4.6 Article

A Tool to Strengthen the Older Patient-Companion Partnership in Primary Care: Results from a Pilot Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 62, Issue 2, Pages 312-319

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.12639

Keywords

family caregiver; patient-provider communication; physician office; primary health care

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [K01MH082885]
  2. (National Institute on Aging) from AFAR [K23 AG032910]
  3. NIA
  4. John A. Hartford Foundation
  5. Commonwealth Fund
  6. Retirement Research Fund

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ObjectivesTo determine the acceptability of a pre-consultation checklist for older adults who attend medical visits with an unpaid companion and to evaluate its effects on visit communication. DesignRandomized controlled pilot study. SettingAcademic geriatrics ambulatory clinic. ParticipantsThirty-two individuals aged 65 and older and their unpaid companions. InterventionA self-administered checklist was compared with usual care. The checklist was designed to elicit and align patient and companion perspectives regarding health concerns to discuss with the doctor and stimulate discussion about the companion's role in the visit. MeasurementPrimary outcome: ratio of patient-centered communication, coded from visit audiotapes. Secondary outcomes: checklist acceptability; visit duration; patient-companion verbal activity; patient- and physician-reported perspectives of the visit. ResultsAll intervention patients and companions (n=17) completed the checklist, and all participants (n=32 dyads) completed the study. Patients and companions stated that the checklist was easy to complete (88%) and useful (91%), and they uniformly (100%) recommended it to other patients. Communication was significantly more patient-centered in intervention group visits (ratio of 1.22 vs 0.71; P=.03). Visit duration (35.0 and 30.6minutes; P=.34) and percentage of total verbal activity contributed by patients and companions (58.2% and 56.3% of visit statements; P=.50) were comparable in the intervention and control groups, respectively. Physicians were more likely to indicate that intervention companions helped them provide good care to the patient (94% vs 60%; P=.02). Intervention patients were more likely to indicate that they better understood their doctor's advice and explanations because their companion was present (82% vs 47%; P=.03). ConclusionA checklist to elicit and align perspectives of older adults and their companions resulted in enhanced patient-centered medical visit communication.

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