|
Item
#6
Outcomes
Improve When Using a New Interactive Technique
Simple
communication techniques make physicians more effective teachers.
Diabetes
management may improve when physicians use an interactive
communication technique with patients. Unfortunately, physicians
underuse this simple strategy, according to a new study.
Prior
research has shown that patients fail to recall or comprehend as much
as half of what they are told by their physicians, according to
University of California-San Francisco (UCSF) researchers.
"In
this study, we tried to identify simple communication techniques that
make physicians more effective teachers," said Dean Schillinger,
MD, UCSF assistant professor of medicine at San Francisco General
Hospital Medical Center (SFGHMC) and lead author of the study. The
investigators used audio tapes of actual visits at a public hospital's
clinics to measure the extent to which primary care physicians
interacted with their patients to assess patient recall and
comprehension of new concepts. They recorded visits between 38
physicians and 74 English-speaking patients with diabetes and poor
health literacy. Study findings showed that physicians used this
interactive technique in only 20% of visits and for only 12% of new
concepts, explained Schillinger.
Patients
with poor health literacy may experience problems ranging from reading
labels on a pill bottle, interpreting blood sugar values or dosing
schedules, and comprehending appointment slips and educational
brochures. They are more likely to have troubles with oral
communication, as well, said Schillinger. He explained that poor
health literacy is common in public hospital settings and among the
elderly.
"Some
physicians asked patients to respond to newly delivered information,
while other physicians asked patients to restate the instructions or
'teach back' the information. Patients whose physicians explicitly
assess recall or comprehension in these ways were more likely to have
good diabetes control, said Schillinger. "We found that using
this strategy did not require lengthier visits. By checking patients'
recall and comprehension or critical concepts, more physicians may be
able to effectively partner with their diabetes patients to achieve
better outcomes."
The
study was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ), the UCSF Hellman Family Early Career Research Award, the
Pfizer, Inc. Health Literacy Research Award, and the UCSF General
Clinical Research Center at SFGHMC.
Outcomes Improve When
Using a New Interactive Technique
The
Archives of Internal Medicine, 01/13/2003
===========================
DID
YOU KNOW:
Eating
100 fewer calories a day could help prevent weight gain in the average
individual, say scientists in the US.
Adding
that 100 calories equals a mile of walking or running, or three bites
of a hamburger
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|