A Qualitative Investigation of Factors Affecting Saudi Patients’ Communication Experience with Non-Saudi Physicians in Saudi Arabia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methodology/Study Design
2.2. Description of the Research Context
2.2.1. Data Collection Technique
2.2.2. Data Analysis Techniques
Ethical Consideration
3. Results
3.1. Theme One: Encountering Difference
3.1.1. Sub-Theme One: Being Different
“I believe that communication between Saudi patient and non-Saudi doctor is difficult by nature because of the different cultures. It would be much easier to communicate with a Saudi doctor. Saudi doctors understand us better because we have the same country, culture, and language”(Participant 1).
“There will be no communication if the patient and the doctor share no common language”(Participant 1).
“On some occasion, they came to give my mam the back injection but they found her bed positioned toward Mecca because she was performing the prayer. Even though, they left and came back later, I felt some of them did not like this delay at all. Some of them are non-Muslim”(Participant 2).
“Of course, they seem different from us on everything”(Participant 7).
“There is no way that the doctor will understand you unless the doctor is a Saudi. Though they were not asked about their medical experiences with Saudi physicians, patients talked about them in comparison to their experiences with non-Saudi physicians to show their preferences, and to highlight the differences and difficulties”.
“I would prefer a Saudi physician who can exchange information with you and can understand you right away. I can communicate with Saudi physicians by informal language. We use informal language in our daily life so it would be easier if you could explain your health issues to your physician using informal speech. As you know, the only way to do that is to have a Saudi physician. I prefer to see Saudi physicians because they are one of us and they can understand us better than foreigner doctors”(Participant 3).
3.1.2. Sub-Theme Two: Being Disconnected
“I don’t really know if the doctor got and understood what I have already told him. This happens with doctors speaking with broken language or don’t speak Arabic at all. I use non-verbal language to explain to doctors my health problem. It is not sufficient for him and for me. We as patients suffer a lot from seeing non-Arabic doctors. For example, I can convey to the doctor that my stomach hurts me but I cannot tell him any other information such as which part of my stomach is the source of pain, or the food that I had in which I think is the cause of my stomach-ache. Believe me, it is hard to communicate with doctors who speak no Arabic”(Participant 4)
“Language is not a problem because always there is someone to do the translation such as the nurse. However, the majority of nurses are not Arabic speakers, only a few of them 95 speak very limited Arabic”(Participant 4)
“Most nurses here are from non-Arabic speaking countries such as Philippines, and India. So, they know only few Arabic words such as go, come, visit, and so on. It seemed from the patients’ experiences that nurses could help with translation but not enough to replace the need for a qualified translator”(Participant 3).
“I think that language issue is important. We could use a translator between the doctors and patients who do not speak the same language. Even though, I prefer the contact between the patient and the doctor directly because sometimes the translators do not convey the information accurately between the two parties”(Participant 5).
“In some medical visit I got reluctant to talk to my doctor because another person will be in the room like another doctor or nurse”.
Participant 2 “insisted that it is not enough to have a translator, but the translator has to be Saudi: Having a local translator is important to use simple words and informal language. Patients found that language was an obstacle not only with physicians who do not speak Arabic, but at times also with physicians whose native language is Arabic. Even though Arabic physicians and patients speak the same language, it is spoken differently in Saudi Arabia than in the physician’s own country and is compounded by the existence of a local dialect with its own unique features”.
“if you tell an Arabic doctor that I have “mukuse” [abdominal colic] there is no way that the doctor will understand you. The following quote by Participant 3 clearly confirms Participant 6concerns and exemplifies how the same language can be used differently by different people. Even though some non-Saudi physicians speak Arabic, I find difficulties to make some of them understand me because we use words that they do not know what it means. For example, in one of my medical visits I told the doctor that I have tanmil (numbness) in my left hand. The doctor did not understand what the word tanmil means because this word is used by Saudi as it seemed to me. In the third visit, he came to know what the word or the phrase means. I got myself embarrassed because I was not able to explain it to him. If he had understood me from the beginning, he would have given me the right medicine in the first place because I felt better when he changed my prescription. I suffered for quite some time because he did not understand what the word tanmil is. If he had understood me right in the first place, he would diagnose my illness accurately and prescribe the right medicine for me”(Participant 3).
