Title: Establishing Rapport Building Relationships
1Establishing Rapport Building Relationships
- Evelyn Kemp, Psy.D. Kathleen L. B. Beine,
M.D. -
- Forrest Lang, M.D.
- Department of Family Medicine
- Susan M. Grover, Ph.D., R.N.
- College of Nursing
- Revised by Sue Grover Chris Dula, 2014
- East Tennessee State University
2RAPPORT Definition
- Rapport a harmonious or sympathetic relation or
connection. - May occur in a single encounter
- Time alone is not sufficient to establish
rapport - Different from
- Trust Confidence in the professionals
demonstration of competence. - Charisma Magnetic charm or appeal.
3BUILDING RAPPORT SKILLSVERBAL COMMUNICATION
- SKILL Introduction and personal remarks
Icebreakers/social conversation - SKILL Pats on the back
- SKILL Expressions of caring, collaboration, and
commitment - R.1 pharmacist commitment
- 4. SKILL Concluding with collaborative comments
-
4BUILDING RAPPORT SKILLSNON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION
- Between 65 and 90 of communication is thought
to be nonverbal (Birdwhistell, 1970 Hall, 1966).
- Ivey and Ivey (2002) considered attending
behaviors to be the foundation of interviewing
and suggested four dimensions have been supported
by research and to some extent, cross-culturally - 1. eye contact
- 2. body language
- 3. vocal qualities
- 4. verbal tracking
5BUILDING RAPPORT SKILLSNON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION
- Non-verbal communication elements include such
things as - Handshakes, nods, use of hands while talking
(gestures) - Voice tone, speed, pauses (para-linguistics)
- Distance, culturally appropriate eye contact,
body position (e.g., leaning in, open posture)
(proximics). - In reviewing the research literature, Libero,
Stevens and Kana (2014) concluded that Body
postures can convey the emotional states of
others.., help people infer others feelings and
intentions.., formulate appropriate social
responses.., regulate ones own emotions.., and
help detect deception and threat - R.2 pharmacist non-verbal
6BUILDING RAPPORTthroughout the interview
- Beginning
- A rich combination of verbal and non-verbal
connections are possible and desirable, but often
absent or superficial. - Throughout
- Whenever the patient reveals something personal,
expresses feelings, or demonstrates knowledge
about his/her illness. (These opportunities are
often missed.) - Conclusion
- A final opportunity to cement the relationship.
7SKILL IcebreakerOften clinicians are concerned
that icebreakers will take too much time.
- R.3 Introduction - Mrs. Jones
- Questions to Consider
- 1. Estimate the time this type of initial
greeting / introduction might take. - 2. What are the pros and cons of using
- an icebreaker?
- Think of some examples of icebreakers.
-
8Answer 1
- Typically, personal and collaborative talk takes
about 30 seconds. - In the video clip you just saw with Mrs. Jones,
the greeting and reconnecting with this - established patient took 23 seconds.
- There is research that indicates that using
Rapport Building improves both efficiency (time
management) and quality in patient interviews.
(Mauksch LB, Dugdale DC, Dodson S, Epstein R,
Arch Intern Med. 2008)
9Answer 2 Pros and Cons of Icebreakers
- Advantages
- Shows interest in the patient as a person.
- Helps calibrate future communication by
identifying the patients level of intelligence,
communication style, language, comfort,
spontaneity, etc. - Potential Disadvantages
- Can appear insincere if overdone.
- May be inappropriate in some situations (e.g.,
emergencies, when breaking bad news.)
10Answer 3 Examples of Icebreakers
- What have you been up to lately?
- Hows work (school, hobby) going?
- How are things in your family?
- Thats a lovely pin youre wearing.
- From your shirt it looks like you're a Braves
fan? - I see you have a book with you. What are you
reading?
11 Pats on the back
- Verbal or actual pats on the back for positive
health behaviors increase the likelihood of that
behavior recurring in the future. There are
frequent opportunities to provide the patient
with a touch of approval. Much of the time, these
opportunities are missed.
R.4 Mrs. Rogers Question to consider What
happened to positively affect rapport?
12Verbal Skill Pats on the back
- In the previous interview the clinician
- Recalls a previous conversation.
- Pats patient on back, Thats wonderful
- Notes patients success with weight loss.
- Look for the chance to say
- Im impressed with what you know.
- Youve really learned a lot about your illness.
- Youre handling a difficult situation well.
- Youre doing a good job!
13SKILL Collaborative Comments
- Statements of interviewers realistic personal
commitment to help, or comments that stress the
willingness to be collaborative in the plan
development (shared decision-making). - The commitment referred to here goes beyond the
usual responsibility of the healthcare
professional to make a diagnosis, order tests,
provide information, dispense or write
prescriptions. - Use the pronoun I, rather than We, as this is
a personal commitment.
