Olukoga A, Folayan M, Harris G, Ajayi O
School of Medicine, Health Policy and Practice, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
West Afr J Med. 2010 Mar-Apr;29(2):104-8. doi: 10.4314/wajm.v29i2.68203.
Listening is a primary communication skill essential for human learning and reported to be positively correlated with school achievement. It enables the healthcare professional to explore fully the ideas and concerns of the patient during a healthcare encounter. It is especially needed by healthcare students and professionals in light of the study showing that the typical physician will interrupt a patient after about 18-23 seconds.
The objective of this study was to measure the listening skills of the undergraduate health sciences students in a Nigerian setting and to attempt to explain different levels of individual listening skills.
Selected undergraduate students in medicine, dentistry, nursing and physiotherapy who volunteered to complete a self-administered questionnaire were studied. The questionnaire contained seventeen items, ranked on a 5-point Likert scale on the various habits people adopt when listening to others and the students' three most recent academic test scores.
The mean (SD) score for the seventeen items was 2.72 (1.14) out of 5. Seven items had mean scores greater than 3.00, eight items had mean scores between 2.00 and 3.00, and two items had mean less than 2.00. The students had a minimum score of 27 and a maximum score of 67 compared with a possible 17 and 85. The mean (SD) score for the listening scale by the students was 46.87 (7.33). Eighty percent of the respondents had good listening skills. There were no statistically significant associations between the listening skills scores of the students and several possible explanatory variables - age, gender, course being studied and test scores.
The findings indicate that neither males nor females are the better listeners. It showed impressively high levels of listening skills among the respondents. There was the absence of explanatory variables which were significant in explaining differences between individual listening skill scores.
倾听是人类学习所必需的一项主要沟通技能,据报道与学业成绩呈正相关。它能使医疗保健专业人员在医疗接触过程中充分探究患者的想法和担忧。鉴于有研究表明,典型的医生会在大约18至23秒后打断患者,因此医学生和医疗保健专业人员尤其需要具备倾听能力。
本研究的目的是衡量尼日利亚本科健康科学专业学生的倾听技能,并试图解释个体倾听技能的不同水平。
对自愿完成一份自填式问卷的医学、牙科、护理和物理治疗专业的本科学生进行了研究。问卷包含17个项目,根据人们在倾听他人时所采用的各种习惯以及学生最近三次学术测试成绩,采用5点李克特量表进行评分。
17个项目的平均(标准差)得分为2.72(1.14)(满分5分)。7个项目的平均得分高于3.00,8个项目的平均得分在2.00至3.00之间,2个项目的平均得分低于2.00。与可能的最低分17分和最高分85分相比,学生的最低分为27分,最高分为67分。学生倾听量表的平均(标准差)得分为46.87(7.33)。80%的受访者具备良好的倾听技能。学生的倾听技能得分与几个可能的解释变量——年龄、性别、所学课程和测试成绩之间,没有统计学上的显著关联。
研究结果表明,无论是男性还是女性,都不是更好的倾听者。研究显示,受访者的倾听技能水平高得令人印象深刻。不存在能够显著解释个体倾听技能得分差异的解释变量。