motivational interviewing Archives - Global Travel Noteshttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/tag/motivational-interviewing/Sharing real travel experiences worldwideThu, 05 Mar 2026 02:41:10 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3Metric Shaming in Medicine and 3 Ways to Overcome Ithttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/metric-shaming-in-medicine-and-3-ways-to-overcome-it/https://dulichbaolocaz.com/metric-shaming-in-medicine-and-3-ways-to-overcome-it/#respondThu, 05 Mar 2026 02:41:10 +0000https://dulichbaolocaz.com/?p=7487Medicine runs on numbersBMI, blood pressure, A1C, cholesterolbut numbers can turn toxic when they’re delivered with judgment or used to dismiss symptoms. That’s metric shaming: treating a health metric like a moral grade instead of a tool. This in-depth guide explains what metric shaming looks like in real clinical visits, why it happens (system pressure, imperfect measures, bias, rushed communication), and how it can lead to stress, delayed care, and avoidance. You’ll learn three practical ways to overcome it: reframing metrics as shared tools with consent-based, person-first language; redirecting the conversation using scripts and shared decision-making (plus motivational interviewing); and fixing clinic environments and policies so respect is the default. With concrete examples and patient-centered strategies, this article helps turn ‘scorecards’ into supportive care plans.

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Medicine loves numbers. Blood pressure. A1C. Cholesterol. BMI. Depression screens. Pain scales. Steps per day. Minutes of exercise. In a perfect world, these metrics are like a helpful GPS: “You are here. Here are three routes. Want the scenic one or the fastest?” But in real life, the GPS sometimes switches to Judgment Mode and starts yelling, “RECALCULATING… YOUR LIFE CHOICES.”

That’s the vibe behind metric shaming: when health numbers are delivered (or used) in a way that feels moralizing, dismissive, or blaminglike a scorecard for whether you “deserve” care. The metric may be real. The health risks may be real. The problem is the shamebecause shame doesn’t improve health. It usually reduces trust, short-circuits honest conversation, and makes people avoid appointments they actually need.

This article unpacks what metric shaming looks like in real clinical settings, why it happens, and how both patients and clinicians can move from “numbers as weapons” to “numbers as tools.” We’ll focus on weight-related examples because weight stigma is one of the most studied forms of bias in health care, but the same principles apply to any number that can hijack a visit.

What “Metric Shaming” Looks Like in Real Life

Metric shaming isn’t “a clinician mentioning a number.” It’s the tone, framing, and consequences around the number. It happens when a metric becomes a verdict rather than informationespecially when it is used to shut down a patient’s concern.

Common forms of metric shaming

  • Moral scoring: “Your A1C is terrible.” “You’re noncompliant.” “You’ve been bad.” (As if your pancreas is a teacher with a red pen.)
  • Single-number tunnel vision: Every symptom gets routed back to one metric (often weight/BMI), even when the complaint is clearly different.
  • Care as a reward: Treatments are delayed or withheld until the patient “fixes the number,” even when evidence-based care could start now.
  • Public or rushed exposure: Weigh-ins announced out loud, notes read over your shoulder, or sensitive metrics discussed without permission.
  • “Numbers without context” delivery: No explanation of ranges, uncertainty, measurement error, or what’s actually changeable this month.

Weight-related examples are common because weight is visible and culturally loaded. Research has repeatedly found that weight stigma exists in health care, can harm patients emotionally, and is linked to worse care experiences and health care avoidance. The result is a nasty paradox: the people who most need safe, consistent care may be the people most likely to delay or avoid it because past visits were humiliating.

Why Metric Shaming Happens (Even When No One “Means To”)

Most clinicians aren’t trying to be cruel. Many are exhausted, overloaded, and under pressure to hit quality targets. But good intentions don’t protect patients from harm. Metric shaming tends to pop up when three forces collide: system pressure, human bias, and communication shortcuts.

1) Metrics are baked into modern health systems

Health systems measure everything: control rates, screenings, follow-ups, adherence, and outcomes. That can improve quality, but it can also turn a visit into a checklist. When the clinician is being evaluated on “numbers moving,” it’s easy for the patient to feel like a dashboardnot a human.

2) Some metrics are imperfect, but we treat them like truth

A metric can be clinically useful and still limited. Body Mass Index (BMI), for example, is a quick population-level estimate. But using BMI alone can misclassify risk because it doesn’t directly measure body fat distribution, muscle mass, or metabolic factors. The American Medical Association has explicitly noted limitations of BMI and encouraged using it alongside other measures.

