doctors looking down on them—and it turns out that's an entirely rational concern," says Dr. Samantha Kleinberg, the lead researcher on the project. "Our study suggests that doctors really do judge patients harshly if they share information or beliefs that they disagree with."

To understand how people think about sharing information with healthcare professionals, Dr. Kleinberg and her collaborators surveyed over 350 patients and over 200 physicians, asking how they would view people who held a range of different medical beliefs. Beliefs ranged from true information to incorrect statements of many types: some were reasonable (like believing that eating sugar causes diabetes); some were unreasonable (like believing that carrot juice cures diabetes); and some were conspiracy theories (like believing that pharmaceutical companies deliberately cause diabetes to create more customers for insulin). Dr. Onur Asan, also at Stevens Institute of Technology, co-authored the study along with Dr. Jessecae K. Marsh, a collaborator from Lehigh University.

"The degree to which healthcare professionals held negative perceptions towards patients espousing misinformation surprised us, and suggests doctors may need additional support and resources to effectively treat such patients," says Dr. Asan.

The more unreasonable a person's health beliefs, the more negatively they were viewed by both laypeople and healthcare professionals. "We found that our subjects viewed people negatively if they held mistaken beliefs—but viewed them much more negatively if they held more unreasonable or conspiratorial beliefs," Dr. Kleinberg says.

Surprisingly, however, there was little difference between the responses of doctors and laypeople or patients with personal experience. Even patients living with chronic health conditions, who were familiar with the complexities of healthcare, were highly intolerant of people who held mistaken beliefs, the team found. "We'd thought people who had diabetes themselves might be more sympathetic, but it wasn't the case at all," Dr. Kleinberg says.

Physicians were also highly likely to view people negatively when they expressed mistaken beliefs about health-related topics. "That was a surprising result, and frankly a depressing one," Dr. Kleinberg says. "Laypeople aren't expected to have medical expertise, so doctors often have to correct mistaken beliefs on health issues. That shouldn't be something that leads doctors to view patients more negatively."

Surveys show that the majority of people hold at least some incorrect health-related beliefs, such as the false belief that taking vitamin C will cure their cold, or that eating a sugary snack can directly cause diabetes, making it all the more important that people feel free to solicit expert opinions. "We rely on our doctors to educate us and help us overcome these medical misconceptions—but that's only possible if we're able to express our ideas freely, without fear of being judged when we get things wrong," Dr. Kleinberg says.

Part of the problem is that it isn't usually possible for laypeople to know whether their own beliefs are correct or incorrect, or whether they will be perceived as reasonable or unreasonable. That means patients are likely to withhold even true and reasonable beliefs in order to minimize the risk of being viewed negatively by their doctor.

More research is needed to explore the ways in which these negative perceptions impact real-world patient-doctor interactions, Dr. Kleinberg says. Still, she adds, it's clear that physicians need to be doing more to make their patients feel safe and comfortable during routine interactions.

"If we want to have clear communication between patients and healthcare professionals, we need to change the way that doctors think about patients who are misinformed," Dr. Kleinberg says. "Doctors need to overcome their tendency to judge patients, and actively encourage patients to share their thoughts—even their incorrect ones—much more freely than they currently do."

About Stevens Institute of Technology

Stevens Institute of Technology is a premier, private research university situated in Hoboken, New Jersey. Since our founding in 1870, technological innovation has been the hallmark of Stevens' education and research. Within the university's three schools and one college, 8,000 undergraduate and graduate students collaborate closely with faculty in an interdisciplinary, student-centric, entrepreneurial environment. Academic and research programs spanning business, computing, engineering, the arts and other disciplines actively advance the frontiers of science and leverage technology to confront our most pressing global challenges. The university continues to be consistently ranked among the nation's leaders in career services, post-graduation salaries of alumni and return on tuition investment.

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