A randomized controlled trial of communication training with primary care providers to improve patient-centeredness and health risk communication.

Category Primary study
JournalPatient education and counseling
Year 2011
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OBJECTIVE:

to determine the efficacy and effectiveness of training to improve primary care providers' patient-centered communication skills and proficiency in discussing their patients' health risks.

METHODS:

twenty-eight primary care providers participated in a baseline simulated patient interaction and were subsequently randomized into intervention and control groups. Intervention providers participated in training focused on patient-centered communication about behavioral risk factors. Immediate efficacy of training was evaluated by comparing the two groups. Over the next 3 years, all providers participated in two more sets of interactions with patients. Longer term effectiveness was assessed using the interaction data collected at 6 and 18 months post-training.

RESULTS:

The intervention providers significantly improved in patient-centered communication and communication proficiencies immediately post-training and at both follow-up time points.

CONCLUSIONS:

this study suggests that the brief training produced significant and large differences in the intervention group providers which persisted 2 years after the training.Practice Implications: the results of this study suggest that primary care providers can be trained to achieve and maintain gains in patient-centered communication, communication skills and discussion of adverse childhood events as root causes of chronic disease.
Epistemonikos ID: 6aaf912c0e6a3380662af3c0d6d8e28c03d968c1
First added on: May 02, 2013