A Nephrology Fellows’ Communication Skills Course: An Educational Quality Improvement Report
Background Nephrology fellows need expertise navigating challenging conversations with patients throughout the course of advanced kidney disease. However, evidence shows that nephrologists receive inadequate training in this area. This study assessed the effectiveness of an educational quality impro...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of kidney diseases 2016-08, Vol.68 (2), p.203-211 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background Nephrology fellows need expertise navigating challenging conversations with patients throughout the course of advanced kidney disease. However, evidence shows that nephrologists receive inadequate training in this area. This study assessed the effectiveness of an educational quality improvement intervention designed to enhance fellows’ communication with patients who have advanced kidney disease. Study Design Quality improvement project. Setting & Participants Full-day annual workshops (2013-2014) using didactics, discussion, and practice with simulated patients. Content focused on delivering bad news, acknowledging emotion, discussing care goals in dialysis decision making when prognosis is uncertain, and addressing dialysis therapy withdrawal and end of life. Participants were first-year nephrology fellows from 2 Harvard-affiliated training programs (N = 26). Quality Improvement Plan Study assessed the effectiveness of an intervention designed to enhance fellows’ communication skills. Outcomes Primary outcomes were changes in self-reported patient communication skills, attitudes, and behaviors related to discussing disease progression, prognostic uncertainty, dialysis therapy withdrawal, treatments not indicated, and end of life; responding to emotion; eliciting patient goals and values; and incorporating patient goals into recommendations. Measurements Surveys measured prior training, pre- and postcourse perceived changes in skills and values, and reported longer term (3-month) changes in communication behaviors, using both closed- and open-ended items. Results Response rates were 100% (pre- and postsurveys) and 68% (follow-up). Participants reported improvement in all domains, with an overall mean increase of 1.1 (summed average scores: precourse, 2.8; postcourse, 3.9 [1-5 scale; 5 = “extremely well prepared”]; P < 0.001), with improvement sustained at 3 months. Participants reported meaningful changes integrating into practice specific skills taught, such as “Ask-Tell-Ask” and using open-ended questions. Limitations Self-reported data may overestimate actual changes; small sample size and the programs’ affiliation with a single medical school may limit generalizability. Conclusions A day-long course addressing nephrology fellows’ communication competencies across the full course of patients’ illness experience can enhance fellows’ self-reported skills and practices. |
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ISSN: | 0272-6386 1523-6838 |
DOI: | 10.1053/j.ajkd.2016.01.025 |