Even “hard” metrics can be wrong if the measurement is wrong. Blood pressure is a perfect example: if the cuff doesn’t fit, readings can be significantly inaccurate. When the number is wrong, the “shame” is not only cruelit’s also pointless.

3) Bias turns numbers into blame

Weight stigma research describes how negative assumptions (“lazy,” “noncompliant,” “not trying”) can creep into medical decision-making and communication. When bias is in the room, metrics become proof of character instead of data about physiology, environment, stress, medication effects, access to food, sleep, and dozens of other factors that shape health.

4) Shame feels like motivation… until you look at the outcomes

Shame can create short-term compliance in some settings, but in health care it often creates avoidance. People who feel judged are more likely to skip follow-ups, downplay symptoms, or delay preventive care. That’s not “lack of motivation.” That’s self-protection.

Why It Matters: The Real Costs of Metric Shaming

Metric shaming isn’t just a “hurt feelings” issue. It can affect diagnosis, treatment timing, and long-term trustespecially when the shame is tied to weight stigma. Research on weight stigma in health care has linked it with poorer patient-provider communication, reduced quality of care, lower trust, and health care avoidance.

It can lead to missed diagnoses

When a complaint is prematurely attributed to a single metriclike weightclinicians can miss other explanations. Shortness of breath could be asthma, anemia, or medication side effects. Joint pain could be autoimmune disease, an injury, or biomechanical issues unrelated to weight. The number may be relevant, but it’s rarely the whole story.

It can delay needed care

People report being told to “just lose weight” before getting imaging, physical therapy, or specialist referrals. Sometimes weight loss may genuinely improve outcomes for a procedure. But care should be individualized, time-limited, and paired with appropriate supportnot used as an open-ended gate that keeps the patient stuck outside the clinic.

It can increase stress and disengagement

Stigma is a stressor. Stress changes behavior, sleep, and physiology. And the more a patient expects judgment, the harder it becomes to be honest about eating, movement, medication adherence, substance use, or mental health. That’s a clinical problem, not a personality flaw.

The Goal: Keep the Metric, Lose the Shame

Metrics are not the enemy. The enemy is using metrics as identity labels (“You are your BMI”) or moral grades (“You failed your cholesterol test”). A healthier approach is to treat metrics like a thermometer: information that guides decisionswithout blaming someone for having a fever.

Now, the practical part: here are three ways to overcome metric shamingwith specific scripts, examples, and workflow-friendly habits.

Way #1: Reframe Numbers as Shared Tools (Not Verdicts)

The fastest way to drain shame out of a conversation is to change the frame. Instead of “Your number is bad,” try: “This number helps us estimate risk. Let’s figure out what it means for you, and what options fit your life.”

For clinicians: small language changes that make a big difference

  • Ask permission before discussing sensitive metrics. “Would it be okay if we talk about weight today?” “Do you want to review your lab results together now, or later in the visit?”
  • Use person-first language. “A patient with obesity,” not “an obese patient.” It’s a subtle shift that reduces labeling.
  • Offer context and uncertainty. “This is one data point.” “Let’s confirm the measurement.” “This range is based on population studies; it doesn’t capture everything about your health.”
  • Connect the metric to the patient’s goal. “You said you want more energy. Improving sleep and managing blood sugar swings can help.”
  • Be careful with shorthand words that carry judgment. “Noncompliant” often means “our plan didn’t fit their reality.”

A real-world example: blood pressure

Instead of: “Your blood pressure is high again. You need to try harder.”
Try: “Your reading is higher than we want. Before we decide anything, let’s make sure the cuff fits and repeat it. Then we can talk about optionsmeds, sleep, stress, movement, saltwhatever you feel ready to tackle first.”

For patients: a “numbers boundary” you can set

You can say:

“I’m open to discussing numbers that are relevant to my care. I’m not open to being shamed about them. Can we talk about what this number means and what options I have?”

This is not being difficult. This is protecting the conditions required for good medical care: trust, clarity, and collaboration.

Way #2: Use Scripts and Shared Decision-Making to Redirect the Visit

Metric shaming thrives in rushed, one-way conversations. Shared decision-making flips the visit into a two-person team sport: the clinician brings evidence and options; the patient brings values, preferences, and lived reality.

Three “redirect scripts” for patients

  1. “Relevance check”
    “How does this number change what you recommend for the problem I came in for today?”
  2. “Equal-treatment test”
    “How would you treat this symptom in someone in a smaller bodyor with different numbers?”
  3. “Options request”
    “What are the evidence-based options besides changing this metric? What can we start today?”

