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Social science & medicine · Jan 1989
Privacy between physicians and patients: more than a matter of confidentiality.
- R Parrott, J K Burgoon, M Burgoon, and B A LePoire.
- Department of Communication, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721.
- Soc Sci Med. 1989 Jan 1; 29 (12): 1381-5.
AbstractThis study examined patients' perceptions (N = 427) of the meaning of privacy within the physician-patient dyad. The recognition of the importance of privacy, the norms that govern privacy, and the specific behaviors that may be considered to violate privacy in relationships has most often received only general attention by researchers. Recent evidence from the field of communication supports the multidimensional and situational nature of privacy. Thus, in contrast to the usual conception of patient confidentiality as an issue focused on information, confidentiality is cast as a topic within both the informational and psychological realms of privacy. Implications for current medical interviewing practices, especially with regard to questions that concern patients' sexual behavior, are discussed.
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