Patient Information Seeking and DecisionMaking In Clinical Encounters - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Patient Information Seeking and DecisionMaking In Clinical Encounters

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What do patients want from the patient-provider encounter? ... Question asking,information-giving, eye contact, clarification, interruptions, body position ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patient Information Seeking and DecisionMaking In Clinical Encounters


1
Patient Information Seeking and Decision-Making
In Clinical Encounters
MGH INSTITUTE OF HEALTH PROFESSIONS
an academic affiliate of Massachusetts General
Hospital
  • Dr Maura Daly Iversen
  • CARE IV Conference, Leeds, England.


2
Objectives
  • To Address the Following Questions
  • What do patients want from the patient-provider
    encounter?
  • How is information shared in clinical visits?
  • What are the models of communication?
  • What basic assumptions misconceptions about
    provider-patient communication drive discussion?
  • How does clinical communication impact health
    outcomes?

3
What Do Patients Want from the Patient-Provider
Relationship?
  • Establish rapport and trust!
  • Diagnosis
  • Receive care information
  • Education in self-management
  • Understand how to monitor progress identify
    problems
  • Address psychosocial issues
  • Develop a plan of care with provider
  • Relationship quality primary reason for choosing
    another provider (Safran, 2001 Wensing et al,
    1998)

4
Information Sharing and Decision-making Models
5
Aspects of Communication (Roter Hall)
  • Process
  • Question asking,information-giving, eye contact,
    clarification, interruptions, body position
  • Content
  • Statements about symptoms, diagnosis,
    interventions, prognosis, side effects
  • Affect
  • Feelings, emotions, tone of voice

6
What Basic Misconceptions Drive the Clinical
Discussion?
  • Provider perspective
  • Not enough time to discuss things
  • Patients value technical skills more than
    communication
  • Patients view provider as primary source of
    information
  • Communication does not affect outcomes strongly
  • Patient perspective
  • The provider will discuss my needs
  • Providers recognize the psychosocial impact of my
    disease
  • Providers value communication
  • Provider recognize and value patients seeking
    information from other sources

7
What Basic Misconceptions Drive the Clinical
Discussion?
  • Doctors are the primary educators
  • Team coordination may not affect outcomes
  • Encouraging participation of family members is
    not important
  • While most patients may not remember every aspect
    of the treatment plan, they remember their
    diagnosis
  • Whether you like your patient/provider does not
    affect information sharing

8
What Does the Research Show Us About
Communication Outcomes
  • Patients are frequently interrupted
  • 72 of patients interrupted in first 23 seconds
    of visit
  • When patients allowed to express concerns it
    only required 6 seconds more
  • Provider who interrupt patients develop less
    precise diagnoses
  • Patients who are interrupted are more likely to
    present their primary concern in the last minutes
    of the visit

9
What Does the Research Show Us About
Communication Outcomes
  • Patients forget most of what is said in the
    clinic visit
  • Patients often cannot recall their correct
    diagnosis (Hull et al, 1987 Gines et al, 1985)
  • Caregivers often do not know whether patients are
    following their prescriptions
  • Patients have predetermined beliefs and
    expectations when they enter the clinic
  • Discussing psychosocial issues improves
    satisfaction and adherence to Rx

10
What Does the Research Show Us About
Communication Outcomes
  • Patients and providers often disagree about the
    patients functional level and pain (Kwoh, 1992)
  • Engaging patient in discussions and
    decision-making increases adherence and
    satisfaction
  • Complicated regimens are harder to follow
    (adherence rates drop to 20-25) (Inui et al,
    1985)
  • Social Support and social norms influence
    discussions
  • Technological advances (eg internet) influence
    information sharing

11
What Does the Research Show Us About
Communication Outcomes
  • Meta-analysis of Interventions to Improve
    Communication
  • Summary of 15 RCTs found a 16 decrease in
    self-reported pain, 22 crease in depression and
    improved functional ability (Mullen et al.,1987)
  • RCTs of Patient Instruction in Question Asking
  • Daltroy et al (1991) used telephone training and
    found
  • Experimentals 13 better on general health
  • 69 of experimentals vs 31 of controls had
    better communication at follow-up.
  • 20 improved appointment compliance in
    experimental vs control group.

12
Information Sharing and Expectations of the
Clinical visit
  • In a survey of 10 rheumatology patients (Rao et
    al, 2004)
  • 58 reported unmet expectations.
  • Of these, 47 reported unmet expectations with
    regard to receipt of general information and 31
    for new medications.
  • Failure to elicit patient expectations increases
    the likelihood patient will raise concerns late
    in the visit (Marvel et al, 1999Dupre, 2000)

13
What Is Known About Outcomes of Good
Communication?
  • Improves patient satisfaction
  • Greater patient provider knowledge
  • Improved self-efficacy
  • Enhances adherence with intervention
  • Improved health outcomes
  • Both general level of education and
    health-specific knowledge correlates strongly
    with good health outcomes

14
Summary
  • Patients needs for information participation
    in decision making are not always recognized.
  • Failure to elicit patient expectations, beliefs,
    and attitudes toward treatments and to negotiate
    treatment alternatives impacts satisfaction and
    outcomes of care.
  • Even passive patients are more satisfied when
    they participate more in negotiations about
    treatments.
  • Most communication studies show modest
    improvements in outcomes with intervention

15
Practical Implications
  • Data (and ethics) from multiple trials indicate
    the need to
  • Elicit expectations of visit and Rx
  • State Purpose intended Rx outcomes
  • Provide Instruction when/how to take Rx
  • Explain how treatment works
  • Discuss Side effects and Rx drawbacks
  • Emphasize how to assess Rx effectiveness-
    timeframe - how long until treatment works
    (especially with SMARDs)

16
Practical Implications
  • Consider your own attitudes and beliefs
  • Encourage patients to ask questions
  • Bring prioritized lists
  • Use assessment sheets at intake
  • Ask about attributions/ address patient concerns-
    especially psychosocial issues
  • Develop mutual goals and plans to meet goals

17
Practical Implications
  • Evaluate patient understanding often during the
    visit and consider literacy
  • Provide written instruction and diagnosis
  • Develop contingency plans in case of barriers
  • Demonstrate when appropriate
  • Encourage significant other to be present when
    describing plan
  • Refer patients to outside resources
  • Help patients evaluate web resources

18
Thank you
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