Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2012 Jan;166(1):62-7.
Child health providers' precautionary discussion of emotions during communication about results of newborn genetic screening.
Source
Center for Patient Care and Outcomes Research, 8701 Watertown Plank Rd, Milwaukee, WI 53226-0509. mfarrell@mcw.ed .Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To demonstrate a quantitative abstraction method for Communication Quality Assurance projects to assess physicians' communication about hidden emotions after newborn genetic screening.DESIGN:
Communication quality indicator analysis.SETTING:
Standardized parent encounters performed in practicing physicians' clinics or during educational workshops for residents.PARTICIPANTS:
Fifty-nine pediatrics residents, 53 pediatricians, and 31 family physicians. Intervention Participants were asked to counsel standardized parents about a screening result; counseling was recorded, transcribed, and parsed into statements (each with 1 subject and 1 predicate). Pairs of abstractors independently compared statements with a data dictionary containing explicit-criteria definitions.OUTCOME MEASURES:
Four groups of "precautionary empathy" behaviors (assessment of emotion, anticipation/validation of emotion, instruction about emotion, and caution about future emotion), with definitions developed for both "definite" and "partial" instances.RESULTS:
Only 38 of 143 transcripts (26.6%) met definite criteria for at least 1 of the precautionary empathy behaviors. When partial criteria were counted, this number increased to 80 of 143 transcripts (55.9%). The most common type of precautionary empathy was the "instruction about emotion" behavior (eg, "don't be worried"), which may sometimes be leading or premature.CONCLUSIONS:
Precautionary empathy behaviors were rare in this analysis. Further study is needed, but this study should raise concerns about the quality of communication services after newborn screening.- PMID:
- 22213752
- [PubMed - in process]
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario