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<strong>Communication influences on US Black Women’s Pregnancy Risk Perceptions and Related Behavioral Responses</strong>Tiwaladeoluwa Adekunle (6984413) 12 July 2023 (has links)
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<p>Pregnancy poses unjust dangers to Black women in the United States, who are currently faced with higher rates of maternal mortality and pregnancy-related adverse events than women of other races. The maternal mortality ratio for non-Hispanic Black women is 41.4/100,000 compared with 13.7/100,000 for White women (Hill et al., 2022). Although there are available statistics and other forms on expert knowledge on these dangers, risk perceptions and related behaviors are derived from subjective individual interpretations within a dynamic communicative context. While there is extensive evidence on the dangers pregnancy and childbirth pose to Black women, less is known about Black women’s conceptualizations of their own risks, the role of communication (with their healthcare providers and other sources), and the ways in which they enact agency in response to these risks. Using a multi-methodological approach that draws on in-depth interviews, qualitative network analysis and an environmental scan, this dissertation foregrounds Black women’s own narratives to explore the social construction of pregnancy risk, the role of communication with healthcare providers in the amplification or attenuation of these risks, and the broader communicative context that shapes Black women’s pregnancy experiences. In doing so, this study found that Black women’s pregnancy risk perceptions are socially constructed through communication in a socio-political context shaped by gendered racism, and Black women enacted agency in response to these risks in a variety of ways constrained by gendered racism, including intentional decision-making, extensive research, and self-advocacy. Insights from in-depth interviews and the qualitative network analysis were contextualized in an environmental scan that included a review of relevant policies, interviews with community leaders, and a review of community organizations efforts to support Black women. This dissertation concludes with a discussion of contributions to theory and insights for Black women, healthcare providers, community organizations, media and policy makers. </p>
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Examining the Use of Digital Tools to Facilitate Multilingual Patient-Physician Communication: A Scoping ReviewGhosalkar, Esha V 01 January 2022 (has links)
The United States healthcare system cares for and supports a diverse patient population. Patients come from various ethnic backgrounds, speak different languages, hold distinct religious affiliations, and more. These differences can create a chasm in the patient-provider relationship, impacting the quality of care or health outcomes. Specifically, language-discordance can affect patient-provider communication; however, technological interventions, such as access to electronic medical record tools and digital translators, can facilitate this dyadic communication. This scoping review examines the literature present on the use of digital tools to facilitate multilingual patient-provider communication. The initial search in PubMed with MeSH terms resulted in 531 studies. After studies were screened for the inclusion criteria in abstract and full-text screening, seven studies remained for data extraction. Results revealed no strong patterns regarding either type of digital technology studied, medical specialization, or clinical setting. Only one randomized controlled trial was identified. Findings highlight the need for more research in this field to determine more specific impact of the usage of technology in healthcare communication.
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Respectful Patient-Provider Communication and Portal Use in Pregnant People of Color:Goh, Amy H. January 2024 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Joyce Edmonds / Background: Systemic racism contributes to the persistent and large inequities in perinatal health outcomes for pregnant people of color, particularly Black pregnant people. Poor communication between pregnant people of color and their providers contributes to these health inequities and perpetuates systemic racism in perinatal health. Pregnant people of color report being dismissed, ignored, discriminated against, and disrespected within the perinatal care system. One of the ways that patients communicate with their providers is via the patient portal. According to the Health Information National Trends Survey, around 80% of U.S. adults utilized information technology, such as patient portals, to track health data or communicate with their provider. Researchers have identified lower usage of patient portals in pregnant people of color compared to their White counterparts. Lower levels of utilization may perpetuate the digital divide for the low-resourced communities of color. Aims: The dissertation has three aims. The first aim was to synthesize and critically analyze patient-provider communication in pregnant people of color. The second aim was to examine the relationship between the quality of patient-provider communication (PPC) and the extent of patient portal use in pregnant people of color and to determine if digital health literacy is a moderating factor in this relationship. The third aim was to explore pregnant people of color’s access, use and perceptions of the patient portal in order to identify barriers and facilitators to quality digital communication with their prenatal providers.