For clinicians: a shared decision-making mini-structure that fits a busy clinic

  • Name the choice: “We have a couple of reasonable paths here.”
  • Offer options: meds, referrals, lifestyle supports, watchful waiting, additional testing.
  • Ask what matters: “What’s most important to you right nowsymptom relief, energy, function, fewer meds?”
  • Choose together: “Given that, option B seems to fit best. Want to try it for 6–8 weeks and reassess?”

Bring the focus back to behavior without turning it into blame

This is where motivational interviewing helps. It’s a communication style that supports behavior change by reducing defensiveness and boosting autonomy. It replaces “lecturing” with curiosity: “What feels doable?” “What’s gotten in the way before?” “On a scale of 0–10, how ready do you feel?” The tone is “partner,” not “principal’s office.”

Way #3: Fix the Environment and the System So Shame Isn’t the Default

Even the best clinician can’t out-talk a clinic environment that screams, “You don’t belong here.” Overcoming metric shaming requires changing the room, the workflow, and the policies.

Make the clinic physically inclusive

  • Have appropriately sized equipment: blood pressure cuffs, gowns, chairs without arms, sturdy exam tables.
  • Offer private weighing options: ask permission; allow “blind weights” (patient doesn’t see the number) if helpful.
  • Train staff scripting: the front desk and medical assistants set the emotional tone long before the clinician enters.

Update “default assumptions” in documentation

  • Replace shaming chart language (“morbidly obese,” “failed diet”) with neutral clinical language and patient-centered goals.
  • Avoid notes that moralize: document barriers and supports instead (“food insecurity,” “shift work sleep,” “med side effects,” “chronic pain limits activity”).

Use better metrics (or better use of metrics)

Some metrics are useful but incomplete. When a system relies too heavily on a single number, it increases stigma and can distort clinical judgment. A more accurate approach is to use multiple measures of health risk and functionespecially when discussing body sizeand to individualize targets based on age, comorbidities, and patient priorities.

Adopt trauma-informed principles as a baseline

Trauma-informed care isn’t only for trauma clinics. It’s a set of principlessafety, trust, choice, collaboration, empowermentthat reduces reactivity and increases engagement for everyone. “Ask permission before touching,” “explain what you’re doing,” and “offer choices” may sound simple, but they dramatically reduce shame, especially in sensitive measurements and exams.

A Quick Self-Check: “Is This Metric Helping or Hurting Right Now?”

Whether you’re a clinician, a patient, or a caregiver, these questions can catch metric shaming early:

  • Is the metric accurate? (Was it measured correctly? Does it need repeating?)
  • Is the metric relevant today? (Does it change the plan for the chief complaint?)
  • Is the conversation consent-based? (Did we ask permission to discuss it?)
  • Is the language neutral? (No moral labels, no blame.)
  • Is there a collaborative plan? (Options + patient priorities + follow-up.)

Conclusion: You Deserve Care, Not a Report Card

Metrics can be life-saving. They can also be life-limiting if they become a reason to shame, dismiss, or delay care. Overcoming metric shaming doesn’t require ignoring numbersit requires using them with humility, context, and partnership. The three practical moves are simple enough to remember even on a chaotic day: reframe the number, redirect the conversation with shared decisions, and fix the system that normalizes shame.

When numbers are treated as toolsnot verdictspatients are more likely to show up, speak honestly, and follow through. And that’s the whole point of measurement in the first place: not to judge people, but to help them get better.


Experiences: What Metric Shaming Feels Like (and What Helps Instead)

If you’ve never experienced metric shaming, it can be hard to understand why a “simple number” can feel so heavy. But in an exam roomwhere you’re already vulnerablenumbers can take up all the oxygen. One patient described it as walking in with a sprained ankle and leaving with a lecture about character. “I came for pain,” they said, “and somehow my body became a moral debate.” That’s the sneaky part: metric shaming often doesn’t sound like an insult. It sounds like certainty. Like the case is closed.

Another common experience is the “autopilot visit.” The patient shares a concernfatigue, headaches, irregular periods, joint pain, shortness of breathand the clinician, pressed for time, latches onto the most visible metric or the easiest explanation. Weight and BMI are frequent magnets for this. The patient leaves feeling unseen, as if their story was edited down to a single digit. Over time, many people learn a painful lesson: the fastest way to avoid judgment is to avoid the clinic. That’s not stubbornness; it’s self-defense.

