Clinicians' implicit and explicit attitudes about the legitimacy of functional neurological disorders correlate with referral decisions

被引:8
作者
Begley, Roisin [1 ]
Farrell, Lynn [2 ]
Lyttle, Nigel [3 ]
Alty, Jane [4 ,5 ,6 ]
Curran, David [1 ]
Williams, Stefan
Graham, Christopher D. [1 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Queens Univ Belfast, Dept Psychol, Belfast, North Ireland
[2] Natl Coll Ireland, Psychol Dept, Dublin, Ireland
[3] Belfast Hlth & Social Care Trust, Adult Acute Neuropsychol Serv, Belfast, North Ireland
[4] Univ Tasmania, Wicking Dementia Res & Educ Ctr, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[5] Royal Hobart Hosp, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[6] Leeds Teaching Hosp NHS Trust, Neurol Dept, Leeds, England
[7] Queens Univ Belfast, Dept Psychol, David Keir Bldg, Belfast BT7 1NN, North Ireland
关键词
bias; functional neurological disorder; implicit attitudes; referral decisions; ASSESSMENT PROCEDURE IRAP; STATISTICAL POWER; CRITERION; COGNITION; BEHAVIOR; OUTCOMES; THERAPY; GENDER; IMPACT; BIAS;
D O I
10.1111/bjhp.12643
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
ObjectivesUncertainty regarding the legitimacy of functional neurological disorder (FND) remains among some health care professionals. Despite treatment guidelines and consensus recommendations, variability in clinical practice referral decisions persists. Evidence from other conditions suggests such clinical decision making is impacted by practitioners' implicit and explicit attitudes. We aimed to identify whether health care professionals hold implicit and/or explicit attitudes about the legitimacy of FND and whether these attitudes are associated with referral decision making. Design/MethodsWe included 66 health care professionals who work with people with neurological conditions: n = 37 medical doctors, mainly neurologists (n = 18) and psychiatrists (n = 10), and n = 29 doctoral level practitioner psychologists. Participants completed an Implicit Association Test (IAT), Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP), a referral decision-making vignette task and self-report measures of explicit attitudes on FND-legitimacy, therapeutic optimism and clinician confidence. Multiple Sclerosis (MS) was used as a comparator condition. ResultsParticipants self-reported strong explicit FND-legitimate and MS-legitimate attitudes but demonstrated an implicit FND-illegitimate/MS-legitimate bias. Deeper examination provided by the IRAP data indicated pro-FND-legitimate attitudes, but no bias for or against FND-illegitimate-contrasting the pro-MS-legitimate, anti-MS-illegitimate attitudes for the comparator condition. Attitudes about FND-illegitimacy were negatively associated with likelihood of referral to physical interventions such as physiotherapy. Medical doctors had lower treatment optimism and stronger explicit attitudes that FND is illegitimate than psychologists. ConclusionsAt an implicit level, clinicians are uncertain about the illegitimacy of FND, and such attitudes are associated with lower likelihood of referral to physiotherapy in particular. Improved education on FND among health care professionals is indicated.
引用
收藏
页码:604 / 618
页数:15
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