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Introduction to communication patterns

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University of East Anglia, Norwich, U.K. 13th ... By end of keynote: ... A set of behaviours by which people habitually seek to convey meaning to another ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to communication patterns


1
Introduction to communication patterns
  • Amanda Howe
  • MA MEd MD FRCGP
  • Professor of Primary Care
  • University of East Anglia, Norwich, U.K.

2
Objectives
  • By end of keynote
  • Be able to identify your taken for granted
    assumptions about doctor patient communication
    in family medicine
  • Have reconsidered some established models for
    analysis
  • Become aware of contribution of different
    disciplines to this field of learning and
    research
  • Be able to apply some simple tools to your
    consultations
  • Have begun to think of some areas for study in
    practice
  • Be able to identify issues in consultation where
    communication patterns may mislead us

3
Definitions1
  • To communicate
  • impart, reveal, bestow
  • succeed in conveying ones meaning
  • have something in common with another
  • A pattern
  • something to be copied, a model
  • a design or guide when something is to be made
  • recognisable repetitive structure
  • thus, Communication patterns
  • - A set of behaviours by which people habitually
    seek to convey meaning to another
  • NB may not be successful or model
  • 1Chambers English Dictionary, 1998

4
Assumptions
  • What do you take for granted in your
    communication with patients?
  • Discuss
  • Consider further after the workshop
  • Your own learned styles(s)?
  • Need to modify this to patients?
  • Time limits?
  • Tasks to be achieved?
  • Language and cultural barriers?

5
Models of communication in family medicine
  • Doctor centred versus patient centred
  • Calgary Cambridge OLOBA
  • Objective Led Outcome Based Analysis
  • Broader consultation analysis models
  • Leicester Assessment Package
  • LIV-MAAS
  • MRCGP video rating scale
  • Consultation Quality Index
  • gtgtgtgt
  • (NB. these look at communication and clinical
    care)

6
Evidence based assumptions in these models
  • How we communicate is essential to successful
    outcomes both diagnostic and relational
  • There are recognisable components to the
    consultation (not necessarily sequential in time)
  • gt initiating, building rapport, gathering
    information, providing structure, effective
    explanation, shared decision making
  • The opening component of the consultation must
    give scope to the patient to communicate reveal
  • Some parts of the consultation must be doctor
    led
  • Behaviours can be observed and evaluated
  • but meaning cannot be interpreted by an
    outsider

7
Disciplines which contribute to studies of
communication
  • Family medicine (core clinical skill)
  • Psychology
  • Sociology (influence of power culture)
  • Linguistics (meaning, communication styles)
  • Ethics and law (constraints, confidentiality)
  • Education (learning, research into impacts)
  • Humanities (indirectly but effectively)
  • Philosophy (epistemology)

8
Practical Approaches
  • Use an accredited evidence based checklist
  • CPD opportunity to look at ones consultations
    (video, observer, simulated patients)
  • Audit patient feedback CQI, LIV-MAAS
  • Audit diagnoses especially any mishaps - for
    contribution of communication problems
  • Reflect on difficult consultations especially
    cultural barriers, anger, somatisation consider
    further training if needed
  • Read and think!

9
Communication patterns - recommendations
  • Consultations should include recognisable
    components
  • gt initiating, building rapport, gathering
    information, providing structure, effective
    explanation, shared decision making
  • The opening component of the consultation must
    give scope to the patient to communicate reveal
  • Microbehaviours e.g. clarification, checking,
    and safety netting are crucial to effective
    communication
  • Nonverbal behaviours may be as important as
    verbal
  • Continuous reflection on this aspect of
    professional behaviours is essential for all FMPs

10
Communication - can be misleading
  • PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPAIRMENT drugs, depression,
    damage, disability
  • DISTRUST vulnerability, power, abuse
  • LANGUAGE BARRIERS
  • CHARACTER introversion / extroversion,
    emotional literacy / expressiveness
  • IMITATING vs genuine EMPATHY/RESPECT
  • gtgt looking behind the message
  • SYSTEMS CONSTRAINTS time, design
  • gtgt need for underlying attitudinal development,
    organisational facilitation and self management

11
Introduction to communication patterns
Amanda Howe MA MEd MD FRCGP Professor of Primary
Care University of East Anglia, Norwich, U.K.
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