Clinicians have their own version of this experience, too. Many are trained in environments where progress is defined by numbers trending in the “right” direction. A resident might be praised for getting an A1C down, scolded for “uncontrolled” blood pressure, or evaluated on screening completion rates. That pressure is realand it can quietly change bedside manner. When your performance is tied to metrics, it’s easy to treat the metric like the mission and the patient like the obstacle. Most clinicians don’t want that. They just don’t always notice it happening in the moment.

What helps is often surprisingly small. Patients frequently report that permission changes everything. “Would it be okay if we talk about your weight today?” feels different from “We need to talk about your weight.” So does, “Do you want to know the number?” before announcing it. Another powerful shift is specificity: “Here’s what this lab suggests, here’s what it doesn’t tell us, and here are the options.” When a clinician takes ten extra seconds to add context, the number becomes information againnot a label.

Patients also describe relief when clinicians focus on function and symptoms rather than “earning” care through perfect metrics. “Let’s help your knee pain so movement feels possible,” is a different universe than, “Lose weight and then we’ll talk.” It sends the message that health care is not a prize for good behavior. It’s support for a human being with a real problem today. And that mindset tends to build momentum: when symptoms improve and trust increases, people are more willing to tackle long-term changes.

Finally, there’s the environment. People notice when a clinic has gowns that fit, chairs that don’t pinch, and blood pressure cuffs that match arm size. Those details communicate respect without saying a word. They also improve accuracybecause a wrong measurement can trigger a chain reaction of unnecessary worry, unnecessary medication changes, or unnecessary shame. Patients remember clinics that feel safe. Clinicians remember visits that feel collaborative. And those memories shape whether people return. In the long run, the best “metric” might be this: did the patient leave feeling empowered enough to come back?


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The 4 Processes of Motivational Interviewinghttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/the-4-processes-of-motivational-interviewing/https://dulichbaolocaz.com/the-4-processes-of-motivational-interviewing/#respondThu, 22 Jan 2026 13:44:04 +0000https://dulichbaolocaz.com/?p=1233Motivational interviewing is an evidence-based approach that empowers individuals to make lasting changes. Learn about the four core processes of MI and how they guide clients toward achieving their goals. Read on for valuable insights!

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Motivational interviewing (MI) is a collaborative, goal-oriented communication style designed to help individuals resolve ambivalence and strengthen their motivation for change. This therapeutic approach is widely used in various settings, including addiction treatment, health care, and counseling, to support individuals in making positive behavioral changes. The four core processes of motivational interviewing, as outlined by its developers, Dr. William R. Miller and Dr. Stephen Rollnick, are engaging, focusing, evoking, and planning. Let’s break them down to understand how they contribute to the overall success of this evidence-based approach.

1. Engaging: Building the Relationship

The first step in motivational interviewing is engaging, which refers to the process of establishing a trusting and empathetic relationship between the therapist or counselor and the client. This process is essential because it sets the tone for the entire intervention. Engaging is more than just building rapportit’s about creating a genuine connection that allows the client to feel safe and understood, which in turn encourages open and honest communication.

During the engaging phase, therapists use reflective listening, empathy, and nonjudgmental responses to show that they are actively interested in what the client has to say. This helps the client feel heard and respected, which can reduce defensiveness and resistance. The focus is not on solving problems or pushing the client toward a specific outcome, but on simply understanding their perspective and building a solid therapeutic alliance.

For example, in addiction counseling, a therapist might ask open-ended questions like, “What has your experience been like with trying to quit smoking?” This encourages the client to reflect on their personal journey and share their thoughts and feelings, which is crucial for the next stages of MI.

2. Focusing: Clarifying the Direction

Once a strong relationship has been established, the next process is focusing. This phase is about narrowing the conversation to specific goals and issues that the client wants to address. While the engaging phase is about understanding the client’s experience, the focusing phase is about directing the conversation toward the areas where change is desired.

Focusing involves identifying the client’s priorities and determining what matters most to them. This can be tricky, especially if the client has multiple goals or feels conflicted. MI therapists help clients clarify their values and the reasons they want to change. This step is essential for maintaining a clear direction in the conversation and for ensuring that the client remains engaged in the process of change.

For instance, if a client is seeking therapy for both weight loss and smoking cessation, the therapist may ask, “Which of these would you like to focus on first?” or “What’s most important to you right now?” The goal is to hone in on the client’s most pressing concern and set the stage for deeper exploration.

3. Evoking: Exploring Motivation and Ambivalence

The third process in motivational interviewing is evoking, which refers to drawing out the client’s intrinsic motivation to change. At this stage, the therapist’s role is to elicit the client’s own reasons for change and to explore the ambivalence that may be present.

