Medical College of Wisconsin
CTSIResearch InformaticsREDCap

Child health providers' precautionary discussion of emotions during communication about results of newborn genetic screening. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2012 Jan;166(1):62-7

Date

01/04/2012

Pubmed ID

22213752

DOI

10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.696

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84855318519 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   10 Citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate a quantitative abstraction method for Communication Quality Assurance projects to assess physicians' communication about hidden emotions after newborn genetic screening.

DESIGN: Communication quality indicator analysis.

SETTING: Standardized parent encounters performed in practicing physicians' clinics or during educational workshops for residents.

PARTICIPANTS: Fifty-nine pediatrics residents, 53 pediatricians, and 31 family physicians.

INTERVENTION: Participants were asked to counsel standardized parents about a screening result; counseling was recorded, transcribed, and parsed into statements (each with 1 subject and 1 predicate). Pairs of abstractors independently compared statements with a data dictionary containing explicit-criteria definitions.

OUTCOME MEASURES: Four groups of "precautionary empathy" behaviors (assessment of emotion, anticipation/validation of emotion, instruction about emotion, and caution about future emotion), with definitions developed for both "definite" and "partial" instances.

RESULTS: Only 38 of 143 transcripts (26.6%) met definite criteria for at least 1 of the precautionary empathy behaviors. When partial criteria were counted, this number increased to 80 of 143 transcripts (55.9%). The most common type of precautionary empathy was the "instruction about emotion" behavior (eg, "don't be worried"), which may sometimes be leading or premature.

CONCLUSIONS: Precautionary empathy behaviors were rare in this analysis. Further study is needed, but this study should raise concerns about the quality of communication services after newborn screening.

Author List

Farrell MH, Speiser J, Deuster L, Christopher S



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Communication
Counseling
Emotions
Empathy
Female
Genetic Testing
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Male
Middle Aged
Neonatal Screening
Physician-Patient Relations
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Quality Assurance, Health Care