Methods: An integrative review method was applied to the empirical literature to achieve aim one. A multi-method, cross-sectional survey study with a non-probability convenience sample of 130 pregnant people of color receiving prenatal care at a large safety net hospital in Boston was conducted for aims two and three. Logistic regression and moderation models were utilized to analyze the quantitative survey data to achieve the second aim. Content analysis was used to analyze the responses to four open-ended survey questions to achieve the third aim.
Results: A three-manuscript dissertation was completed. In the first manuscript, 26 articles were identified and the factors, outcomes and recommendations from communication between pregnant people of color and their prenatal providers were evaluated. There were two overarching themes: Racism and Discrimination and Unmet Information Needs along with multiple factors, outcomes and recommendations. The second manuscript reported on the quantitative results responses from 130 pregnant people of color. Participants that did not use the patient portal and who had public insurance had lower odds of rating higher quality PPC. Digital health literacy was found to be a moderating factor in the association between PPC and portal use at the level of portal users. The third manuscript reported on the content analysis and found main facilitators to communication between pregnant people of color and their providers were Provider behaviors and functionality of myChart and barriers were quality of response, multiple providers and digital access and literacy.
Conclusions: The findings from this dissertation may be translated into clinical practice by informing perinatal providers on the pregnant people of color’s ratings of respectful communication and facilitators and barriers to quality health communication. Policies and strategies may be developed to improve digital health communication in order to provide inclusive and person-centered care in pregnancy. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2024. / Submitted to: Boston College. Connell School of Nursing. / Discipline: Nursing.
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Preventing Progression of End Stage Renal Disease: A Systematic Review of Patient-Provider Communication in Primary CarePrieto, Roseanne January 2016 (has links)
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects approximately 26 million individuals in the United States and is a top priority in the objectives for Healthy People 2020. Despite efforts to improve awareness, discussion of CKD is often minimal or ineffective in the primary care setting. This leads to a lack of patient awareness and knowledge of self-care skills to prevent or slow progression of the disease. A lack of communication of has been attributed to the provider's lack of confidence and knowledge to discuss CKD and to avoid unnecessary stress. Purpose: The purpose of the DNP project is to provide a systematic review of patient-provider communication processes used to influence self-management or behavioral change in primary care and propose a tool to enhance communication and slow progression of CKD. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following the method guidelines of the Cochrane Collaboration. Six electronic databases were searched. Inclusion criteria were adult humans, primary research studies, systematic and literature reviews, focus on communication of self-management or behavioral change strategies, primary outcomes of improving self-management and/or patient outcomes and availability of full-text online or by request. Outcomes: Of the 5765 articles initially identified, 28 studies met inclusion criteria. The studies revealed a lack of evidence directed towards CKD and communication was not directly addressed in a majority of the studies. Interventions most successful in improving patient outcomes were individualized, elicited collaboration or interaction with the patient and provider, were motivational or encouraging and aided in barrier identification and problem solving. A communication tool was developed from the evidence in order to stimulate more meaningful conversation between the patient and provider.
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Cultural Factors and Communication During Medical Consultations with HIV-Positive Racial/Ethnic Minority PatientsStevens, Lillian 20 August 2010 (has links)
This study examined the relationships between cultural characteristics, communication variables, and medical outcomes in HIV-positive racial/ethnic minority patients. Participants included 33 patients and 5 providers across two urban, community medical clinics. The patient sample was 61% African American, 24% Latino, and 15% Other/Mixed. The majority (73%) were male. Providers included one White female physician, one White male nurse practitioner, two White female nurse practitioners, and one White male physician assistant. In this descriptive study, patients completed self-report ratings of their desire for engagement in decision-making prior to their scheduled medical consultation. After their consultations, patients rated their provider regarding engagement in decision-making, interpersonal communication, and working alliance. Patients also completed measures of acculturation, fatalism, familism, and mistrust. Providers rated their engagement of patients in decision-making, the patients’ interpersonal style, and working alliance immediately after the consultation. Measures of CD4 count and viral load were obtained from patients’ medical records. Cultural characteristics were not related to patient desire for engagement in decision-making. Patient perceptions of being highly informed and involved in decision-making were not related to satisfaction or immune functioning. Patient perceptions of provider affiliation and control, and the complementarity between these two, were also not found to have any significant relation to satisfaction or immune functioning. Though working alliance was not found to have a significant relation to any outcome, the relation between patient perception of a stronger working alliance and higher satisfaction was marginally significant. A match between patient and provider on the bond subscale of working alliance was found to correspond to IMI affiliation complementarity. Though the hypotheses were not supported, certain demographic variables were significantly associated with outcomes. For example, use of antiretroviral medications was associated with lower viral load and gender (i.e., being male) was related to lower CD4. The limitations of this study and directions for future research are discussed.
