Shay L Aubree, Street Richard L, Baldwin Austin S, Marks Emily G, Lee Simon Craddock, Higashi Robin T, Skinner Celette Sugg, Fuller Sobha, Persaud Donna, Tiro Jasmin A
University of Texas School of Public Health, San Antonio Regional Campus, Department of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences, 7411 John Smith Drive, Suite 1100, San Antonio, TX 78229, USA.
Texas A & M University, Department of Communication, 102 Bolton Hall, College Station, TX 77843-4234, USA; Baylor College of Medicine, Department of Medicine, 1 Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Patient Educ Couns. 2016 Sep;99(9):1452-60. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2016.06.027. Epub 2016 Jun 25.
Although provider recommendation is a key predictor of HPV vaccination, how providers verbalize recommendations particularly strong ones is unknown. We developed a tool to describe strength and content of provider recommendations.
We used electronic health records to identify unvaccinated adolescents with appointments at six safety-net clinics in Dallas, Texas. Clinic visit audio-recordings were qualitatively analyzed to identify provider recommendation types (presumptive vs. participatory introduction; strong vs. weak), describe content communicated, and explore patterns between recommendation type and vaccination.
We analyzed 43 audio-recorded discussions between parents and 12 providers. Most providers used a participatory introduction (42 discussions) and made weak recommendations (24 discussions) by using passive voice or adding a qualification (e.g., not school required). Few providers (11 discussions) gave strong recommendations (clear, personally-owned endorsement). HPV vaccination was lowest for those receiving only weak recommendations and highest when providers coupled the recommendation with an adjacent rationale.
Our new tool provides initial evidence of how providers undercut their recommendations through qualifications or support them with a rationale. Most providers gave weak HPV vaccine recommendations and used a participatory introduction.
Providers would benefit from communication skills training on how to make explicit recommendations with an evidence-based rationale.
尽管医疗服务提供者的建议是HPV疫苗接种的关键预测因素,但医疗服务提供者如何表达建议,尤其是强烈的建议,尚不清楚。我们开发了一种工具来描述医疗服务提供者建议的力度和内容。
我们使用电子健康记录来识别在得克萨斯州达拉斯市六家安全网诊所预约就诊的未接种疫苗的青少年。对门诊就诊录音进行定性分析,以确定医疗服务提供者的建议类型(推定式与参与式介绍;强烈与微弱),描述所传达的内容,并探索建议类型与疫苗接种之间的模式。
我们分析了家长与12名医疗服务提供者之间的43次录音讨论。大多数医疗服务提供者采用参与式介绍(42次讨论),并通过使用被动语态或添加限定条件(如学校不要求)给出微弱建议(24次讨论)。少数医疗服务提供者(11次讨论)给出强烈建议(明确的、个人认可的支持)。仅接受微弱建议的人群HPV疫苗接种率最低,而当医疗服务提供者将建议与相邻的理由相结合时,接种率最高。
我们的新工具提供了初步证据,表明医疗服务提供者如何通过限定条件削弱他们的建议,或通过理由来支持建议。大多数医疗服务提供者给出的HPV疫苗建议微弱,并采用参与式介绍。
医疗服务提供者将从关于如何以循证理由做出明确建议的沟通技能培训中受益。