RT @Laura_Chien: The little things in language make a big difference! Want to know if there's 'anything' else your patient wants to discuss…
RT @Laura_Chien: The little things in language make a big difference! Want to know if there's 'anything' else your patient wants to discuss…
The little things in language make a big difference! Want to know if there's 'anything' else your patient wants to discuss? Double your chances of finding out by asking if there's 'something' else they would like to talk about. https://t.co/Q87zevytMs
RT @DrSarahJWhite: For example: https://t.co/y3xw4krUJw
RT @DrSarahJWhite: For example: https://t.co/y3xw4krUJw
For example: https://t.co/y3xw4krUJw
@DrMarcusG Wholeheartedly agree. I ask “is there something else?” based on this study (repeating if necessary) https://t.co/ndfUVJf2db
"Is there SOMETHING else you would like to ask?" gives much more response than "Is there ANYTHING else you would like to ask?". The difference one word can make. https://t.co/10KZjULINn The words that we use and the way that we say them is so important.
Asking a patient if there is ‘something else’ elicits significantly more needs than asking if there is ‘anything else’ https://t.co/xhKymlTrUK 1 word can make all the difference – important as we know that prostate worries are often an add-on at the en
RT @CACEnotes: @Trisha_the_doc Tweaking this suggestion Trisha, there's some evidence from linguistics that wording the question as "What…
@Trisha_the_doc Tweaking this suggestion Trisha, there's some evidence from linguistics that wording the question as "What can I do for you today?" or "Is there something I can do for you today?" will be even more successful in encouraging people to reque
@dantegalileu Sobre o poder que o formato de uma pergunta pode ter uma consulta médica, recomendo a leitura de: https://t.co/azOlrwyzVw
RT @Cindy_J_Chang: Cool to see research on the impact of language in therapy! From now on, asking “Is there something else you want to addr…
Love this!
RT @jtan021: Thinking about provider-patient communication today, and this study of the impact of asking "something else?" instead of "anyt…
It’s worth being reminded how dramatically and unexpectedly helpful it can be to fine-tune language when engaging with patients: “is there “anything” else” I can help you with?”: the unexpected difference one word can make #clinicalpsychology #mentalhealth
RT @jtan021: Thinking about provider-patient communication today, and this study of the impact of asking "something else?" instead of "anyt…
Cool to see research on the impact of language in therapy! From now on, asking “Is there something else you want to address today?” Rather than “Is there anything else you want to address today?” #CBTworks
Thinking about provider-patient communication today, and this study of the impact of asking "something else?" instead of "anything else?" on eliciting patients' concerns has always been interesting to me. It's just one word! https://t.co/gMawwzCzcn
@DissanaikeMD One word change - something else instead of anything else - significant reduction in unmet https://t.co/SlaAkSGf5Z
@chante_df @drjenniferbest The some vs any tip comes from this paper I think. A great tip I have shared a lot https://t.co/5TlIwr9wKB
RT @DingemanseMark: @DhruvKhullar Always nice when intuitions are bolstered by experimental findings: a SOME vs ANY manipulation has indeed…
@DhruvKhullar Always nice when intuitions are bolstered by experimental findings: a SOME vs ANY manipulation has indeed been experimentally shown to be highly effective in reducing patients' unmet concerns https://t.co/5m14m4NAjZ
Fun morning introducing #conversationanalysis to our MSc in evidence based health care qualitative methods cohort - @OxEBHC @OxfordConted - learning about how we do CA, and also helpful tips for clinicians too.
