| Literature DB >> 22166064 |
Geurt Essers1, Sandra van Dulmen, Chris van Weel, Cees van der Vleuten, Anneke Kramer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Communication is a key competence for health care professionals. Analysis of registrar and GP communication performance in daily practice, however, suggests a suboptimal application of communication skills. The influence of context factors could reveal why communication performance levels, on average, do not appear adequate. The context of daily practice may require different skills or specific ways of handling these skills, whereas communication skills are mostly treated as generic. So far no empirical analysis of the context has been made. Our aim was to identify context factors that could be related to GP communication.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22166064 PMCID: PMC3262758 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-12-138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
GP behaviour observed using MAAS-Global and context factors inferred by inductive reasoning1
| MAAS-items | Observed GP communication behaviour | Inferred context factors |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Opening | ○ opening and establishing contact are very short | - GP knows patient and his/her social context |
| 2. Follow-up consultation | ○ does not name earlier complaints or management | - GP knows patients' medical history |
| 3. Request for help | ○ does not name request for help | - GP knows patients' way of communicating |
| 4. Physical Examination (PE) | ○ does not explain PE | - patient knows PE from prior consultations |
| 5. Diagnosis | ○ does not do any diagnosing | - patient has a disease (diagnosis) or (recurrent) problem known to both GP and patient |
| 6. Management | ○ does not share decision on management | - patient is also treated by other provider |
| 7. Consultation closure | ○ does not ask general evaluative question | - GP knows patient and his/her social context |
| 8. Exploration | ○ does not react to cues on psychosocial problems | - GP knows patients' medical history |
| 9. Emotions | ○ does not ask for emotions | - GP knows patients' way of communicating |
| 10. Providing Information | ○ does not discuss consulting with other provider | - GP knows patients' way of communicating |
| 11. Summarizing | ○ does not summarize | - specific patient verbal behaviour |
| 12. Structuring | ○ sequence is not always logical | - patient is familiar with (physical) examination (PE) |
| 13. Empathy | ○ does not express empathy in brief verbal responses | - GP knows patients' way of communicating |
communication behaviour and context factors are only listed; bullets and hyphens at the same height do not have a specific relationship.
Context factors in GP consultations affecting communication process
| doctor-related factors | |
|---|---|
| 1. | doctor knows patient and his social context |
| 2. | doctor knows patients' medical history |
| 3. | doctor knows patients' way of communicating |
| 4. | doctor is very experienced |
| 5. | specific patient verbal behaviour |
| 6. | specific patient non-verbal behaviour |
| 7. | patient is also treated by other provider |
| 8. | patient has a disease (diagnosis) or (recurrent) problem known to both doctor and patient |
| 9. | patient is familiar with (physical) examination (PE) |
| 10. | single consultation |
| 11. | first consultation in a series |
| 12. | follow-up consultation in a series |
| 13. | consultation in a series based on protocol (initiative by doctor) |
| 14. | consultation in preventive care (initiative doctor) |
| 15. | problem is mainly psychosocial |
| 16. | diagnosed problem is easily solved |
| 17. | problem urgently needs medical care |
| 18. | more than one person (patient) present |
| 19. | characteristics of physical examination |