Search for contacts, projects,
courses and publications

Linking patient-centered communication with cancer information avoidance
the mediating roles of patient trust and literacy

Additional information

Authors
Lu Q., Link E., Baumann E., Schulz P. J.
Type
Journal Article
Year
2024
Language
English
Abstract
Objectives: This study, drawing on the pathway mediation model developed by Street and his colleagues (2009) that links communication to health outcomes, explores how patient-centered communication affects cancer information avoidance. Methods: Data was gathered through online access panel surveys, utilizing stratified sampling across Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Austria. The final sample included 4910 non-cancer and 414 cancer patients, all receiving healthcare from clinicians within the past year. Results: The results demonstrated that patient-centered communication is directly associated with reduced cancer information avoidance, especially among cancer patients. Additionally, this association is indirectly mediated through patient trust and healthcare literacy. Conclusion: The findings provide empirical evidence that reveals the underlying mechanism linking clinician-patient communication to patient health information behavior. Practice implications: The potential of clinician-patient communication in addressing health information avoidance is highlighted by these findings. Future interventions in healthcare settings should consider adopting patient-centered communication strategies. Additionally, improving patient trust and literacy levels could be effective in reducing cancer information avoidance.
Keywords
Patient-provider communication, Patient-centered communication, Health information behavior, Information avoidance, Cancer, Literacy, Trust
Journal
Patient education and counseling
Volume
123
Number ( Month )
108230

Diffusion

License
CC BY
Visibility
Public
Status open access
Hybrid