{Reference Type}: Review {Title}: Patient-practitioner interaction within the field of prosthetics and orthotics: A scoping review. {Author}: Comstock BCD; {Journal}: Prosthet Orthot Int {Volume}: 47 {Issue}: 6 {Year}: 2023 Dec 1 {Factor}: 1.672 {DOI}: 10.1097/PXR.0000000000000281 {Abstract}: Patient-practitioner interaction has been shown to positively affect patient outcomes and experiences in various medical fields. However, the career of prosthetics and orthotics (P&O) includes components and processes unique to its field. Therefore, the concepts, practices, and information of patient-practitioner interaction need to be identified to understand how P&O practitioners can positively influence patient outcomes. A scoping review of PubMed, PsycINFO, and CINAHL was conducted for empirical research involving patient-practitioner interaction in P&O between the years of 1990 and 2021. Initial searches discovered 646 unique articles. Only 2 quantitative studies and 3 qualitative studies were included in the final analysis. Three interconnected themes were prevalent across the 5 articles: the knowledge available to the patient and the practitioner, the difference in expectations of both patient and practitioner, and communication processes. These 3 concepts create a feedback loop of consequences that can be addressed by ensuring that adequate and useful patient-practitioner communication is applied during the care process. Despite multiple calls for research in this area over the past 50 years, very few articles have addressed patient-practitioner interactions. Future research is needed to understand how interactions in P&O can be optimized to positively affect patient experience and outcomes.