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. 2008 Mar 6;8:54. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-54

Table 3.

Association of diagnosis disclosure items with competence index and general attitude towards dementia care by specialities

General practitioners Specialists
Association with CI Association with general attitude cluster Association with CI Association with general attitude cluster

τ p1 τ p2 τ p1 τ p2

16 Disclosing diagnosis and prognosis does more harm than good to the patient -0.770 0.159 0.106 0.075 -0.099 0.238 0.128 0.157
17 Most patients are grateful when I address their cognitive decline 0.137 0.011 -0.219 < 0.001 0.123 0.140 -0.232 0.010
18 Patients react with shame when their cognitive deficits are addressed -0.096 0.074 0.130 0.028 -0.102 0.220 0.196 0.029
19 I only disclose when the patient demands it -0.232 < 0.001 0.135 0.024 -0.019 0.818 0.035 0.701
20 Patients with dementia should be informed because of their possibility to plan their lives 0.228 < 0.001 -0.149 0.015 0.180 0.038 -0.212 0.024
21 When communicating the diagnosis to the patient I never use the term dementia -0.41 0.450 0.069 0.243 -0.228 0.005 0.198 0.024
22 When communicating the diagnosis to the patient I never use the term Alzheimer -0.017 0.753 0.041 0.479 -0.245 0.003 0.210 0.017
23 I inform the relatives more than the patient on the course of the disease 0.113 0.041 -0.126 0.038 -0.040 0.636 0.009 0.919
24 In relation to the relatives I avoid the diagnosis and I prefer to use terms like „senility" or „perfusion problems" -0.157 0.005 0.128 0.037 -0.188 0.028 0.183 0.046

CI = competence index; p1 = statistical significance of association between competence index and items; p2, = statistical significance of association between general attitude cluster and items