| Literature DB >> 28008237 |
WenGang Hu1, YaJun Song1, Xiao Zhong1, JiaYu Feng1, PingXian Wang1, ChiBing Huang1.
Abstract
Effective doctor-patient communication is essential for establishing a successful doctor-patient relationship and implementing high-quality health care. In this study, a novel urinary system-simulating physical model was designed and fabricated, and its content validity for improving doctor-patient communication was examined by conducting a randomized controlled trial in which this system was compared with photographs. A total of 240 inpatients were randomly selected and assigned to six doctors for treatment. After primary diagnosis and treatment had been determined, these patients were randomly divided into the experimental group and the control group. Patients in the experimental group participated in model-based doctor-patient communication, whereas control group patients received picture-based communication. Within 30 min after this communication, a Demographic Information Survey Scale and a Medical Interview Satisfaction Scale (MISS) were distributed to investigate patients' demographic characteristics and their assessments of total satisfaction, distress relief, communication comfort, rapport, and compliance intent. The study results demonstrated that the individual groups were comparable with respect to demographic variables but that relative to patients in the picture-based communication group, patients in the model-based communication group had significantly higher total satisfaction scores and higher ratings for distress relief, communication comfort, rapport, and compliance intent. These results indicate that the physical model is more effective than the pictures at improving doctor-patient communication and patient outcomes. The application of the physical model in doctor-patient communication is helpful and valuable and therefore merits widespread clinical popularization.Entities:
Keywords: doctor–patient communication; doctor–patient relationship; model; urology
Year: 2016 PMID: 28008237 PMCID: PMC5171197 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S123468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Figure 1One design image of the male urinary system.
Figure 2The male urinary-system-simulating physical model.
Figure 3One doctor was explaining the ureteral stent insertion.
Figure 4The stent in the model.
Figure 5The participant flow of the randomized controlled trial.
Demographic characteristics
| Characteristics | No in experimental group | No in control group | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | 0.485 | 0.486 | ||
| Male | 80 | 85 | ||
| Female | 40 | 35 | ||
| Age division (years) | 3.158 | 0.368 | ||
| 18–32 | 20 | 14 | ||
| 33–47 | 35 | 33 | ||
| 48–62 | 39 | 36 | ||
| ≥63 | 26 | 37 | ||
| Level of education | 2.223 | 0.329 | ||
| Less than middle school | 49 | 57 | ||
| Middle school to high school | 37 | 22 | ||
| More than high school | 34 | 41 | ||
| Illness category | 4.873 | 0.301 | ||
| Renal failure | 19 | 26 | ||
| Urolithiasis | 49 | 38 | ||
| Obstruction | 23 | 29 | ||
| Tumor | 18 | 21 | ||
| Other | 11 | 6 | ||
| First hospitalization or not | 0.071 | 0.790 | ||
| First | 76 | 74 | ||
| Not the first | 44 | 46 | ||
| Total | 120 | 120 |
Impact of intervention on patient and doctor satisfaction
| Investigation issue | Mean ± SD
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental group | Control group | ||
| Patient satisfaction (Total MISS) | 148.44±18.97 | 141.66±20.92 | 0.009 |
| MISS subscales | |||
| Distress relief | 56.04±6.46 | 53.88±7.43 | 0.017 |
| Communication comfort | 19.92±2.96 | 18.55±3.51 | 0.001 |
| Rapport | 52.25±7.75 | 49.96±8.94 | 0.035 |
| Compliance intent | 20.23±2.93 | 19.27±3.42 | 0.019 |
Abbreviations: MISS, Medical Interview Satisfaction Scale; SD, standard deviation.