Health Care Communication
As the nation's health care resources become more and more strained, health care professionals are being asked to do more with less. They are being pressured to find cheaper ways to improve the quality of health care they deliver. Given the current circumstances, this sounds difficult and even unreasonable, but it may not be entirely impossible.
One simple way for medical professionals to improve the quality of health care they provide is by improving their health care communication skills. Health care communication is "The art and technique of informing, influencing, and motivating individual, institutional, and public audiences about important health issues. The scope of health communication includes disease prevention, health promotion, health care policy, and the business of health care as well as enhancement of the quality of life and health of individuals within the community." (U.S.D.S.H.S., 2000, p.11-20).
In health care, as in all aspects of life, communication is important. Almost everyone knows firsthand the power of words. Words can be used to help people, but can also be used to hurt people. For health care professionals, words are invariably meant to help patients. However, some words end up having the opposite effect, creating fear and depression in the patient. The ultimate goal of the health care communication field, or therapeutic communication field, is to figure out the relationship between communication and personal health.
The Relevancy of Effective Professional Health Care Communication to Health Outcomes
There have been number of studies which demonstrate a strong relationship between health care communication and health outcomes. These studies have looked at some of the most important categories of health outcomes, most notably those relating to patient capacity and effort after treatment. Although these outcomes are considered to be beyond the control of a health care professional in the traditional sense, they appear to be predicted by certain health care communication factors.
Patient Capacity to Self-Manage a Chronic Medical Condition
A 2003 study investigated the association of physician communication behaviors as perceived by the patient with patient reported satisfaction, distress, cancer-related self-efficacy, and perceived control over the disease in cancer patients. The overall results showed that higher survey scores of physician attentiveness and empathy were associated with greater patient...
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