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THE ROLE OF THE MESSAGE CONVERGENCE FRAMEWORK IN OBSTETRICIANS’ CLINICAL AND COMMUNICATIVE PRACTICESAnthony, Kathryn E 01 January 2013 (has links)
Over the past few years, the rate of elective interventions in pregnancy in the United States, including elective inductions of labor and elective cesarean deliveries, has increased dramatically. While scholars attribute some of the increase in elective interventions to the female patients who request elective procedures from obstetricians, some literature contradicts that notion and suggests physicians are actually the primary perpetuators of the growth in elective procedures. Although pregnant women may seek elective interventions because of desired convenience, physicians can also claim the benefit of convenience in scheduling deliveries. In addition, elective procedures provide physicians greater monetary compensation than labor and deliveries which evolve without intervention. The current dissertation investigates the communicative role of obstetricians in women’s delivery decisions through in-depth interviews with obstetricians practicing in the state of Kentucky (N=28). Guided by the framework of Message Convergence, the study assesses how obstetricians manage uncertainty surrounding patient care and make clinical decisions in the midst of either unclear evidence or competing messages. The study also reveals the ways that physicians utilize their medical expertise to engage in decision-making with patients. In addition, specific scenarios of decision-making regarding delivery are discussed, including patients’ requests and physicians’ provisions of requests; patients’ requests and physicians’ refusals of requests; and physicians’ recommendations for treatment and patients’ refusals of recommendations for treatment. Finally, the internal tensions and conflicts experienced by physicians in the decision-making process with patients are also examined.
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In Another's Voice: Making Sense of Reproductive Health as Women of ColorKetheeswaran, Nivethitha 03 July 2019 (has links)
The goals of this project are twofold. The first goal is to articulate my sense making of reproductive health for Women of color in the United States as a postcolonial condition; one that I trace back to the logics of elimination of settler colonialism (Wolfe, 2006) and frame as maintained through the colonial institutions, or racial projects (Omi & Winant, 2015), of the Prison Industrial Complex, the welfare system, and the health care system which create and perpetuate dominant cultural narratives of “the welfare queen”, “the negligent Black mother”, and “the wily patient”. I show how these narratives colonize the minds of health care providers and contribute to the current stratification of health care.
My second goal with this project is to show how postcolonial interpretive ethnography can be used as a narrative medicine educational intervention for providers. Currently, Narrative Medicine asks providers to read themselves, their patients, and their interactions as literature to emphasize the personal and interpersonal tensions that are often lost in the fast paced biomedical world (Charon, 2001). With this project I aim to expand the field of Narrative Medicine to consider the ways patient-provider interactions are postcolonial, and how analyses of these interactions can be a method of decolonization. I do so by analyzing three interpretive ethnographic narratives that I have created which story my interactions with three Women of color: Tiffany, Rose, and Jane. I then analyze each of these interactions for colonizing and decolonizing sense making.
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Patient Preferences Matter: A Qualitative Inquiry With Patients About the Surgical Decision for Osteosarcoma in the Lower ExtremityPanoch, Janet Elizabeth 06 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Purpose
The experience of surgical patient decision-making for amputation, rotationplasty, or limb salvage surgery for the lower extremity was explored with osteosarcoma survivors and parents. Issues and patient concerns were examined prospectively in Facebook posts and retrospectively in personal interviews. Recommendations were sought for the development of a decision aid.
