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Rating communication in GP consultations: the association between ratings made by patients and trained clinical raters

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-04-01, 00:00 authored by Jenni Burt, Gary Abel, Natasha Elmore, Jenny Newbould, Antoinette Davey, Nadia Llanwarne, Inocencio Maramba, Charlotte Paddison, John Benson, Jonathan SilvermanJonathan Silverman, Marc N Elliott, John Campbell, Martin Roland
Patient evaluations of physician communication are widely used, but we know little about how these relate to professionally agreed norms of communication quality. We report an investigation into the association between patient assessments of communication quality and an observer-rated measure of communication competence. Consent was obtained to video record consultations with Family Practitioners in England, following which patients rated the physician's communication skills. A sample of consultation videos was subsequently evaluated by trained clinical raters using an instrument derived from the Calgary-Cambridge guide to the medical interview. Consultations scored highly for communication by clinical raters were also scored highly by patients. However, when clinical raters judged communication to be of lower quality, patient scores ranged from "poor" to "very good." Some patients may be inhibited from rating poor communication negatively. Patient evaluations can be useful for measuring relative performance of physicians' communication skills, but absolute scores should be interpreted with caution.

History

Journal

Medical care research and review

Volume

75

Issue

2

Pagination

201 - 218

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Location

London, Eng.

eISSN

1552-6801

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, The Author(s)