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"Great Expectations" communication between stadardized patients and medical students in Objective Structured Clinical ExaminationsBudyn, Cynthia Lee. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Indiana University, 2007. / Title from screen (viewed on January 9, 2008). Department of Communication Studies, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). Advisor(s): Stuart M. Schrader, Kim D. White-Mills, Elizabeth M. Goering, Jane E. Schultz. Includes vitae. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 85-94).
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The Effectiveness Of "delivering Unfavorable News To Patients Diagnosed With Cancer" Training Program For Oncologists In UzbekisHundley, Gulnora 01 January 2008 (has links)
Effective physician-patient communication is primary to successful medical consultation and encourages a collaborative interactional process between patient and doctor. Collaborative communication, rather than one-way authoritarian, physician-led medical interview, is significant in navigating difficult circumstances such as delivering "bad news" to patients diagnosed with cancer. Additionally, the potential psychological effects of breaking bad news in an abrupt and insensitive manner can be devastating and long-lasting for both the patient and his or her family. The topic of delivering unfavorable news to patients is an issue that many medical professionals find to be challenging and is now getting the attention of medical professionals in many countries, including the former Soviet Union (FSU) republics. The limited literature on communication skills in oncology in the FSU republics supports that the physician-patient communication style is perceived as significantly physician-oriented rather than patient-oriented. More specifically, the Soviet medical education system, as well as post-graduate medical education, has placed little to no emphasis on physician-patient communication training. Physician-oriented communication leads to patients being less forthcoming and open regarding their own feelings about being diagnosed with cancer, which may exacerbate the overall communication problem. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of the training program "Delivering Unfavorable News to Patients Diagnosed with Cancer" (Baile et al., 2000) conducted in Uzbekistan, one of the FSU republics. A total of 50 oncologists from the National Oncology Center of Uzbekistan (N = 50, n = 25 , n = 25 ) completed Self-Efficacy, Interpersonal skills (FIRO-B), Empathy (JSPE), and Physician Belief (PBS), and demographic instruments before, immediately after, and then two weeks after the training intervention. Results of MANOVA and bivariate statistical analyses revealed significant differences in self-efficacy, empathy, and PBS scores within the experimental group, but not within the control group, from pre-test to post-test. The follow-up data analysis suggested that participants maintained the level of change that occurred immediately after the training intervention.
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"Great Expectations" : Communication between standardized patients and medical students in Objective Structured Clinical ExaminationsBudyn, Cynthia Lee 20 November 2007 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / In relationship-centered care, the relationship formed between physician and
patient is critical to the creation of positive patient outcomes and patient satisfaction
(Inui, 1996; Laine & Davidoff, 1996; Tresolini, 1994). Medical educators have
increasingly utilized Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs) to assess
medical students’ abilities to utilize a relationship-centered approach in clinical
interviewing. OSCEs, however, have recently come under scrutiny as critics contend that
the overly scripted and standardized nature of the OSCE may not accurately reflect how
medical students build and maintain relationships with patients. Although some studies
have looked at how standardized patients help teach medical students interviewing skills,
few studies have looked specifically at how the structured nature of the OSCE may
influence relationship-building between standardized patients and medical students.
Therefore, this study asks the question “How is relationship-centered care negotiated
between standardized patients and medical students during a summative diagnostic
OSCE?”
Using an ethnographic methodology (Bochner & Ellis, 1996), data consists of an
ethnographic field journal, transcripts of semi-structured interviews with SPs and medical
students, and transcripts of headache and chronic cough videotaped scenarios. Using
grounded theory (Strauss & Corbin, 1990, 1998), a back-and-forth thematic analysis was
conducted in discovering the saturation of conceptual categories, linking relationships,
and in critically comparing interpretive categorical concepts with relevant literature
(Josselson & Leeblich, 1999).