@AlburyCharlotte shared Heritage et al's #ConversationAnalysis study today: 'Is there SOMETHING else I can help you with today?' is better than 'Is there ANYTHING else I can help you with today?' at eliciting additional pt concerns #OldButGold #GP http
RT @saul: This leads to a lovely introduction to Heritage et al.’s (2007) landmark ‘some’ vs. ‘any’ medical interaction intervention stud…
RT @LizStokoe: #DFTB19 colleagues may find this useful 👇 https://t.co/ZAtZrHuvMC
RT @LizStokoe: #DFTB19 colleagues may find this useful 👇 https://t.co/ZAtZrHuvMC
RT @LizStokoe: #DFTB19 colleagues may find this useful 👇 https://t.co/ZAtZrHuvMC
#DFTB19 colleagues may find this useful 👇
This leads to a lovely introduction to Heritage et al.’s (2007) landmark ‘some’ vs. ‘any’ medical interaction intervention study https://t.co/HxEnFtczAi https://t.co/u8vNPvkhgb
RT @kim_vidhani: Any v Some in Healthcare .. https://t.co/dsiMQ7Hws5 paper by Heritage et al https://t.co/lftG1G53F0
Any v Some in Healthcare .. https://t.co/dsiMQ7Hws5 paper by Heritage et al
Doctors: do you ask patients if there is "Something else" or "Anything else" they want to address in their visit? In primary acute-care visits, the word "something" reduced unmet needs by 78% vs. control, while "anything" had no change #medtwitter https:/
Excellent commentary & referencing from @saul as @isca - very useful #lboroCAday18
In the construction of a closing relevant environment in police these interviews (with children about sexual abuse cases), the standard pattern resembles the negative polarity ‘additional business question’ closings observed by Heritage & Robinson (200
RT @behradbarmay: Fascinating world of conversation analysis (CA): difference that changing a single word can make in our interactions http…
Fascinating world of conversation analysis (CA): difference that changing a single word can make in our interactions https://t.co/7HyaqJlurc
https://t.co/8vediSH03X reading this too.... what are your thoughts @JCRWormald
RT @matt_westmore: @SDenegri @Drakesyard this was the study I mentioned today. Diff 1 word can make in eliciting patient concerns https:/…
@SDenegri @Drakesyard this was the study I mentioned today. Diff 1 word can make in eliciting patient concerns https://t.co/WacgM4iLDZ
RT @Prof_IanD: "Is there anything else..." invites "no" because implies finishing. "What other things do we need to talk about?" leaves con…
"Is there anything else..." invites "no" because implies finishing. "What other things do we need to talk about?" leaves conversation open. https://t.co/NhVoLKWrxJ
@Prof_IanD @Paulflevy @susanbbiggar @grant_phelps consider using 'some' rather than 'any' to elicit pt concerns https://t.co/8iOBZGckdH
.RT @JBBC Reducing Patients’ Unmet Concerns in Primary Care: the Difference One Word Can Make https://t.co/NET6cXT0qG
@drol007 @RinaPatel1979 There is a publication re 'some' vs 'any' Heritage et al 2007 http://t.co/YxJvdXtBh9
Reducing Patients’ Unmet Concerns in Primary Care: the Difference One Word Can Make http://t.co/4qnoBqgSTC
Research about the difference one word can make: change "any" to "some" and the patients may tell their doctors more! http://t.co/U4w26AAf4L
i think this is the heritage 2007 paper just mentioned at #physio14 http://t.co/qKTfHaUe8C
'Is there something else' is much more powerful than 'Is there anything else' via @ralanshirley @JohnLauner http://t.co/0MIeNjC9yP
'Is there something else' is much more powerful than 'Is there anything else' via @ralanshirley @JohnLauner http://t.co/0MIeNjC9yP
The power of words! "Is there SOMETHING else?" Vs "Is there ANYTHING else" asked by Dr to pt. http://t.co/W5cLIIoKVC Via @JohnLauner
Why 'Is there something else?' is a better question for doctors to ask than 'Is there anything else? MT @ralanshirley http://t.co/SJ9jotdpnX
Why 'Is there something else?' is a better question for doctors to ask than 'Is there anything else? MT @ralanshirley http://t.co/SJ9jotdpnX
Why 'Is there something else?' is a better question for doctors to ask than 'Is there anything else? MT @ralanshirley http://t.co/SJ9jotdpnX
Why 'Is there something else?' is a better question for doctors to ask than 'Is there anything else? MT @ralanshirley http://t.co/SJ9jotdpnX
Why 'Is there something else?' is a better question for doctors to ask than 'Is there anything else? MT @ralanshirley http://t.co/SJ9jotdpnX
Great piece thank you @JohnLauner here's the something/anything paper http://t.co/7dlsX8uiie
@cknott20 @leach_mick #NHSChangeDay pledge: Heritage shows asking 'some?' instead of 'any?' elicits more unmet needs http://t.co/U5HVmMMszV