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Bhc gpj article
1. Building a Better Care Relationship
with Effective Doctor-Patient
Communication
By Michael L. Millenson
Communication Comes to the Fore
In 2001, the Institute of Medicine
listed âpatient-centered careâ as one
of six aims of the U.S. healthcare
system. Since then, measurement
of how effectively clinicians com-
municate with Medicare patients has
become part of âreport cardsâ shared
with the public and community
through the H-CAHPS survey
(Hospital Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems).
Similar report cards are planned
using a clinician and medical group
survey (known as CG-CAHPS).
Meanwhile, patient-centeredness
measures are linked to reimburse-
ment for Medicareâs accountable
care organizations, in the patient-
centered medical home, and in other
new payment models from private
and public payers.
While there are multiple ques-
tions, what lies at the heart of all
these surveys are the conversations
i n the era of accountable care orga-
nizations, patient-centered medical
homes, and online report cards,
The wording of the Care Card
and the doctor-patient interaction
involved in using it are carefully
that take place between physician
and patient.
The average physician conducts
effective communication between designed to help patients more more than 150,000 interviews
doctors and patients can have a efficiently and effectively express during a practice lifetime, making
significant impact on reimbursement, what they want to accomplish and the patient interview potentially
patient relationships, and community help doctors consistently collaborate âthe most powerful, sensitive, and
reputation. with them in doing so. The formal versatile instrument available.â1 It
The Better Health ConversationsSM name for this type of effort is does not always fulfill that potential:
program was developed as an âagenda setting.â one oft-quoted study showed that
evidence-based, consumer- and In a pilot program at three diverse physicians interrupt the patientâs ini-
physician-friendly means of medical groups, the program prompted tial description of his or her problem
integrating better communication a positive response from both patients after just 18-23 seconds.2
into the office visit routine to improve and veteran physicians who might Done right, however, effective
care and satisfaction. The programâs not have been aware that their own communication skills build a better
centerpiece is the Care CardSM, communication practices could be relationship that has a powerful
which patients bring with them into improved. As one physician participant impact on doctors and patients
the doctorâs office, share, and then acknowledged, âIt changed my way of alike. Better communication enables
take home. starting conversations with patients.â physicians to improve patientsâ
12 Group Practice Journal may 2012
May2012_mech.indd 12 5/14/12 12:08 PM
2. understanding of their illnesses, which was then shared with focus and office staff and a Frequently
improve patient adherence to treat- groups conducted with AMGA Asked Questions page
ment regimens, use time efficiently, member executives and doctors. â â Waiting Room Display, alert-
avoid professional burnout, and There are already health literacy ing patients to the program and
increase professional fulfillment.3 programs for patients, encourag- engaging them
Studies show âunequivocal and ing them to ask several specific â â CareCard for the patient to fill
significant relationshipsâ between questions, and training programs out and share with the physician
various aspects of communica- for physicians to improve commu-
tion and such health outcomes as nication skills. What distinguished The Care Card is central to
psychological and functional status, Better Health Conversations was our the program. It directly addresses
symptom recovery, and recovery decision to make improving com- patients at the point of care, asking
from emotional problems.4,5 munication a responsibility shared them to write down health concerns
On the other hand, physicians by clinicians and patients. That joint before seeing the physician and then
who communicate poorly not only approach, the focus on one specific take the card into the exam room
miss out on a chance to help their area (agenda setting), and the warm to share with the doctor. There are
patients, but also run an increased and friendly âlook/feelâ of all the three separate lines for the first
risk of being sued.6 program materials set it apart. three concerns, followed by lines for
The spread of consumer-oriented Two caveats came through loud âAdditional Concerns.â However,
medical websites, third-party payer and clear from AMGA members: the concerns were deliberately not
incentives related to patient satisfac- âWhatâs in it for me?â had to be numbered so as not to require (or
tion, and changed societal expecta- immediately apparent to doctors, and suggest) prioritization; joint agree-
tions have made effective com- the program had to fit seamlessly ment on prioritization is at the
munication even more important. into a very busy office workflow. heart of the clinical conversation.
