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Article
Qualitatively exploring the impact of a relationship-centered communication skills training program in improving patient perceptions of care
PEC Innovation
  • Marie C. Haverfield, San Jose State University
  • Robert Victor, Stanford Medicine
  • Brenda Flores, Stanford Medicine
  • Jonathan Altamirano, Stanford Medicine
  • Magali Fassiotto, Stanford Medicine
  • Merisa Kline, Stanford Healthcare
  • Barbette Weimer-Elder, Stanford Healthcare
Publication Date
12-1-2022
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100069
Abstract

Objective: To explore qualitative patient experience comments before and after a relationship-centered communication skills training to understand patient experience, program impact, and opportunities for improvement. Methods: Qualitative patient experience evaluation data was captured from January 2016 to December 2018 for 483 health care clinicians who participated in the skills training. A random sampling of available open-ended patient comments (N = 33,223) were selected pre-training (n = 668) and post-training (n = 566). Comments were coded for valence (negative/neutral/positive), generality versus specificity, and based on 12 communication behaviors reflective of training objectives. Results: No significant difference was found in the valence of comments, or generality versus specificity of comments before and after the training. A significant decrease was present in perceived clinician concern. “Confidence in care provider” was the communication skill most frequently identified in comments both pre- and post-training. Conclusion: Perceptions of interactions largely remained the same following training. Key relationship-centered communication skills require further attention in future training efforts. Measurements of patient satisfaction and engagement may not adequately represent patient experience. Innovation: This study identified areas for improvement in the training program and offers a model for utilizing patient experience qualitative data in understanding communication training impact.

Keywords
  • Communication skills,
  • Patient experience,
  • Patient-clinician relationship,
  • Qualitative methods
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Citation Information
Marie C. Haverfield, Robert Victor, Brenda Flores, Jonathan Altamirano, et al.. "Qualitatively exploring the impact of a relationship-centered communication skills training program in improving patient perceptions of care" PEC Innovation Vol. 1 (2022)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marie-haverfield/68/