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Effective Communication Skills with Families and Colleagues. CMH Fellows Curriculum August 7, 2007 Timothy P. Hickman, MD, MEd, MPH Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics and Department of Medical Education and Research Cultural Competency Master
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Effective Communication Skills with Families and Colleagues CMH Fellows Curriculum August 7, 2007 Timothy P. Hickman, MD, MEd, MPH Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics and Department of Medical Education and Research Cultural Competency Master Office of Cultural Enhancement and Diversity University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine
Learning Objectives • Describe research in parent-provider-child communication in pediatrics • Discuss communication styles and how they might effect interdisciplinary and patient communication • Identify approaches to taking a history that will elicit health beliefs and traditional medical practices from any patient • Discuss incorporating a cultural history into the clinical history
ACGME Core Competencies Addressed • Patient Care • Interpersonal and Communication Skills • Professionalism
Cincinnati Children's Study • Methodology • Survey of Attending Physician, Nursing Staff, and Parents • Probably Case Series Design (Baseline for RCT) • Sample • 44 PGY1 residents scheduled for pediatric rotations (8 not eligible) • Physician, Nurses, Parents: Convenience sample Brinkman, 2006
Cincinnati Children's Study Brinkman, 2006
Significant Differences • Physician > Parent Rating of Residents • None • Parent > Physician Rating of Residents • Sharing Decisions (p<0.3) Brinkman, 2006
Cincinnati Children's Study Brinkman, 2006
Significant Differences • Physician > Nurse Rating of Residents • Treat staff with respect • Accept Suggestions • Good team member • Sensitive and empathetic • Respect confidentiality • Honesty and integrety • Nurse > Physician Rating of Residents • Effectively plan course of care • Anticipate post discharge needs Brinkman, 2006
Discussion • Percentages reflect how often the highest item on a 5 point scale was selected • Parents mean rating for all items was about 57% • Physician and parents had similar ratings on resident-parent interaction but physicians frequently marked unable to observe • Parent and nursing staff provide unique perspectives Brinkman, 2006
Birmingham Children’s Hospital • Methodology • Independent analysis of doctor-parent-communication • Surveys of parents and children • Case Series • Sample • Convenience sample • 51 outpatient visits, 12 doctors Wasmer, 2004
Birmingham Children’s Hospital Wasmer, 2004
Birmingham Children’s Hospital Wasmer, 2004
Discussion/Conclusions • Growing evidence that children should participate in clinical encounters including shared decision making • Most research indicates very low communication by children Wasmer, 2004
Active Listening Skills • Attentive body language • Posture and gestures showing involvement and engagement • Appropriate body movement • Appropriate facial expressions • Appropriate eye contact • Non-distracting environment Robertson, 2005
Active Listening Skills • Following skills (Giving the speaker space to tell their story in their own way) • Interested ‘door openers’ • Minimal verbal encouragers • Infrequent, timely and considered questions • Attentive silences Robertson, 2005
Active Listening Skills • Reflecting skills (Restating the feeling and/or content with understanding and acceptance) • Paraphrase (check periodically that you’ve understood) • Reflect back feelings and content • Summarize the major issues Robertson, 2005
Communication Styles • Direct • Meaning is conveyed through explicit statements made directly to the people involved. No need to rely on contextual factors such as situation and timing. • Indirect • Meaning is conveyed by suggestion, implication, nonverbal behavior or other contextual cues. This allows one to avoid confronting another person or cause them to lose face. Foreign Affairs Canada and International Trade Canada, 2007
Communication Styles • Linear • Discussion is conducted in a straight line, almost like an outline. There is a low reliance on context. • Circular • Discussion is conducted in a circular manner. The main point is often left unstated. There is a high reliance on context. Foreign Affairs Canada and International Trade Canada, 2007
Communication Styles • Attached • Issues are discussed with feeling and emotion. • Detached • Issues are discussed with calmness and objectivity, conveying the speaker’s ability to weigh all the factors impersonally. Foreign Affairs Canada and International Trade Canada, 2007
Communication Styles • Intellectual Engagement • Any disagreement with ideas is stated directly, with the assumption that only the idea, not the relationship, is being attached. (We’re just having a friendly discussion – don’t take it personally’.) • Relational Confrontation • Relational issues and problems are confronted directly, while intellectual disagreement is handled more subtly and indirectly. Foreign Affairs Canada and International Trade Canada, 2007
Communication Styles • Concrete (Factual) • Issues are best understood through stories, metaphors and examples, with an emphasis on the specific, rather than the general. • Abstract (Big Picture) • Issues are best understood through theories, principles and data, with emphasis on the general, rather than the specific. Foreign Affairs Canada and International Trade Canada, 2007
Why Conduct a Culturally Competent History • Increasing diversity of U.S. population • Importance of health belief • Diagnosis • Compliance • Traditional Treatments • Importance of history in diagnosis and decisions about diagnostic and therapeutic options
Culturally Competent Care • Recognizes the complexity of cultural influences • Issue specific not culture specific • Takes advantage of epidemiology but creates a uniform approach to any person • Learn about culture but avoid stereotyping
Parallels with “Discipline” Specific History • Pediatrics • Developmental Stages • Caregivers vs. Patient • Wide belief in traditional health practices • Feeding • Discipline • Crying Infant • Disease Susceptibility
Culturally Competent History • Greeting • Respectful • Addresses formally (Mr., Mrs.) • Why they came to see the physician • Health beliefs regarding the illness • Kleinman’s questions
Culturally Competent History • Avoid showing reaction or making judgments about patient’s beliefs • Avoid judgmental or condescending statements • Neutral facial expression • Avoid making assumptions • Avoid alienating or emotionally laden terms
Culturally Competent History • Inquire about medical decision making authority • Use lay terms • Show empathy • Ask final question: “Is there anything else I can help you with or any other questions that you have?”
Questions • What do you thinks caused your problem? • Why do you think it started when it did? • What do you think your sickness does to you? How does it work? • How severe is you sickness? Will I have a short or a long course?
Questions? • What kind of treatment do you think that you should receive? • What are the most important results you hope to receive from this treatment? • What are the chief problems your sickness has caused you? • What do you fear most about your sickness?
References • Boyd SD. Using active listening: improve your communication skill with the most powerful tool available. Nurs Manage. 1998;29(7):55. • Brinkman WB, Geraghty SR, Lanphear BP, Khourey JC, et al. Evaluation of resident communication skills and professionalism: a matter of perspective. Pediatrics. 2006;118(4):1371-1379. • Carrillo, J. E., Green, A. R. & Betancourt, J. R. Cross cultural primary care: A patient based Approach. Ann Intern Med. 1999;130: 829-834.
References • Foreign Affairs Canada and International Trade Canada. Virtual Campus: Independent Learning Module on International Work Skills. Cross-Cultural Skills. Available at: http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/ypi-jpi/pdf/Cross-Cultural_Skills-en.pdf Accessed March 27, 2007 • Kleinman A, Eisenberg L, Good G. Culture, illness and care: Clinical lessons from anthropologic and cross-cultural research. Ann Intern Med. 1978;88: 251-258. • Kreps G, Kunimoto E. Effective communication in multicultural heath care settings. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications; 1994.
References • Robertson K . Active listening: more than just paying attention. Australian Fam Phys. 2005;34(12):1053-1055. • Spector R. Cultural Diversity in Health and Illness. 5th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Appleton and Lange; 2000. • Wasmer E, Minnaar G, Abdel Aal N, Atkinson AM et al. How do peadiatricians communicate with children and parents? Acta Paeditrica. 2004;93:1501-1506.