14EXAMPLES Collaborative Comments
- Lets work together to get your illness under
control. (collaboration) -
- Id like to help in any way I can. (commitment)
- Im interested in doing everything I can to help
you through this difficult time. (caring and
commitment) - R.5 Personal Commitment-Lab Test
15Unconditional Positive Regard (UPR)
- Two clusters of interpersonal behaviorare
clearly associated with good therapy
outcomes (1) Rogerianempathy, non-possessive
warmth, positive regard, and genuineness and (2)
therapeutic alliance. (Keijsers, Schaap
Hoogduin, 2000, p.264) - In the 1960s, Dr. Carl Rogers found
Unconditional Positive Regard builds rapport and
enhances the therapeutic alliance. UPR is a
patient experience facilitated by a caring and
non-judgmental clinician, including - Supporting the patient no matter what s/he says
or has or has not donealways treating the
patient with overt respect and resisting any
impulse to negatively judge the patient - Attempting to empathetically understand the
patients view (trying your very best to put
yourself into their shoes) - Holding conflicting biases/values/beliefs in
reserve and conveying positivity and hopefulness
to the patient.
16 NEGATIVE SPEAKDistancing the Patient and the
Provider
- Unfortunately, there are comments or expressions
that criticize, belittle, or show disrespect to
the patient. There are remarks that convey
unwanted advice. Comments can range from mildly
offensive or insensitive to being unequivocally
rude or insulting (e.g., racist, sexist, ageist,
or biased in any way) - Examples of negative speak may include
- You worry too much.
- You got upset over nothing.
- Youve got to cooperate.
- Id like you to be more responsible.
- The problem is you dont take your health
seriously.
17NEGATIVE SPEAK Examples
- R.6 Diabetic log R.7 Pharmacist
- Note that all of these remarks and those in the
previous slide begin or imply that you . . .
should, you need to . . . , you ought to . .
. - The implication is clear that the speaker is
conveying superiority to the patient.
18SKILLS Non-Verbal Rapport
- Review the following three interview situations.
- In each the words are the same.
- Analyze and identify what observable non-verbal
elements result in the different messages. - R.8 N/V 1
- R.9 N/V 2
- R.10 N/V 3
19SKILLS Non-Verbal Rapport
- ANSWERS
- The positive or negative non-verbal elements
include - Tone of voice - excited vs. disinterested
- Body lean - leans forward vs. back
- Eye contact - present vs. absent
- Focus of attention - patient vs. chart
20SKILLS NON-VERBAL RAPPORT(Note These behaviors
vary by culture)
- Shake hands with patient initially
- Use appropriate eye contact (avoid gt 5-7 seconds,
which may be interpreted as staring some
cultures find direct eye contact disrespectful) - Sit at same level as patient
- Lean slightly toward patient
- Respect personal distance (in US, one arms
length) - Respect and consider carefully use of touch
- Avoid furniture barriers between you and patient
- Avoid reading the chart while interviewing
- Limit written notes during interview (key facts
is acceptable) - For information on cultural differences, click
here
21SKILL Touch
- A form of non-verbal communication that can be
extraordinarily powerful, but not without risks. - A deeply personal response when words are
inadequate. REMINDER It is about the patients
perspective, needs, feelings. - Can convey empathy, often better than words.
- In using, consider CAREFULLY AND IN ADVANCE, the
patients and your age, gender, social/cultural
background, and the current situation. - Use thoughtfully, judiciously, consciously. If
touching, use the flat of the hand on the arm,
shoulder or hand. - Do not touch distrustful, reserved, angry or
psychotic patients.
22Establishing Rapport Relationship
BuildingQuestions to Consider
- If building rapport with patients is so effective
and time-efficient . . . - Why does it sometimes not happen?
- What are the potential barriers?
23 ANSWERS
- Our professional role often requires such intense
cognitive, sensory and perceptual focus that our
normal, human responses may get lost. - Gender issues, age issues, cultural issues may
create a fear that expression of personal
interest and concern for the patient may be
misinterpreted and attract unwanted personal
advances. - The interviewer may have negative personal
feelings or experiences with regard to the
patient or clinical situation (counter-transferenc
e).
24SKILL Advanced Rapport The Heart-sink Patient
- They have been called hated patients, thick
chart patients, crocks, turkeys, and
gomers, to name a few. The British call them
heart-sink patients because your heart sinks
when you see their names on the schedule. - One clinicians heart-sink patient might not be
anothers. - Heart-sink patients constitute at least 15 of
the patient population. (Jackson JL, Kroenke K.
Arch Intern Med. 1999) - Heart-sink patients pose a major challenge to
rapport building. - An Unconditional Positive Regard outlook helps
clinicians to realize that difficult patients
still need help, to avoid resenting patients
resistance and/or inappropriate interpersonal
style, and to understand such elements are just
part of a clinical picture.