Methods
A qualitative inquiry was conducted in two studies: 1) a content analysis of 15 Facebook posts on the Osteosarcoma and Ewing’s Sarcoma Support Group about the surgical decision, and 2) a narrative analysis of 20 interviews with survivors and parents about their lived experience. The interview guide was informed by a knowledge translation theoretical model. In-person or video interviews included 29 parents or adolescent-young adults between the ages of 14-71 across 15 states.
Results
Participants were concerned about making the best decision for themselves or their child. Having little time to make the decision contributes to feeling overwhelmed and uninformed. The lack of information about options, potential limitations, prosthetic needs, and long-term functional outcomes impacts the decision-making process. Resources for finding information are limited. Shared decision-making approaches were preferred though many decisions were made by the surgeon. Patients felt unprepared for complications encountered after limb salvage.
Conclusions
Limb salvage surgery remains the gold standard for most providers; participants felt there was a bias on the surgeon’s part for salvage. Potential complications and uncertainties of each option were largely omitted in consultations; information about living with a prosthesis is an unmet need for decision-making. The decision affected their quality of life in ways they did not anticipate, resulting in additional decisions.
Implications
The findings of this study can be used in medical education for orthopedic surgeons to understand the long-term outcomes of limb salvage surgery. Patient preferences matter in the decision and patients who are involved in the decision are more satisfied if they are prepared for the unknown and potential complications. Recommendations for a decision aid include an online format, content that includes a discussion of uncertainties as well as complications of each option, patient stories for long-term outcomes, and resources for psychosocial support.
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Using Human-Centered Designs to Support PPC During the COVID-19 CrisisMamlekar, Chitrali R. 05 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Cultural Competence in Health Care: Examining the Role of Information and Communication Technologies in Reducing Healthcare Disparities for Immigrant PatientsAlghazali, Idris 29 May 2023 (has links)
Background: Much research consistently shows that there are disparities in healthcare delivery. Healthcare disparities affect individuals across a broad range of demographics such as gender, race or ethnicity, and it is also related to socioeconomic factors such as income levels, access to health benefits and insurance, and health literacy. Recent immigrants to Canada encounter a different and unfamiliar healthcare system. This situation presents challenges to the practice of health care delivery. Therefore, it is crucial that innovative strategies be identified to reduce disparities in health care to promote the overall quality of care and public health services. Purpose: The purpose of this dissertation research was two-fold: (1) to examine cultural competence strategies, if any, that are used by healthcare organizations to improve interaction and communication between healthcare providers and their immigrant patients with the purpose to reduce healthcare disparities; and specifically, (2) to explore the use of Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) to improve communication between healthcare providers and immigrant patients with the objective of reducing healthcare disparities.
Methods: This dissertation research employed a mixed methods approach for data collection and analysis. The research was carried out in three phases. In the first phase, a series of focus group discussions with a sample of recent immigrants was conducted. In the second phase, an online survey was conducted to gain insights from healthcare providers regarding the role of ICTs in improving communication with immigrant patients to help reduce healthcare disparities. In the third phase, healthcare providers who participated in the survey were invited to participate in face-to-face, in-depth semi-structured interviews to further reflect on and extend the survey responses. Campinha-Bacote's Cultural Competence Model and Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology were employed for this dissertation research as its theoretical framework.
Results: The findings indicated that the absence of effective communication as well as cultural and language barriers were major issues related to communication between healthcare providers and immigrant patients. The findings also indicated that immigrant patients might need to improve their digital and health literacy skills in order to improve their communication with their healthcare providers. Further, the findings indicated that it was important for healthcare providers to have access to more demographic data on immigrant patients because such data will allow healthcare providers to be better informed on how to most effectively tailor their healthcare services to this population group.
Conclusion: Findings obtained from this dissertation research shed light on cross cultural communication issues related to working with immigrant patients that may lead to disparities in health care. Healthcare organizations may use these findings to better inform their decision making with regard to effective patient-provider communication. Finally, the findings bear important implications for the line of research that examines patient-provider communication from immigrant patients' perspectives. They can inform the design of cultural competence strategies for healthcare organizations.
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