“Anyway, let me tell you about my experience with my previous dentist. During the medical visit, I will uncover not my whole face but to a point that allows the doctor to work on my teeth. He did not like me doing that and asked me to take the whole veil off. He told me that his intention is to finish the job perfectly not to stare at my face. I left him and moved to another doctor”(Participant 2).
“The whole process of examining my neck was so embarrassing to me. Unlike the hand, the neck is a sensitive part of my body. Even though, the examination time is not too long, I felt so shy and I wanted the doctor to hurry up and finish. Moreover, the story did not end there because every time I come to see him, I have to uncover my neck to him. I do not understand the fact that he needs to check my neck in every visit. He diagnosed my illness in the first visit that should be enough. My suffering last for a year because I was schedule to see him in every month. Whenever he asks me to uncover my neck, I feel hurt like just he is asking me to show out my whole face. I carry such burden on the medical visit day and in my way to see him”(Participant 3).
3.1.3. Sub-Theme Three: Being Culturally Acknowledged
“I do not like going to the dentist because I have to uncover my face, so he can work on my teeth. However, this doctor was very considerate because he allowed me to do whatever makes me comfortable in regard to taking my face cover off. So, I used to uncover only the part of the face that he needs to see in order for him to perform the job”(Participant 2).
“Some doctors are very welcoming and eager to start a discussion with you. For example, one time a doctor asked me about whether I went to see the traditional healer or not. I said no I didn’t go but if you do not heal me, then I will go. He laughed because of what I have said. He knew many things about the people in this city and their traditions. The funny thing was that this doctor was not even an Arabic doctor. He was from Russia or Greece”(Participant 4).
“I can tell you that one of the things that helped my mother’s wounds to heal is the use of alternative medicine. A Saudi nurse has some experiences in applying honey on the wounds to speed up the wounds to heal. With doctor approval and supervision, he continues to use the honey on the wounds. Frankly speaking, I and my family had witnessed huge improvements on my mom’s wounds”(Participant 2).
3.2. Theme Two: Absence of Partnering
3.2.1. Sub-Theme One: Being Powerless
“I believe those doctors are more responsible about having good communication because patients do not have the same power as doctor. So, doctor should initiate asking questions and try to activate the patient into a conversation during the medical visit. Doctor must be the one who begin by exchanging information with the patient”(Participant 1).
“I am a believer in specialization and this is his specialization. This is a doctor and this is his field. I am ignorant when it comes to health knowledge. So, why should I question what he thinks?”(Participant 4).
“The other issue is that you can’t change your doctor because the hospital policy refuse this. I tried to change my doctor but I have been told by the hospital’s administrators that 104 either your doctor die or you leave the hospital otherwise you can’t change your doctor. I told them him that I have been with this doctor for 2 years and I feel no improvement in my condition but they refused to change my doctor”(Participant 4).
“As a female patient, I would like to see a female doctor who can understand me better since we are alike. Failure to respond to patients’ preferences and choices made patients feel less in control and somewhat helpless to manage their own health issues, as well as disempowered to participate”(Participant 1).
3.2.2. Sub-Theme Two: Being Unnoticed and Neglected
“When I went to see the doctor from Egypt, he did not bother to listen to me or give me a chance to explain my health problem and my concern. It is very important that doctors pay attention to their patients. I used to see a doctor and during the visit I get so nervous because he is not paying attention to me or to what I am saying. He talks to the nurse or gets himself distracted by anything like the computer while I am talking to him”(Participant 7).
“He did not listen to me enough and he was kind of pushing me to cut off my talk.”
“Some doctors do not give you a chance to talk. She described her unsatisfying interaction with a dermatologist. Another bad experience happened with me with a dermatologist. There was no exchange of information. I did not get what I wanted at all. She did not meet even the minimum of my expectations”(Participant 1).
“Recently, I started to feel dizzy when I stand up. So, I came to see the doctor. The doctor didn’t bother talking to me to understand exactly what I have. He asked me to take some medical tests and come to see him a month later, can you believe it. Again, to what I have told you before, doctor concentrate always on medical test. Even after second visit, they still ask to do more medical test. For example, one doctor asked me to do transactional X-ray but I told him that I already have done that then he said ok then you need to do magnetic X-ray, can you believe that!”(Participant 8).