25Sources of Frustration with Heart-sink Patients
- Seven sources of frustration (Levinson W, Stiles
WB Med Care 1993) - Lack of trust and agreement
- Too many problems a barrage of complaints
- Feelings of distress prompted by practitioners
emotional response to patient - Lack of understanding due to confusing history
- Patient non-adherence
- Demanding, controlling, or manipulative behavior
- Special problems, e.g., substance abuse and
chronic pain - In the following slides, we will explore ways to
build rapport with two types of challenges.
26SKILL Advanced RapportChallenge 1Patient
with Chronic Pain
- Mrs. Strawbridge has just moved to your
community. As part of the initial history, she
describes her migraine headaches and requests a
prescription for narcotics. -
- Watch this video to see what might happen
- R.11 Chronic Migraine Headaches
27Mrs. StrawbridgeChronic Migraine Headaches
- What makes this patient potentially a
heart-sink patient? - How do you personally feel about her?
- What kind of buttons might she push, at least for
some providers? - How might having an Unconditional Positive Regard
orientation help avoid heart-sink and improve
interactions? - What kinds of things might you have done in this
situation to build rapport? - R.12 Alternative approach
- What differences did you see?
- What else might you have done?
28Mrs. StrawbridgeChronic Migraine Headaches
Answers
- This patient may be categorized as a heart-sink
patient because - Lack of trust and agreement
- Feelings of distress prompted by practitioners
emotional response to patient - Requesting narcotics in an insistent manner
- Chronic pain
- The provider may feel this patient is being
demanding or manipulative.
29SKILL Advanced RapportChallenge
2Non-Adherent Patient
- Mr. Webb has severe COPD/Emphysema and continues
to smoke 1-2 packs of cigarettes/day. During his
current hospitalization for an acute exacerbation
of his COPD, he spent a short time on the
respirator followed by several days of Bi-Pap
therapy. He was just transferred out of critical
care, and the nurse informs you that Mr. Webb was
discovered smoking in the bathroom. - Click on the following video to see one way to
respond - R.13 Non-adherence
- What about this patient might make your heart
sink? What did you notice that might damage
rapport? - R.14 Answers
30Non-adherent Patient Alternative Approach
- R.15 Alternate Approach
- What techniques did you notice the doctor using
that might have helped build rapport with the
patient?
31 Mr. Webb - Alternate Approach
- Answers
- Self-reflection, acknowledging feelings to
oneself. - Eliciting the patients perspective.
- Acknowledging the patients frustration.
- Taking a collaborative approach to treatment.
32SKILLS When your heart-sinks
- Identify the buttons that have been pushed in
you. Pause. - Reframe What is the patients behavior that
causes the negative reaction? What underlying
interest of the patient may be driving this
behavior (e.g., fear, sadness, loss, being
overwhelmed, recent or past negative experiences
aka transference) ? Keep Unconditional Positive
Regard in mind, and try to adopt that positive
mindset. - Talk with colleagues, rather than talking about
the patient. - Consider that the problem may be your stuff
and not about the patient (this is called
counter-transference and will be discussed in
greater detail later, in the Addressing Feelings
module).
33Rapport Building Summary of Skills
- Verbal Rapport Building
- Introductory personal remarks
- Pats on the back---here we mean verbal, but
these may also be real pats (in appropriate
situations). - Statements of your personal support,
collaboration, and commitment. - Concluding personal remarks
- Non-verbal Rapport Building
- Gestures (handshakes, etc.)
- Voice tone, speed, interest (para-linguistics)
- Eye contact, lean, body position (proximics)
34How Will I Be Graded on an OSCE?Establishing
Rapport, Rating Descriptions
- 5 Demonstrates rapport-building skills such
that most patients would subsequently go out of
their way to tell friend or family about this
interviewer with extraordinary interpersonal
skills. Usually include two or more elements of
positive speak and expressions of non-verbal
interest that are exceptionally warm. - 4 Notably warm and makes effective connection
via identifiable elements of both verbal and
non-verbal connection - 3 Clearly, professional, respectful and
interested but minimal or ineffective specific
verbal or non-verbal efforts to make a more
personal connection. - 2 For the most part professional and
respectful. Absent of specific effective efforts
at rapport building. Present are some comments,
expressions or non-verbal behaviors, which might
have a negative reception by a least some
patients. - 1 Absent are positive elements of relationship
building. Present are clearly negative comments
or expressions, which would leave many patients
with negative feelings about the interviewer. - 5 100 4 90 3 80 2 70 1 60
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36Module Quiz
- Modular quizzes should be completed as scheduled
before the small group class - Unless there is prior approval, quizzes not
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