1995
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.311.6999.236
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Videotaping of general practice consultations: effect on patient satisfaction

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Cited by 33 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Positive influences Health centre staff as recruiting agents a [21] Increasing age of patients [17,[35][36][37]19] Recruitment conducted immediately prior to consultation [14,36,[38][39][40] Recruitment conducted at the Health Centre [18] Negative influences Increasing length of time to consider participation [17,18,35,41,42] Requirement to obtain written consent [17,18,35,41,42] Patient experiencing distress or embarrassment [14,17,18,35,37] Patients with mental health or gynaecological conditions [14,17,18,35,37] Patients not having enough time to decide [18] Patients who are worried about being watched [18] Patients who recording is seen as a restricting factor [14] Researcher as recruiting agents a [17,18,35,41,42] Ambiguous evidence Sex/gender of patients [17,35,36,19] No influence Patient ethnicity [19] Employment st...…”
Section: Context Referencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Positive influences Health centre staff as recruiting agents a [21] Increasing age of patients [17,[35][36][37]19] Recruitment conducted immediately prior to consultation [14,36,[38][39][40] Recruitment conducted at the Health Centre [18] Negative influences Increasing length of time to consider participation [17,18,35,41,42] Requirement to obtain written consent [17,18,35,41,42] Patient experiencing distress or embarrassment [14,17,18,35,37] Patients with mental health or gynaecological conditions [14,17,18,35,37] Patients not having enough time to decide [18] Patients who are worried about being watched [18] Patients who recording is seen as a restricting factor [14] Researcher as recruiting agents a [17,18,35,41,42] Ambiguous evidence Sex/gender of patients [17,35,36,19] No influence Patient ethnicity [19] Employment st...…”
Section: Context Referencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some older studies assessing the effect of video recording of general practice consultations suggested that video recording did not alter doctor's behavior, 22 but most patients were willing to consent to video recording. 23 Other potential advantages would be patient education and helping to engage patients in their own health by improving the understanding of the overall screening process and the importance of adequate bowel preparation. A study by Raghavendra and Rex 24 demonstrated that 80% of patients would be interested in obtaining a video recording of their colonoscopies, and 63% were willing to pay for it.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some research on videotaping in clinical settings has found that awareness of being recorded has a significant impact on the patients' behavior during the office/ consultation visit (e.g., Martin & Martin, 1984;Servant & Matheson, 1986). Other studies have found no detrimental effect of video recording on patients (e.g., Campbell, Sullivan, & Murray, 1995). These contradictory findings may be due in large part to the fact that the studies that found participants' "normal" behavior had been impacted by the act of video recording their behavior were conducted in the 1980s when video recording was not a common practice as it was in the 1990s where most studies found no significant impact.…”
Section: Measurement Issuesmentioning
confidence: 97%