“I am asking for more attention and care from the doctor. You know some doctors just write a prescription. They do not give a patient enough time to explain his/her health problem”.
“I can tell you most of my appointments are about taking new medicine supply. Every time, the doctor asks you by saying quickly, how are you? Are you good? And write the prescription without leaving any chance to discuss my condition. I am telling you, the medical visit is only about taking new medicine supply”(Participant 4).
“I think some visits are happy because once the doctor starts to talk to you and listen to you then as a patient you feel mentally good. I think half of the treatment happens when the doctor start to exchange information with you”(Participant 4).
“A happy encounter occurs when meeting a physician with good interpersonal skills which enables effective interaction. Patients come to see physicians with two things in mind. First, to be cured, and second, to feel better by knowing what is wrong with them”.
“He was so nice with me because he listens to me and answers all of my questions. He explained to me exactly what my illness is and how the treatment is going to be. We exchanged information. He showed me his attention”(Participant 7).
3.2.3. Sub-Theme Three: Reluctance to Trust
“After the ambulance brought me to the hospital, the doctor took some quick examination on me and hospitalized me. He insisted on me to walk little from my bed to the bathroom in the same room. I did once and it was horrible. Later on, the doctor run CT scan on me. The scan shows that I have multiple fractures in three parts in my body. The doctor came to me and apologized for forcing me to walk when I was not ready for that. I lost trust on them because of their inaccurate diagnosis and their careless behavior. I wonder why the doctor did not do a ST scan on me from the beginning”(Participant 2).
“I explain my knee problem briefly to the non-Saudi physician. He asked me to get in the bed, then he conducted a hand examination on my injured knee. He diagnosed me as having torn ligaments and suggested a surgery after meeting him. I asked him to make X-ray to me. He refused and told me that he knows better than me. Here, doctors do not 110 want to hear your opinion or to have a say over anything. It is funny because after all it is your body and health. However, I insisted on making X-ray before I go into any type of surgery. So, he prescribed X-ray to me. The result showed a minor torn ligament, so I decided not on the surgery but on the physical therapy”(Participant 6).
“For me, I don’t trust all doctors regardless of nationality because I have seen three doctors in three hospitals regarding my health conditions and all of them have given me different diagnoses. You see now why I don’t trust them. One doctor asked me to get exposed to the sun light as a treatment while the other doctor has required a laser treatment along with a skin lotion only. Now, I stopped the sun treatment and doing the laser but with no improvements”(Participant 5).
“One of the doctors I met was non-Arabic. This doctor gains my trust because he asked me couple of questions just to get exactly the type of dizziness I have. His questions were like that do you feel dizzy just before stand up, after standing up completely, or do you feel dizzy after setting to long and then standing up”(Participant 8).
“Saudi patients have less trust toward non-Saudi doctor. Some believe that they are not good enough and other believe that non-Saudi doctors are driven only by money incentives”(Participant 5).
“Most Saudi doctors are qualified and skillful and able to gain the patient’s trust. I think, you will be lucky if you can get treated by Saudi doctors because they are better than non-Saudi doctors”(Participant 8).
3.2.4. Sub-Theme Four: Not Being Given Adequate Time
“Some doctors try to show you that they are so busy and you as a particular patient are an extra burden over his daily load. So, they expect you to understand this message. I believe that the main reason of being a doctor is to serve patients because that is the doctors’ duty. They should understand that when they serve patients, they are doing no favour to anyone but it is their duty”(Participant 2).
“They should understand that I didn’t come to see them in their houses but in the public hospital. The above examples indicate that some physicians refrain from dedicating enough time for patients which results in patients feeling they are imposing on the physicians’ time”(Participant 6).
“He had run my surgery with a success thanks for god. Now after spending so much time with him, we have good relationship. He understands me now better and knows what I like and what I do not like”(Participant 6).
“The medical visit was too short, I did not get enough chances to ask all of my questions that are in my mind. You know that when we go to a doctor, we all have concerns and questions that need to be answered from a person who knows”(Participant 1).
“My problem comes when doctors don’t give me details about my health problem because they don’t have enough time and want to serve the next patient”(Participant 5).
