Skip to main content
Article
Benefit of Report Card Feedback After Point-of-Care Assessment of Communication Quality Indicators
Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews
  • Michael H Farrell, Aurora University of Wisconsin Medical Group, Aurora Health Care
  • Clair R Sprenger, Aurora University of Wisconsin Medical Group, Aurora Health Care
  • Shelbie L Sullivan, Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
  • Bree A Trisler, Diederich College of Communication, Marquette University
  • Jessica J F Kram, Aurora University of Wisconsin Medical Group, Aurora Health Care
  • Erin K Ruppel, Department of Communication, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Publication Date
1-31-2017
Keywords
  • health communication,
  • patient satisfaction,
  • physician-patient relations,
  • health care quality
Abstract

Purpose

Communication is crucial for patient experience and biomedical outcomes. Training programs improve communication but are too resource-intensive for sustained use across an entire health care organization. This study demonstrates in a heterogeneous set of encounters the efficacy of quantitative feedback on two groups of physician communication behaviors: 1) jargon explanation, and 2) assessment of patient understanding.

Methods

We used a secure Internet application to audio-record conversations between primary care physicians and 54 patients. Transcripts were quantitatively abstracted using explicit-criteria definitions for assessments of understanding and jargon explanations. These data were conveyed to physicians using a previously tested report card. Finally, physicians were audio-recorded with 48 other patients and compared against their baseline.

Results

Baseline transcripts included an average of 15.5 unique jargon words. Many words were spoken more than once so the total jargon count averaged 25.1. Jargon explanations were infrequent (median of 2.6/ transcript). The jargon explanation ratio (fraction of jargon words spoken after or alongside a jargon explanation for that word) averaged 0.26 out of 1.0. Assessments of understanding were found in 61.1% of transcripts, but most were "OK?" questions (median of 2.22/transcript) or close-ended assessments of understanding (median of 0.59/transcript). After the report card, use of jargon explanations improved to a median of 4.8/transcript (P < 0.001), and the jargon explanation ratio improved to 0.37 (P < 0.02). Assessments of understanding improved to 81.3% of transcripts (P < 0.03), largely due to increased use of close-ended assessments of understanding to 1.08/transcript (P < 0.006).

Conclusions

It is feasible to audio-record at the point of care, abstract transcripts at a central office and improve physician-to-patient communication quality via a report card. A larger, multifaceted program may improve patient experience and biomedical outcomes.

Citation Information

Farrell MH, Sprenger CR, Sullivan SL, Trisler BA, Kram JJ, Ruppel EK. Benefit of report card feedback after point-of-care assessment of communication quality indicators. J Patient Cent Res Rev. 2017;4:7-17. doi: 10.17294/2330-0698.1283