Characteristics of communication guidelines that facilitate or impede guideline use: a focus group study
Open Access
- 16 May 2007
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Family Practice
- Vol. 8 (1) , 31
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2296-8-31
Abstract
The quality of doctor-patient communication has a major impact on the quality of medical care. Communication guidelines define best practices for doctor patient communication and are therefore an important tool for improving communication. However, adherence to communication guidelines remains low, despite doctors participating in intensive communication skill training. Implementation research shows that adherence is higher for guidelines in general that are user centred and feasible, which implies that they are consistent with users' opinions, tap into users' existing skills and fit into existing routines. Developers of communication guidelines seem to have been somewhat negligent with regard to user preferences and guideline feasibility. In order to promote the development of user centred and practicable communication guidelines, we elicited user preferences and identified which guideline characteristics facilitate or impede guideline use.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- The assessment of depressive patients’ involvement in decision making in audio-taped primary care consultationsPatient Education and Counseling, 2006
- Teaching and learning consultation skills for paediatric practiceArchives of Disease in Childhood, 2006
- Is there a cost to poor communication in cancer care?: a critical review of the literaturePsycho‐Oncology, 2005
- Communication training for health professionals who care for patients with cancer: a systematic review of training methodsSupportive Care in Cancer, 2004
- Communication training for health professionals who care for patients with cancer: a systematic review of effectivenessSupportive Care in Cancer, 2004
- Improving communication between health professionals and women in maternity care: a structured reviewHealth Expectations, 2002
- The East Anglia Deanery Communication Skills Teaching Project--six years onMedical Teacher, 2002
- Suffering in deference: a focus group study of older cardiac patients' preferences for treatment and perceptions of riskQuality and Safety in Health Care, 2001
- Variability in patient preferences for participating in medical decision making: implication for the use of decision support toolsQuality and Safety in Health Care, 2001
- The Patient-Centred Clinical Method. 1. A Model for the Doctor-Patient Interaction in Family MedicineFamily Practice, 1986