Findings suggest that standardized patients and medical students hold differing
expectations for 1) diagnostic information gathering and 2) making personal connections
upon entering a diagnostic summative OSCE. SPs “open up” both verbally and
nonverbally when medical students “go beyond the checklist” by asking discrete
diagnostic questions and when overtly trying to connect emotionally. Fourth year medical
students, however, expect SPs to “open-up” during what they experience as a rushed,
time-constrained, and overly structured “gaming” exercise which contradicts their own
clinical experiences in being more improvisational during empathetic rapport building.
Differences between SPs and medical students’ expectations and communication
practices influence how they perform during summative diagnostic OSCEs. Findings may
suggest the re-introduction of more relationship-focused OSCEs which positions SPs as
proactive patients who reflexively co-teach students about the importance of making
personal connections.
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Waiting to Die: An Exploratory Qualitative Study of Older AdultsOgle, Kimberly K. 26 November 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Determining Component Weights in a Communications Assessment Using Judgmental Policy CapturingHarvill, Leo M., Lang, F. F., McCord, Ronald S. 01 December 2004 (has links)
OBJECTIVES: Tools are needed for determining appropriate weights for complex performance assessment components in medical education. The feasibility of using judgmental policy capturing (JPC), a procedure to statistically describe the information processing strategies of experts, for this purpose was investigated. METHODS: Iterative JPC was used to determine appropriate weighting for the six core communication skill scores from a communications objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) for medical students using a panel of four communication skill experts. RESULTS: The mean regression weights from the panel indicated they placed less importance on information management (8.5%), moderate and nearly equal importance on rapport building (15.8%), agenda setting (15.4%), and addressing feelings (14.1%), and greater importance on active listening (20.1%) and reaching common ground with the patient (25.5%). DISCUSSION: JPC is an effective procedure for determining appropriate weights for complex clinical assessment components. The derived weights may be very different for those assessment components.
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Communication Theory in Physician Training: Examining Medical School Communication Curriculum at American Medical UniversitiesCarroll, Melissa A. January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Strategies for Cross-Cultural Physician-Patient Communication: A Case of International Patients in a Cultural Competency LaboratoryZheng, Yan 26 September 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Informed Consent in Obstetric Anesthesia: The Effect of the Amount, Timing and Modality of Information on Patient SatisfactionHicks, Michelle, B. 12 1900 (has links)
Using mainly quantitative methods of evaluation, as well as patient comment assessment, this study evaluated whether changing the current informed consent process for labor epidural analgesia to a longer, more informational process resulted in a more satisfied patient. Satisfaction with the labor epidural informed consent process was evaluated using a questionnaire that was mailed and also available online. Half of the patient population was given a written labor epidural risk/benefit document at their 36-week obstetric check up. All patients received the standard informed consent. Survey responses were evaluated based on three independent variables dealing with the modality, timing, amount of informed consent information and one dependent variable, whether the patient's expectations of the epidural were met, which is equated with satisfaction. Patients in this study clearly indicated that they want detailed risk/benefit information on epidural analgesia earlier in their pregnancy. A meaningfully larger percentage of patients who received the written risk/benefit document were satisfied with the epidural process as compared to those who did not receive the document.
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Bridging the Gap between Medical Science and Communication: An Interpretive Analysis of Messages Portrayed on Endometriosis Websites.Anderson, LaKesha Nichole 01 May 2004 (has links) (PDF)
This study examined women's health messages found on ten endometriosis websites. Qualitative research methods were used to investigate messages available via Internet media about causes and treatments of endometriosis, particularly as they relate to the suggestion that hysterectomy and pregnancy are effective treatments. Messages about infertility, physician-patient communication, and accessibility were also examined. Findings indicate that the websites provided similar messages regarding the symptoms, causes, and treatments of endometriosis; results pertaining to infertility were mixed. Little information was available on methods of improving physician-patient communication. Most websites provided additional low-cost information while requiring minimal technological competency or additional software of site patrons. The results of this study have implications for future research in medical science and communication and reflect the importance of research on women's health communication. A detailed discussion of findings and suggestions for further research are offered. The author's own experiences with endometriosis are incorporated into the analysis.
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The Patient-Physician Relationship from the Perspective of Economically Disadvantaged PatientsCaruso, Myah 25 August 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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