A Division of Medical Communications in an Academic Medical Center’s Department of Medicine

Excellent physician communication skills (physician-to-patient and patient-to-physician) have been found to have a positive impact on patient satisfaction and may positively affect patient health behaviors and health outcomes. Such skills are also essential for accurate, succinct, and clear peer-to-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic Medicine 2014-12, Vol.89 (12), p.1623-1629
Hauptverfasser: Drazen, Jeffrey M, Shields, Helen M, Loscalzo, Joseph
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container_title Academic Medicine
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creator Drazen, Jeffrey M
Shields, Helen M
Loscalzo, Joseph
description Excellent physician communication skills (physician-to-patient and patient-to-physician) have been found to have a positive impact on patient satisfaction and may positively affect patient health behaviors and health outcomes. Such skills are also essential for accurate, succinct, and clear peer-to-peer (physician-to-physician), physician-to-lay-public, and physician-to-media communications. These skills are not innate, however; they must be learned and practiced repeatedly. The Division of Medical Communications (DMC) was created within the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital as an intellectual home for physicians who desire to learn and teach the wide variety of skills needed for effective communication.In this Perspective, the authors provide an overview of the key types of medical communications and share the DMC model as an innovative approach to providing expert guidance to physicians and physicians-in-training as they develop, practice, and refine their communication skills. Current DMC projects and programs include a Volunteer Patient Teaching Corps, which provides feedback to medical students, residents, and faculty on communication skills; a controlled trial of a modified team-based learning method for attending rounds; expert coaching in preparation for presentations of all types (e.g., grand rounds; oral presentations or poster presentations on basic science, clinical, or medical education research); sessions on speaking to the media and running a meeting well; and courses on writing for publication. Objective assessment of the impact of each of these interventions is planned.
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid LWW Legacy Archive; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Academic Medical Centers - organization & administration
Clinical Competence
Communication
Education, Medical - methods
Humans
Interdisciplinary Communication
Patient Education as Topic
Physician-Patient Relations
Professional Competence
Program Development
title A Division of Medical Communications in an Academic Medical Center’s Department of Medicine
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