4.6 Article

Eliciting the Patient's Agenda- Secondary Analysis of Recorded Clinical Encounters

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 36-40

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-018-4540-5

Keywords

agenda setting; patient-centered care; patient-physician communication

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [P30 DK092926] Funding Source: Medline

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BackgroundEliciting patient concerns and listening carefully to them contributes to patient-centered care. Yet, clinicians often fail to elicit the patient's agenda and, when they do, they interrupt the patient's discourse.ObjectiveWe aimed to describe the extent to which patients' concerns are elicited across different clinical settings and how shared decision-making tools impact agenda elicitation.Design and ParticipantsWe performed a secondary analysis of a random sample of 112 clinical encounters recorded during trials testing the efficacy of shared decision-making tools.Main MeasuresTwo reviewers, working independently, characterized the elicitation of the patient agenda and the time to interruption or to complete statement; we analyzed the distribution of agenda elicitation according to setting and use of shared decision-making tools.Key ResultsClinicians elicited the patient's agenda in 40 of 112 (36%) encounters. Agendas were elicited more often in primary care (30/61 encounters, 49%) than in specialty care (10/51 encounters, 20%); p=.058. Shared decision-making tools did not affect the likelihood of eliciting the patient's agenda (34 vs. 37% in encounters with and without these tools; p=.09). In 27 of the 40 (67%) encounters in which clinicians elicited patient concerns, the clinician interrupted the patient after a median of 11seconds (interquartile range 7-22; range 3 to 234s). Uninterrupted patients took a median of 6s (interquartile range 3-19; range 2 to 108s) to state their concern.ConclusionsClinicians seldom elicit the patient's agenda; when they do, they interrupt patients sooner than previously reported. Physicians in specialty care elicited the patient's agenda less often compared to physicians in primary care. Failure to elicit the patient's agenda reduces the chance that clinicians will orient the priorities of a clinical encounter toward specific aspects that matter to each patient.

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