Ambivalence is a natural part of the change process. Most people experience mixed feelings about making changes, whether it’s quitting a bad habit or adopting healthier behaviors. Evoking involves helping the client explore both sides of this ambivalencethe reasons they want to change and the reasons they may resist change.

To do this effectively, therapists use techniques such as reflective listening and asking open-ended questions that encourage the client to consider their motivations. The goal is not to argue or persuade but to allow the client to articulate their own reasons for change, which makes those reasons more meaningful and compelling.

An example of evoking in action could be a therapist asking, “What are the benefits you see from quitting smoking?” followed by, “What are the challenges you expect to face if you quit?” This prompts the client to weigh both sides of the decision, which can help them find their own motivation to move forward.

4. Planning: Creating a Path Forward

The final process of motivational interviewing is planning, which focuses on developing a concrete, actionable plan for change. After engaging with the client, identifying areas of focus, and exploring motivations, the therapist works with the client to develop a practical plan that addresses their goals.

Planning involves identifying specific steps the client can take to move toward their goal, considering potential obstacles, and determining how to overcome them. The therapist’s role here is to guide the client in setting realistic, achievable goals that align with their values and motivations.

For example, in a case where a client has decided to quit smoking, the therapist might work with the client to establish a quit date, outline coping strategies for cravings, and identify support systems, such as friends or support groups. This plan should be flexible and adaptable, as the client may face setbacks along the way.

It’s important to note that planning is not a one-time eventit’s an ongoing process that may require adjustments as the client progresses. A good MI therapist will check in with the client regularly to assess their progress, troubleshoot challenges, and modify the plan as needed.

Integrating the 4 Processes: How They Work Together

These four processesengaging, focusing, evoking, and planningare interconnected and build upon one another. While each phase has its own distinct purpose, they flow naturally from one to the next, creating a seamless process that facilitates change.

Effective motivational interviewing involves a delicate balance between guiding the conversation and allowing the client to lead. It’s not about giving advice or telling the client what to do; instead, it’s about drawing out their own ideas and fostering a sense of autonomy and empowerment. By the time the planning phase arrives, the client is not simply following a prescription for changethey are an active participant in designing their own path forward.

Conclusion

Motivational interviewing is a powerful tool for facilitating change, especially in individuals who may feel ambivalent or resistant to making changes in their lives. By engaging with clients in a collaborative and empathetic manner, focusing on their goals, evoking their motivations, and helping them develop a concrete plan, MI therapists can guide clients through the process of change in a way that feels authentic and empowering.

The four processes of motivational interviewingengaging, focusing, evoking, and planningare designed to help individuals not only identify their own reasons for change but also to create a pathway for achieving it. Through this approach, individuals gain the confidence and autonomy they need to make lasting, positive changes in their lives.

sapo: Motivational interviewing is an evidence-based approach that empowers individuals to make lasting changes. Learn about the four core processes of MI and how they guide clients toward achieving their goals. Read on for valuable insights!

Experiences with Motivational Interviewing

Motivational interviewing (MI) has been widely recognized for its effectiveness in various therapeutic and behavioral settings. One of the key factors that sets MI apart from other therapeutic approaches is its collaborative nature. In personal experiences working with individuals facing substance abuse, MI has proven to be an essential tool in breaking down resistance and fostering change. For instance, a client struggling with alcohol dependency may initially resist the idea of quitting, but by engaging them in a nonjudgmental and empathetic manner, the therapist is able to help the client reflect on the consequences of their behavior and explore their own reasons for change.

In addition, MI has been used effectively in health care settings, especially when working with patients who need to make lifestyle changes such as improving diet or exercise habits. A common experience shared by many health professionals is that MI can significantly increase patient engagement by making them feel more involved in their care decisions. In one case, a patient who had been struggling with hypertension and obesity was able to lose weight and lower their blood pressure after engaging in motivational interviewing. Through the process, the patient was able to identify personal motivations for health improvement, which was key in their ability to follow through with dietary and exercise changes.

Lastly, motivational interviewing has been beneficial for individuals in mental health treatment, particularly those dealing with conditions like depression and anxiety. By focusing on the client’s strengths and values, MI helps them reconnect with their internal motivation to make positive changes. Personal experiences in this area show that MI is particularly effective in situations where the individual feels overwhelmed or lacks confidence in their ability to change. The process of evoking motivation helps clients realize their own potential, which in turn leads to more sustainable and meaningful change.

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