How Do Patients and Otolaryngologists Define Dizziness?

  • Brianna L. Murphy
  • , Jakob L. Fischer
  • , Anthony M. Tolisano
  • , Alvaro I. Navarro
  • , Lily Trinh
  • , Waleed M. Abuzeid
  • , Ian M. Humphreys
  • , Nadeem A. Akbar
  • , Sharan Shah
  • , John S. Schneider
  • , Charles A. Riley
  • , Edward D. McCoul

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To assess for differences in how patients and otolaryngologists define the term dizziness. Methods: Between June 2020 and December 2022, otolaryngology clinicians and consecutive patients at 5 academic otolaryngology institutions across the United States were asked to define the term “dizziness” by completing a semantics-based questionnaire containing 20 common descriptors of the term within 5 symptom domains (imbalance-related, lightheadedness-related, motion-related, vision-related, and pain-related). The primary outcome was differences between patient and clinician perceptions of dizzy-related symptoms. Secondary outcomes included differences among patient populations by geographic location. Results: Responses were obtained from 271 patients and 31 otolaryngologists. Patients and otolaryngologists selected 7.7 ± 3.5 and 7.1 ± 4.3 symptoms, respectively. Most patients (266, 98.2%) selected from more than 1 domain and 17 (6.3%) patients identified symptoms from all 5 domains. Patients and clinicians were equally likely to define dizziness using terms from the imbalance (difference, −2.3%; 95% CI, −13.2%, 8.6%), lightheadedness (−14.1%; −29.2%, 1.0%), and motion-related (9.4; −0.3, 19.1) domains. Patients were more likely to include terms from the vision-related (23.6%; 10.5, 36.8) and pain-related (18.2%; 10.3%, 26.1%) domains. There were minor variations in how patients defined dizziness based on geographic location. Conclusions: Patients and otolaryngologists commonly described dizziness using symptoms related to imbalance, lightheadedness, and motion. Patients were more likely to use vision or pain-related terms. Understanding of these semantic differences may enable more effective patient-clinician communication.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)512-518
Number of pages7
JournalAnnals of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology
Volume133
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2024

Keywords

  • definition of terms
  • dizziness
  • health literacy
  • patient-provider communication
  • symptom description
  • word-association

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