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Family Practice Advance Access originally published online on October 24, 2005
Family Practice 2006 23(1):111-115; doi:10.1093/fampra/cmi086
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Meeting and treating cultural difference in primary care: a qualitative interview study

Caroline Wachtler, Annika Brorsson and Margareta Troein

Institution for Clinical Sciences, Malmö, Department of Primary Care, Lund University, Sweden, Malmö University Hospital, SE 20502 Malmö, Sweden

Background. Primary care doctors see patients from diverse cultural backgrounds and communication plays an important role in diagnosis and treatment. Communication problems can arise when patient and doctor do not share the same cultural background.

Objective. The aim of this study was to examine how consultations with immigrant patients are understood by GPs and how GPs manage these consultations.

Methods. Semi-structured interviews with GPs about their experiences with immigrant patients were recorded on audio-tape, transcribed and analysed using a qualitative thematic analysis methodology. A constructivist approach was taken to analysis and interpretation.

Results. Culture is not in focus when GPs meet immigrant patients. The consultation is seen as a meeting between individuals, where cultural difference is just one of many individual factors that influence how well doctor and patient understand each other. However, when mutual understanding is poor and the consultation not successful, cultural differences are central. The GPs try to conduct their consultations with immigrant patients in the same way that they conduct all their consultations. There is no specific focus on culture, instead, GPs tend to avoid addressing even pronounced cultural differences.

Conclusion. This study indicates that cultural difference is not treated in GPs consultation with immigrant patients. Learning about cultural difference's effect on mutual understanding between doctor and patient could improve GPs cross-cultural communication. Increased awareness of the culture the doctor brings to the consultation could facilitate management of cross-cultural consultations.

Keywords. Communication barriers, communication skills, cultural diversity, GPs, physician–patient relations.


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