“The medical visit time does not help either patient or doctor to understand each other because it is short. These experiences confirm that insufficient time allocated physicians to consult with patients was a barrier to meeting patients’ needs and expectations, to ensuring patient satisfaction, and to establishing patient-centered care”.
“However, he did not listen to me enough and he was kind of pushing me to cut my talk. During the last part of the medical visit, he allowed another patient to sit in the chair facing me. I objected right away but the doctor said it is ok because there is a lot of patients waiting outside and your visit is about to end. I insisted that it is still my time and the other patient must leave the room. Finally, the doctor said that I am right and asked the other patient to leave the room, which he did. However, I felt that the doctor is somehow not happy with me because of my stand on this issue”(Participant 6).
“Sometime, I get surprised because another patient is given the permission to enter the room while my visit still not yet finished. I protested against that. It is funny because there was a sign in the doctor’s door that says “it is not allowed for a patient to enter the room if there is another patient still inside”(Participant 2)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
6. Implications for National Policy
7. Implications for Clinical Practice and Education
8. Limitations and Recommendations for Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PICOS | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
---|---|---|
Population | All Physicians (consultants, specialist, GPs) and patients come from different cultural backgrounds | Physicians and patients who share the same culture communication with health providers or health staff other than physicians |
Intervention | Communication during medical consultation | Inpatient medical consultation, or any medical consultation in nursing homes and/or homebased care |
Comparison | None | None |
Setting | Out-patient clinics and other clinics | Hospitalized patients, including mental health patients |
Outcome | Factors hindering communications | - |
Participant | Gender | Age | Education | Job | Nationality |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Participant 1 | Male | 35 | Bachelor | Teacher High school | Saudi |
Participant 2 | Male | 59 | High school | Govt Worker | Saudi |
Participant 3 | Male | 28 | College student | Qassim University | Saudi |
Participant 4 | Male | 29 | Bachelor | Govt Civil Employee | Saudi |
Participant 5 | Female | 24 | College student | Qassim University | Saudi |
Participant 6 | Female | 22 | College student | College of Technology | Saudi |
Participant 7 | Female | 40 | High school | Housewife | Saudi |
Participant 8 | Female | 24 | Bachelor English | Qassim University | Saudi |
S# | Main Themes | Sub-Themes | Units of Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Encountering Difference | Being different | Involve talking with other backgrounds? Expectation Personal experience Fulfillment experience Good or bad experiences? Outcome Patient satisfaction? Suggestions regarding cross cultural communication between doctors and patients? |
Being disconnected | |||
Being culturally acknowledged | |||
22 | Absence of Partnering | Being powerless | |
Being unnoticed and neglected | |||
Reluctance to trust | |||
Not being given the adequate time |
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Share and Cite
Alkhamees, M.; Lea, J.; Islam, M.S.; Alasqah, I.; Alzghaibi, H.; Alharbi, M.F.; Albejaidi, F.; Mughal, Y.H.; Parker, V. A Qualitative Investigation of Factors Affecting Saudi Patients’ Communication Experience with Non-Saudi Physicians in Saudi Arabia. Healthcare 2023, 11, 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010118
Alkhamees M, Lea J, Islam MS, Alasqah I, Alzghaibi H, Alharbi MF, Albejaidi F, Mughal YH, Parker V. A Qualitative Investigation of Factors Affecting Saudi Patients’ Communication Experience with Non-Saudi Physicians in Saudi Arabia. Healthcare. 2023; 11(1):118. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010118
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlkhamees, Mohammad, Jackie Lea, Md Shahidul Islam, Ibrahim Alasqah, Haitham Alzghaibi, Mohammad F. Alharbi, Fahad Albejaidi, Yasir Hayat Mughal, and Vicki Parker. 2023. "A Qualitative Investigation of Factors Affecting Saudi Patients’ Communication Experience with Non-Saudi Physicians in Saudi Arabia" Healthcare 11, no. 1: 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010118
APA StyleAlkhamees, M., Lea, J., Islam, M. S., Alasqah, I., Alzghaibi, H., Alharbi, M. F., Albejaidi, F., Mughal, Y. H., & Parker, V. (2023). A Qualitative Investigation of Factors Affecting Saudi Patients’ Communication Experience with Non-Saudi Physicians in Saudi Arabia. Healthcare, 11(1), 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010118