Table 1.
Sampled doctors | Patients (as perceived by the sampled doctors) | |
---|---|---|
Perception on the patients’ bladder complaints | 1. Chronic condition | 1. Infection due to rare bacteria |
Expectations of treatment | 1. Consultation and physical examination alone are considered as treatment 2. Prescribing medication is not necessary |
1. Being prescribed with medication is a norm; merely consultation and physical examination are not enough to accomplish a treatment 2. Expect antibiotics in some cases |
Expected outcome | 1. Limitations to confirm OAB in primary care setting 2. Full recovery as impossible since OAB is a chronic condition |
1. Expect definite diagnosis from doctors 2. Expect quick recovery 3. Not aware of the treatment limitations |
When failing to experience improvement | 1. Patience is required to see the improvement because of the limitations of current treatment 2. Suggest referral |
1. Blamed doctors as incapable, deceptive money-making, prolonging treatment with bad intention to extract more money 2. Refuse referral |
Communication style | 1. Adopted casual communication style to ease patients’ embarrassment | 1. Doctors were expected to show sincerity and empathy; casual communication style was perceived as unacceptable |
History taking | 1. Norm to ask for every possibility | 1. Felt offensive when asked about their sexual life and substance abuse habit |