Respondents
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Respondents
Photo by Ketut Subiyanto from Pexels
As I watched the medical student take a history I noticed his scuffed shoes but more especially where his feet were pointed during the meeting. He sat with both feet on the ground but with his knees pointed towards the desk to his side, leaning away from the patient. Afterwards the patient and I agreed that this was not the best consultation. His legs were just one of several things that weren’t quite right.
We know that our faces display our feelings. During their training doctors are taught to become aware of where their patients are gazing and to study facial expression.
What is much less often the topic of any lectures or instruction is how to sit or to consider where your feet are pointed during a meeting. Just as the patient’s body language is leaking clues- so the doctor’s body language is either reinforcing the notion that they are alert and interested or that they are bored, challenged or simply in a hurry to get on to the next thing on their list.
The legs are the farthest limbs away from the brain – and therefore far from the attention of others. Because we never truly care or focus on what others do with them, we also tend to neglect what we do with ours. This neglect leaves a lot of room for the keen observer to notice hidden thoughts and attitudes that are not clearly visible anywhere else in the body.
Study Body Language
The best advice seems to be to sit with both feet on the ground pointed at the other person.
Placing both feet on the ground with a “standard” gap between them is the most basic, normal position you can think of. Just like with hands-to-the-sides posture it serves as a neutral but powerful starting point. It’s stable, focused and lacks any other nonverbal “noise” – so it’s very effective for formal and focused conversations
Study Body Language
In the context of a professional meeting there are a host of other basics.
Photo by Clem Onojeghuo on Unsplash
In any consultation involving health professionals there are two ‘actors’ the patient and the health professional. During that meeting each will have something to say and will say it in a specific way. The tone, the emphasis and the volume of their speech will offer information. The actor’s limbs and torso will reflect their thoughts and feelings during the meeting. Their hand gestures and their head movements will betray emotion.
These aspects are not be formally taught at medical school or at least not in the way that actors are taught their craft. And yet how the doctor plays their role in the consult will impact the outcome of that meeting with the patient.
As doctors or health professionals we can’t anticipate how the ‘other’ actor in the meeting will choose to present themselves in the meeting but we can learn to become much more aware of our own behaviour. How we position ourselves, the movements of our limbs, our facial expression, our gestures, our non-verbal response to the information received from the other. In most meetings we have very little time to make an impact in the desired direction and a failure to become self aware will undermine our efforts to be of help.
Photo by KAL VISUALS on Unsplash
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