Determinants of Chinese physicians’ engagement in narrative medicine: a comprehensive SEM-ANN analysis
Jiaqi Li, Zhuomu Hu, Xinyu Gu, Yan Wu, Wei Sun, Yufei Yang, Yexin Hu, Yuxiao Li, Hui Zhang, Hao Zhang

TL;DR
This study explores what influences Chinese doctors to engage in narrative medicine, using a combination of theories and data analysis to identify key factors and patterns.
Contribution
A hybrid SEM-ANN model is introduced to analyze behavioral intentions toward narrative medicine, revealing nonlinear interactions and distinct clinician profiles.
Findings
Perceived behavioral control was the strongest predictor of narrative medicine practice intentions.
Four distinct clinician profiles were identified based on psychological motivation and behavioral intention coupling.
Profile distribution varied significantly across hospital levels and departments.
Abstract
The implementation of narrative medicine (NM) holds significant implications for multiple stakeholders in healthcare, necessitating investigation into clinicians’ behavioral intention (BI) toward NM practice. This study employs the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) to identify predictors of Chinese clinicians’ NM practice intentions, extending the theoretical framework through incorporation of external variables—Perceived Organizational Support (POS) and Perceived Informal Organizational Support (PIOS). Data collected from 855 Chinese clinicians validated the theoretical model. The hybrid model of Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN) demonstrated superior predictive accuracy, successfully capturing both linear associations and nonlinear interactions among variables. Phase I utilized SEM to identify intention predictors, while Phase II applied ANN to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmpathy and Medical Education · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Mental Health and Patient Involvement