Yet the nuts-and-bolts components Three diverse groups volunteered The request to the patient to fill out
of clinical communication, such as to help refine the materials and the card is phrased as a way to help
information sharing and relationship conduct a four-week pilot in the âusâ provide better care; that is, it
building, are inevitably stressful and summer of 2011: Crystal Run implicitly gives permission to the
challenging for both patient and Healthcare of Warwick, New York, patient to become a partner.
physician.7 Thatâs why both sides serving a suburban and rural popula- The reverse side of the card
need new tools that will allow them tion; Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis, includes space for note taking by
to move forward together. Ohio, serving a rural population; the patient or for notes written by
and University of Utah Health Care, the physician. However, the card is
Improving on Improvement Tools Salt Lake City, serving primarily an deliberately given back to the patient
Health Quality Advisors LLC, urban and suburban population. by the doctor so it does not become a
a consulting firm on quality of care formal part of the medical record and
and patient empowerment, began by Developing Program Materials possibly subject to privacy regulations.
assembling an expert advisory board While the Better Health
to develop an intervention that would Conversations materials are anchored Launching the Pilot
be effective in the group practice in the medical literature, they have We knew good materials alone
environment. We included patient a consumer-oriented look and an were insufficient. Building a better
advocates along with physicians and engaging style of writing that signals doctor-patient relationship starts
academic researchers. We also worked patient and doctor alike that this is with other relationships. Critical to
closely with the American Medical not typical âeducationalâ materials. launching the pilot was buy-in by
Group Association in conjunction The different components include: medical group leaders, who selected
with the pharmaceutical company a physician champion at each group.
Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. to ensure that â â A Program Guide for the Group They were: Jonathan Nasser, M.D.,
the intervention would be effective Practice that welcomes provid- an internist board-certified in
âin the trenches.â ers, describes the program, and pediatrics and internal medicine, at
In addition, we set out to learn contains references and other Crystal Run; Adam Breinig, D.O., a
from what had been done before by information family practice physician, at Holzer;
reviewing the medical literature on â â Agenda Setting: A Practical and John Houchins, M.D., a family
physician-patient communication Guide, supplementing hands-on practice physician, at Utah. All three
and assessing similar initiatives coaching at the program launch champions received background
offered by others. We also learned information on communication and
along the way: the expert advisory â â Folderwith Welcome Letter, in- on physician training.
board provided continual feedback, cluding an overview for physicians Training took place face-to-face
14 Group Practice Journal may 2012
May2012_mech.indd 14 5/14/12 12:08 PM
3. for about an hour at a lunch or unfounded. The most frequent gram was helpful to them in their
breakfast meeting onsite with the number of concerns listed on the overall interaction with patients.
physicians in each group recruited to Care Card was one (36.5 percent). Sixty-five percent felt âthe Care
try out the program. After a remote Just 12 percent of patients listed Card was helpful to me in my
presentation by advisory board more than three concerns. interaction with patientsâ and 50
experts Howard Beckman, M.D., and â Patient satisfaction with how percent agreed âI was more satisfied
Richard Frankel, Ph.D., about the physicians addressed concerns was with my interactions with patients.â
science of doctor-patient communica- very high. About 98 percent of For a short pilot with a very modest
tion, Health Quality Advisorsâ team patients were âcompletelyâ or âvery behavioral intervention, that sort of
members on site provided informa- satisfiedâ with the visit. positive impact is striking.
tion about the goals and structure â The consistency of satisfaction â About two-thirds of physicians
of the program. Most important of suggested a program effect. Even favored continued use of the Care
all was an interactive role-playing when patient expectations were Card or were neutral. Fifty-seven
exercise in which physicians had the increased by telling them their percent were positive and 14
opportunity to use the Care Card in doctor was interested in what they percent neutral. Some of those
clinical scenarios developed by Health wrote on the Care Card, those reacting negatively may have been
Quality Advisors. Switching between new and higher expectations were influenced by a technical glitchâ
the doctor and patient roles provided met. Had they not been, satisfac- the cards were printed on glossy
a personal experience of how the tion could have taken a dip. paper that was tough to write on.
