Abstract

BackgroundCommunication is a key competence for health care professionals. Analysis of registrar and GP communication performance in daily practice, however, suggests a suboptimal application of communication skills. The influence of context factors could reveal why communication performance levels, on average, do not appear adequate. The context of daily practice may require different skills or specific ways of handling these skills, whereas communication skills are mostly treated as generic. So far no empirical analysis of the context has been made. Our aim was to identify context factors that could be related to GP communication.MethodsA purposive sample of real-life videotaped GP consultations was analyzed (N = 17). As a frame of reference we chose the MAAS-Global, a widely used assessment instrument for medical communication. By inductive reasoning, we analyzed the GP behaviour in the consultation leading to poor item scores on the MAAS-Global. In these cases we looked for the presence of an intervening context factor, and how this might explain the actual GP communication behaviour.ResultsWe reached saturation after having viewed 17 consultations. We identified 19 context factors that could potentially explain the deviation from generic recommendations on communication skills. These context factors can be categorized into doctor-related, patient-related, and consultation-related factors.ConclusionsSeveral context factors seem to influence doctor-patient communication, requiring the GP to apply communication skills differently from recommendations on communication. From this study we conclude that there is a need to explicitly account for context factors in the assessment of GP (and GP registrar) communication performance. The next step is to validate our findings.

Highlights

  • Communication is a key competence for health care professionals

  • We found 19 context factors in GP consultations that could be related to low scores on the MAAS-Global

  • If goals are modulated by the specific context and communication is goal-oriented, context factors should explicitly play a role in the assessment of GP communication performance

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Summary

Introduction

Analysis of registrar and GP communication performance in daily practice, suggests a suboptimal application of communication skills. The influence of context factors could reveal why communication performance levels, on average, do not appear adequate. The context of daily practice may require different skills or specific ways of handling these skills, whereas communication skills are mostly treated as generic. Our aim was to identify context factors that could be related to GP communication. There are indications, that the effects of such communication skills training for GP registrars are limited [7,8,9,10], a recent study shows some improvement is possible [11]. Find it difficult to apply acquired communication skills when working in daily practice [12].

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