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Dive into the research topics where Demi Krystallidou is active.

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Featured researches published by Demi Krystallidou.


Interpreter and Translator Trainer | 2014

Gaze and body orientation as an apparatus for patient inclusion into/exclusion from a patient-centred framework of communication

Demi Krystallidou

Dialogue interpreter training has traditionally focused on the way in which the interpreter manages, and maintains, verbal interaction between the primary participants while it seems to overlook the importance of specific non-verbal aspects that are inherent in mediated interaction. This article presents an alternative method for the training of medical interpreters by drawing on research on non-verbal communication in interpreter-mediated consultations with a view to drawing attention to the interpreter’s impact on the patient’s inclusion in a patient-centred framework during mediated consultations. More specifically, it provides evidence of non-verbal interaction that might open up new trajectories in the interpreters’ training by foregrounding the impact of the interpreter’s and others’ direction of gaze and body orientation on the accomplishment and maintenance – or lack thereof – of a patient-centred framework of communication. The present article reports on findings that emerged from the analysis of selected excerpts of authentic interpreter-mediated consultations within the framework of a training experiment. Coded instances of interaction are analysed by relying on Goffman’s ‘ratification process’, Goodwin’s ‘participation and engagement frameworks’ and Norris’ ‘modal density foreground–background continuum’. Hospital ethical approval and participants’ written informed consent were obtained prior to the collection of data.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2018

How interpreters influence patient participation in medical consultations: The confluence of verbal and nonverbal dimensions of interpreter-mediated clinical communication

Demi Krystallidou; Peter Pype

OBJECTIVE To investigate i) how the patients participation in interaction occurs in interpreter-mediated consultations (IMCs) when the doctor provides information to the patient or tries to elicit information from them; ii) how the interpreters presence in the consultation influences the patients participation. METHOD We analyzed 20 authentic video-recorded IMCs using the A.R.T. framework, an analytical tool for the study of participation in video recorded interpreter-mediated interactions. RESULTS We coded 521 doctor utterances through which doctors either provided information or tried to elicit information from the patient. In 448 of them, the interpreter established a participation and engagement framework (PEF) with the patient while translating the doctors utterances. In 48 cases the interpreter established a PEF with the doctor and in 25 cases the interpreter avoided establishing a PEF with either of the participants while translating the doctors utterances. CONCLUSION When the interpreter established a PEF with either of the participants, they used verbal and nonverbal means that created the conditions in interaction in order to enable and/or rectify the patients participation. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Doctors and interpreters should become more aware of their own and each others actions in interaction and their influence on the patients participation in the consultation.


BMC Health Services Research | 2018

Healthcare teams as complex adaptive systems: understanding team behaviour through team members’ perception of interpersonal interaction

Peter Pype; Fien Mertens; Fleur Helewaut; Demi Krystallidou

BackgroundComplexity science has been introduced in healthcare as a theoretical framework to better understand complex situations. Interdisciplinary healthcare teams can be viewed as Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS) by focusing more on the team members’ interaction with each other than on the characteristics of individual team members. Viewing teams in this way can provide us with insights into the origins of team behaviour. The aim of this study is to describe the functioning of a healthcare team as it originates from the members’ interactions using the CAS principles as a framework and to explore factors influencing workplace learning as emergent behaviour.MethodsAn interview study was done with 21 palliative home-care nurses, 20 community nurses and 18 general practitioners in Flanders, Belgium. A two-step analysis consisted of a deductive approach, which uses the CAS principles as coding framework for interview transcripts, followed by an inductive approach, which identifies patterns in the codes for each CAS principle.ResultsAll CAS principles were identified in the interview transcripts of the three groups. The most prevalent principles in our study were principles with a structuring effect on team functioning: team members act autonomously guided by internalized basic rules; attractors shape the team functioning; a team has a history and is sensitive to initial conditions; and a team is an open system, interacting with its environment. The other principles, focusing on the result of the structuring principles, were present in the data, albeit to a lesser extent: team members’ interactions are non-linear; interactions between team members can produce unpredictable behaviour; and interactions between team members can generate new behaviour. Patterns, reflecting team behaviour, were recognized in the coding of each CAS principle. Patterns of team behaviour, identified in this way, were linked to interprofessional competencies of the Interprofessional Collaboration Collaborative. Factors influencing workplace learning were identified.ConclusionsThis study provides us with insights into the origin of team functioning by explaining how patterns of interactions between team members define team behaviour. Viewing healthcare teams as Complex Adaptive Systems may offer explanations of different aspects of team behaviour with implications for education, practice and research.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2017

Interaction—A missing piece of the jigsaw in interpreter-mediated medical consultation models

Shuangyu Li; Jennifer Gerwing; Demi Krystallidou; Angela Rowlands; Antoon Cox; Peter Pype

In 2015, at the International Conference on Communication in Healthcare in New Orleans, USA, we formed a symposium panel to discuss and debate how interdisciplinary research can inform interpreter-mediated medical consultation training. In all our work, a recurring theme is not just the strengths but also the shortcomings of the guidelines proposed in the textbooks and widely used in medical education. This paper is an account of our multidisciplinary reflections on a prominent issue of the lack of attention to interaction in communications, which shed light on the limitations of these guidelines and clinical communication models. We propose that an international network be established for all stakeholders to foster interprofessional and interdisciplinary collaboration for research and clinical interventions, and to inform training and policy making.


Medicine Health Care and Philosophy | 2017

Understanding patient needs without understanding the patient: the need for complementary use of professional interpreters in end-of-life care

Demi Krystallidou; Ignaas Devisch; Dominique Van de Velde; Peter Pype

High-quality doctor-patient communication in end-of-life care results in better quality of life for patients. In linguistically and culturally diverse societies, language discordant consultations become daily practice, leading to difficulties in eliciting patient preferences toward end-of-life care. Although family members invariably act as informal interpreters, this may cause some ethical dilemmas. We present a case of a palliative patient whose son acted as an interpreter. This case generated a triple- layered ethical dilemma: (i) how to safeguard patient autonomy against paternalistic interventions by family members, (ii) how to respect the relational context in which patient autonomy can be realized, and (iii) how to respect the ethno-cultural values of the patient and his family. These issues are being discussed and reflected upon within the framework shared decision making involving informal- and professional interpreters. The complementary use of professional interpreters next to family members acting as informal interpreters is recommended.


Interpreting | 2016

Investigating the interpreter's role(s): The A.R.T. framework.

Demi Krystallidou


Linguistica Antverpiensia, New Series – Themes in Translation Studies | 2012

On mediating agents’ moves and how they might affect patient-centredness in mediated medical consultations

Demi Krystallidou


Patient Education and Counseling | 2017

Healthcare teams as complex adaptive systems: Focus on interpersonal interaction

Peter Pype; Demi Krystallidou; Myriam Deveugele; Fien Mertens; Sara Rubinelli; Ignaas Devisch


Patient Education and Counseling | 2018

Investigating empathy in interpreter-mediated simulated consultations: An explorative study

Demi Krystallidou; Aline Remael; Esther de Boe; Kristin Hendrickx; Giannoula Tsakitzidis; Sofie Van de Geuchte; Peter Pype


Interpreting | 2018

Training "doctor-minded" interpreters and "interpreter-minded" doctors : the benefits of collaborative practice in interpreter training

Demi Krystallidou; Céline Van De Walle; Myriam Deveugele; Evangelia Dougali; Fien Mertens; Amélie Truwant; Peter Pype

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Angela Rowlands

Queen Mary University of London

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Jennifer Gerwing

Akershus University Hospital

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