Scolaris Content Display Scolaris Content Display

Intervensi untuk penyedia untuk mempromosi pendekatan berpusatkan pesakit dalam konsultasi klinikal

Abstract

disponible en

Background

Communication problems in health care may arise as a result of healthcare providers focusing on diseases and their management, rather than people, their lives and their health problems. Patient‐centred approaches to care delivery in the patient encounter are increasingly advocated by consumers and clinicians and incorporated into training for healthcare providers. However, the impact of these interventions directly on clinical encounters and indirectly on patient satisfaction, healthcare behaviour and health status has not been adequately evaluated.

Objectives

To assess the effects of interventions for healthcare providers that aim to promote patient‐centred care (PCC) approaches in clinical consultations.

Search methods

For this update, we searched: MEDLINE (OvidSP), EMBASE (OvidSP), PsycINFO (OvidSP), and CINAHL (EbscoHOST) from January 2000 to June 2010. The earlier version of this review searched MEDLINE (1966 to December 1999), EMBASE (1985 to December 1999), PsycLIT (1987 to December 1999), CINAHL (1982 to December 1999) and HEALTH STAR (1975 to December 1999). We searched the bibliographies of studies assessed for inclusion and contacted study authors to identify other relevant studies. Any study authors who were contacted for further information on their studies were also asked if they were aware of any other published or ongoing studies that would meet our inclusion criteria.

Selection criteria

In the original review, study designs included randomized controlled trials, controlled clinical trials, controlled before and after studies, and interrupted time series studies of interventions for healthcare providers that promote patient‐centred care in clinical consultations. In the present update, we were able to limit the studies to randomized controlled trials, thus limiting the likelihood of sampling error. This is especially important because the providers who volunteer for studies of PCC methods are likely to be different from the general population of providers. Patient‐centred care was defined as a philosophy of care that encourages: (a) shared control of the consultation, decisions about interventions or management of the health problems with the patient, and/or (b) a focus in the consultation on the patient as a whole person who has individual preferences situated within social contexts (in contrast to a focus in the consultation on a body part or disease). Within our definition, shared treatment decision‐making was a sufficient indicator of PCC. The participants were healthcare providers, including those in training.

Data collection and analysis

We classified interventions by whether they focused only on training providers or on training providers and patients, with and without condition‐specific educational materials. We grouped outcome data from the studies to evaluate both direct effects on patient encounters (consultation process variables) and effects on patient outcomes (satisfaction, healthcare behaviour change, health status). We pooled results of RCTs using standardized mean difference (SMD) and relative risks (RR) applying a fixed‐effect model.

Main results

Forty‐three randomized trials met the inclusion criteria, of which 29 are new in this update. In most of the studies, training interventions were directed at primary care physicians (general practitioners, internists, paediatricians or family doctors) or nurses practising in community or hospital outpatient settings. Some studies trained specialists. Patients were predominantly adults with general medical problems, though two studies included children with asthma. Descriptive and pooled analyses showed generally positive effects on consultation processes on a range of measures relating to clarifying patients' concerns and beliefs; communicating about treatment options; levels of empathy; and patients' perception of providers' attentiveness to them and their concerns as well as their diseases. A new finding for this update is that short‐term training (less than 10 hours) is as successful as longer training.

The analyses showed mixed results on satisfaction, behaviour and health status. Studies using complex interventions that focused on providers and patients with condition‐specific materials generally showed benefit in health behaviour and satisfaction, as well as consultation processes, with mixed effects on health status. Pooled analysis of the fewer than half of included studies with adequate data suggests moderate beneficial effects from interventions on the consultation process; and mixed effects on behaviour and patient satisfaction, with small positive effects on health status. Risk of bias varied across studies. Studies that focused only on provider behaviour frequently did not collect data on patient outcomes, limiting the conclusions that can be drawn about the relative effect of intervention focus on providers compared with providers and patients.

Authors' conclusions

Interventions to promote patient‐centred care within clinical consultations are effective across studies in transferring patient‐centred skills to providers. However the effects on patient satisfaction, health behaviour and health status are mixed. There is some indication that complex interventions directed at providers and patients that include condition‐specific educational materials have beneficial effects on health behaviour and health status, outcomes not assessed in studies reviewed previously. The latter conclusion is tentative at this time and requires more data. The heterogeneity of outcomes, and the use of single item consultation and health behaviour measures limit the strength of the conclusions.

PICO

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

El uso y la enseñanza del modelo PICO están muy extendidos en el ámbito de la atención sanitaria basada en la evidencia para formular preguntas y estrategias de búsqueda y para caracterizar estudios o metanálisis clínicos. PICO son las siglas en inglés de cuatro posibles componentes de una pregunta de investigación: paciente, población o problema; intervención; comparación; desenlace (outcome).

Para saber más sobre el uso del modelo PICO, puede consultar el Manual Cochrane.

Plain language summary

Melatih penyedia penjagaan kesihatan untuk menjadi lebih 'berpusatkan pesakit' dalam konsultasi klinikal

Masalah mungkin timbul apabila penyedia penjagaan kesihatan menumpu pada pengurusan penyakit dan bukannya kepada orang dan masalah kesihatan mereka. Pendekatan berpusatkan pesakit untuk penyampaian penjagaan dalam pertemuan pesakit semakin dianjurkan oleh pengguna dan doktor dan disertakan ke dalam latihan untuk penyedia penjagaan kesihatan. Kami mengemas kini ulasan sistematik tahun 2001 tentang kesan intervensi latihan ini untuk penyedia penjagaan kesihatan yang bertujuan untuk mempromosi penjagaan berpusatkan pesakit dalam konsultasi klinikal.

Kami menemui 29 kajian rawak baru (sehingga Jun 2010), menjadikan jumlah kajian yang disertakan dalam ulasan kepada 43. Dalam kebanyakan kajian, intervensi latihan ditujukan kepada doktor penjagaan primer (pengamal perubatan am, internis, pakar pediatrik atau doktor keluarga) atau jururawat yang berkhidmat dalam komuniti atau seting pesakit luar di hospital. Beberapa kajian melatih pakar. Pesakit kebanyakannya orang dewasa dengan masalah perubatan am, walaupun dua kajian menyertakan kanak‐kanak yang menghidap asma.

Kajian menunjukkan bahawa pelatihan penyedia untuk meningkatkan keupayaan mereka untuk berkongsi kawalan dengan pesakit tentang topik dan keputusan yang dibincang dalam konsultasi sebahagian besarnya berjaya dalam mengajar kemahiran baru kepada penyedia. Latihan jangka pendek (kurang daripada 10 jam) mencapai kejayaan yang sama dalam hal ini seperti latihan yang diberi dalam jangka masa yang lebih lama. Hasil bercampur‐campur tentang sama ada pesakit lebih berpuas hati apabila penyedia mengamalkan kemahiran ini. Kesan terhadap kesihatan umum juga bercampur‐campur, walaupun data terhad yang boleh dikumpulkan menunjukkan kesan positif yang kecil terhadap status kesihatan. Tingkah laku kesihatan khusus pesakit menunjukkan penambahbaikan dalam bilangan kajian yang kecil di mana intervensi menggunakan latihan penyedia yang digabung dengan bahan pendidikan dan/atau latihan khusus kepada keadaan untuk pesakit, seperti mengajar pertanyaan soalan semasa konsultasi atau pengambilan ubat selepas konsultasi. Walau bagaimanapun, bilangan kajian adalah terlalu kecil untuk menentukan elemen kajian pelbagai aspek yang penting dalam membantu pesakit mengubah tingkah laku penjagaan kesihatan mereka.