Aleksandra, Lazarević

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The role of past physician-patient communication in passivity normalization during childbirth

Ninković, Milica; Ilić, Sandra; Aleksandra, Lazarević; Pavlović, Svetlana; Kovačević, Katarina; Damnjanović, Kaja

(Filozofski fakultet, Novi Sad, 2021)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Ninković, Milica
AU  - Ilić, Sandra
AU  - Aleksandra, Lazarević
AU  - Pavlović, Svetlana
AU  - Kovačević, Katarina
AU  - Damnjanović, Kaja
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4640
AB  - One of the most important determinants of patients’ adherence to the treatment is the quality of the physician-patient relationship. Studies show that overall positive communication with healthcare workers positively affects treatment adherence and the other desirable patients’ behaviors. Therefore, positive experiences of physician-patient interaction increase the frequency of normative behaviors. In this study, we examined the relationship between experiences of physician-patient communication and the normalization of passivity (i.e. submissiveness and subservience) during childbirth. Thus, if this relation is positive, i.e., if communication quality is positively related to passivity normalization, that would confirm that passivity during labor IS a normative behavior.
A total of 271 women (Mage = 42.4) who gave birth were recruited. They completed 24 items regarding the frequency of physician-patient communication experiences (100-point slider scale). Promax-rotated principal component analysis revealed three dimensions of experience: 1. Aggressiveness (15 items, e.g., When I am at a healthcare facility, it happens that employees threaten patients; α = .88), 2. Supportiveness (six items, e.g., When I am at a healthcare facility, it happens that employees sympathize with me; α = .78), and 3. Shaming for not having children yet (three items, e.g., When I am at a healthcare facility, it happens that employees shame me for not having children yet; α = .85). They also completed seven items that capture normalization of passivity during childbirth (e.g., Women exaggerate their childbirth experiences; α = .73; 5-point Likert scale). Both scales were constructed for the purpose of this study.
Multiple linear regression model revealed that communication experience dimensions explained 21% of the variance of passivity normalization (F(3, 268) = 19.54, p < .000, R2adj = .21). More precisely, passivity normalization was positively predicted by Supportiveness (β = .27, t(268) = 4.27, p < .001), and negatively by Aggressiveness (β = -.24, t(268) = -3.18, p = .002). Shaming did not significantly contribute to the model (β = -.03, t(268) = -.37, p = .712). 
Our results indicate that the more positive physician-patient communication, the higher passivity normalization is. This pattern suggests that positive experiences tend to silence women in that they do not critically re-examine old-fashioned and strongly established practices that define a birthing woman as a fully inactive agent. However, positive communication experiences are not passivizing per se - it is rather the social system that reinforces passivity during childbirth as a norm. In other words, mental representation of the passive female body seems to be internalized by both patients and health care providers. In that realm experiences of supportive and unaggressive communication can be abused, rather than used in a positive way to make the physician-patient relationship beneficial for both sides.
PB  - Filozofski fakultet, Novi Sad
C3  - Book of abstracts, Current trends in psychology, Novi Sad
T1  - The role of past physician-patient communication in passivity normalization during childbirth
EP  - 116
SP  - 115
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4640
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Ninković, Milica and Ilić, Sandra and Aleksandra, Lazarević and Pavlović, Svetlana and Kovačević, Katarina and Damnjanović, Kaja",
year = "2021",
abstract = "One of the most important determinants of patients’ adherence to the treatment is the quality of the physician-patient relationship. Studies show that overall positive communication with healthcare workers positively affects treatment adherence and the other desirable patients’ behaviors. Therefore, positive experiences of physician-patient interaction increase the frequency of normative behaviors. In this study, we examined the relationship between experiences of physician-patient communication and the normalization of passivity (i.e. submissiveness and subservience) during childbirth. Thus, if this relation is positive, i.e., if communication quality is positively related to passivity normalization, that would confirm that passivity during labor IS a normative behavior.
A total of 271 women (Mage = 42.4) who gave birth were recruited. They completed 24 items regarding the frequency of physician-patient communication experiences (100-point slider scale). Promax-rotated principal component analysis revealed three dimensions of experience: 1. Aggressiveness (15 items, e.g., When I am at a healthcare facility, it happens that employees threaten patients; α = .88), 2. Supportiveness (six items, e.g., When I am at a healthcare facility, it happens that employees sympathize with me; α = .78), and 3. Shaming for not having children yet (three items, e.g., When I am at a healthcare facility, it happens that employees shame me for not having children yet; α = .85). They also completed seven items that capture normalization of passivity during childbirth (e.g., Women exaggerate their childbirth experiences; α = .73; 5-point Likert scale). Both scales were constructed for the purpose of this study.
Multiple linear regression model revealed that communication experience dimensions explained 21% of the variance of passivity normalization (F(3, 268) = 19.54, p < .000, R2adj = .21). More precisely, passivity normalization was positively predicted by Supportiveness (β = .27, t(268) = 4.27, p < .001), and negatively by Aggressiveness (β = -.24, t(268) = -3.18, p = .002). Shaming did not significantly contribute to the model (β = -.03, t(268) = -.37, p = .712). 
Our results indicate that the more positive physician-patient communication, the higher passivity normalization is. This pattern suggests that positive experiences tend to silence women in that they do not critically re-examine old-fashioned and strongly established practices that define a birthing woman as a fully inactive agent. However, positive communication experiences are not passivizing per se - it is rather the social system that reinforces passivity during childbirth as a norm. In other words, mental representation of the passive female body seems to be internalized by both patients and health care providers. In that realm experiences of supportive and unaggressive communication can be abused, rather than used in a positive way to make the physician-patient relationship beneficial for both sides.",
publisher = "Filozofski fakultet, Novi Sad",
journal = "Book of abstracts, Current trends in psychology, Novi Sad",
title = "The role of past physician-patient communication in passivity normalization during childbirth",
pages = "116-115",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4640"
}
Ninković, M., Ilić, S., Aleksandra, L., Pavlović, S., Kovačević, K.,& Damnjanović, K.. (2021). The role of past physician-patient communication in passivity normalization during childbirth. in Book of abstracts, Current trends in psychology, Novi Sad
Filozofski fakultet, Novi Sad., 115-116.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4640
Ninković M, Ilić S, Aleksandra L, Pavlović S, Kovačević K, Damnjanović K. The role of past physician-patient communication in passivity normalization during childbirth. in Book of abstracts, Current trends in psychology, Novi Sad. 2021;:115-116.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4640 .
Ninković, Milica, Ilić, Sandra, Aleksandra, Lazarević, Pavlović, Svetlana, Kovačević, Katarina, Damnjanović, Kaja, "The role of past physician-patient communication in passivity normalization during childbirth" in Book of abstracts, Current trends in psychology, Novi Sad (2021):115-116,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4640 .