Artículo de revista
What makes a difficult patient so difficult? Examining the therapist's experience beyond patient characteristics
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Journal of Clinical Psychology, Volumen 75, Issue 5, 2019, Pages 898-911
10974679
00219762
10.1002/jclp.22765
Autor
Fischer, Candice
Cottin, Marianne
Behn, Alex
Errázuriz, Paula
Díaz, Ruben
Institución
Resumen
The primary aim of this study is to improve our understanding of therapists’ experience of a “difficult patient” and consider the different variables involved in this label. What makes a patient be perceived as difficult by a therapist in public health services? Results of our analysis of 10 qualitative semistructured interviews of therapists working in public health service in Chile indicated that therapists’ perceptions of a “difficult patient” depend on variables that go beyond the patient's intrinsic characteristics, including patients’ negative attitude toward the therapist and treating team, patients’ negative effects on therapists, and a difficult treatment context (e.g., work overload, scarce resources, limited number, and frequency of sessions). We illustrate the interaction of these dimensions and focus on the impact of the treating context on therapists’ experience of a “difficult patient” through the case of a therapist working with a patient