Care Card could work in an actual
clinical encounter and gave physicians â The Care Card appears to have This positive reaction stands
the opportunity to ask practical (and been a relationship facilitator. out even more when one considers
probing) questions. Patients seemed to have felt more that practicing physicians tend to
The Health Quality Advisors comfortable sharing concerns. One believe they already communicate
team and the physician champion physician champion said the Care well; it typically takes videotaping
also spoke with front office staff Card got patients talking about and formal follow-up to suggest
at each group about their role in problems they wouldnât ordinarily otherwise. Two physician champions
helping explain to patients what was talk aboutâtruly a better health said they did not fully appreciate
being asked of them and helping conversation. Others reported some the impact of the Care Card on
make the program a smooth-flowing returning patients asked about the their own practice habits until they
part of the office routine. A regularly Care Card after the pilot ended. stopped using them and saw how
scheduled phone call among the they had served as a âpromptâ for
physician champions and the Health Perhaps in part because of the agenda setting.
Quality Advisors team also provided patient reaction, participating physi-
support and feedback. cians were mostly positive. Conclusion
Better communication builds
The Results â Nearly 80 percent of physicians better relationships that have posi-
A satisfaction survey attached to agreed the program improved tive clinical effects, positive effects
the Care Card was returned by 1,465 agenda setting, both by prepar- on patient satisfaction, and positive
patients during the pilot. A physician ing patients and reminding them effects on clinician worklife satisfac-
satisfaction survey was returned by of the importance of setting an tion. We believe the Better Health
14 out of 19 participants and at least agenda jointly. When asked to Conversations pilot to enhance
60 percent at each medical group. respond to the statement, âMy physician-patient communications
We also tracked anecdotal reports. patients were better prepared to succeeded for several reasons:
While this was not a research study, discuss their concerns,â 11 of 14
we submitted the survey results for physicians agreed somewhat or â The program focused on an
analysis by an academic consultant. strongly, two disagreed somewhat important problem for medical
In sum, signs of the good things or strongly, and one was neutral. groups and physicians. As a result,
the medical literature predictedâ When asked whether the Care it received strong support from the
albeit difficult to see clearly in a very Card âwas a useful reminder to me leadership and individual physi-
short pilotâstarted to appear while about agenda setting,â 11 physi- cian champions.
the feared negative consequences did cians agreed somewhat or strongly, â The program addressed an indi-
not. For example: three disagreed somewhat or vidual component of physician-
strongly, and none was neutral. patient communication where it
â Fears of opening a âPandoraâs â Physicians generally felt the pro- could make a difference in a man-
boxâ of patient concerns proved
16 Group Practice Journal may 2012
4. ner that resonated with doctors
and patients alike.
â The program was innovative, col-
laborative, and flexible. Feedback
from participants and Health
Quality Advisorsâ program partners
was solicited and acted upon.
As a next step, we are using the
feedback received from the pilot to
refine the content of materials and
the way those materials are used to
improve their effectiveness. In todayâs
healthcare environment, with an
increasing need to integrate better
physician-patient communication into
the routine processes of outpatient
care at medical groups, a collaboration
between doctors and patients is more
important than ever. Better Health
Conversations seems to provide
an evidence-based, consumer- and
physician-friendly means of helping
that collaboration happen.
References
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Must Medicineâs Science Be Bound by
a Seventeenth Century World View? In:
K.L. White, ed. The Task of Medicine: Dialog
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ers, and H.B. Beckman. 1999. Soliciting
the patientâs agenda: have we improved?
JAMA, 281(3): 283-287.
3. Anthony L. Back et. al. 2005. Approaching
Difficult Communications Tasks in Oncol-
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164-177.
4. M.A. Stewart. 1995. Effective physician-
patient communication and health
outcomes: a review. Canadian Medical
Association Journal, 152(9): 1423-1433.
5. Rainer S. Beck, Rebecca Daughtridge, and
Philip D. Sloane. 2002. Physician-patient
communication in the primary care office:
a systematic review. The Journal of the
American Board of Family Practice, 15(1):
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Complaints and Malpractice Risk. JAMA,
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Stewart. 2002. Enhancing physician-pa-
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464-483.
Michael L. Millenson is president of
Health Quality Advisors LLC in High-
land Park, Illinois and the Mervin
Shalowitz, M.D., Visiting Scholar at
Kellogg School of Management.