Pettit Katie E, Rattray Nicholas A, Wang Hao, Stuckey Shanna, Mark Courtney D, Messman Anne M, Kline Jeffrey A
Department of Emergency Medicine Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN.
VA HSR&D Center for Health Information and Communication Roudebush VA Medical Center and Regenstrief Institute, Inc. Indianapolis IN.
AEM Educ Train. 2019 Mar 28;3(2):136-144. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10328. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Increased empathy may improve patient perceptions and outcomes. No training tool has been derived to teach empathy to emergency care providers. Accordingly, we engaged patients to assist in creating a concept map to teach empathy to emergency care providers.
We recruited patients, patient caretakers and patient advocates with emergency department experience to participate in three separate focus groups ( = 18 participants). Facilitators guided discussion about behaviors that physicians should demonstrate to rapidly create trust; enhance patient perception that the physician understood the patient's point of view, needs, concerns, and fears; and optimize patient/caregiver understanding of their experience. Verbatim transcripts from the three focus groups were read by the authors, and by consensus, five major themes with 10 minor themes were identified. After creating a codebook with thematic definitions, one author reviewed all transcripts to a library of verbatim excerpts coded by theme. To test for inter-rater reliability, two other authors similarly coded a random sample of 40% of the transcripts. Authors independently chose excerpts that represented consensus and strong emotional responses from participants.
Approximately 90% of opinions and preferences fell within 15 themes, with five central themes: provider transparency, acknowledgment of patient's emotions, provider disposition, trust in physician, and listening. Participants also highlighted the need for authenticity, context, and individuality to enhance empathic communication. For empathy map content, patients offered example behaviors that promote perceptions of physician warmth, respect, physical touch, knowledge of medical history, explanation of tests, transparency, and treating patients as partners. The resulting concept map was named the "Empathy Circle."
Focus group participants emphasized themes and tangible behaviors to improve empathy in emergency care. These were incorporated into the Empathy Circle, a novel concept map that can serve as the framework to teach empathy to emergency care providers.
增强同理心可能会改善患者的感受及治疗效果。目前尚未有专门用于向急救护理人员传授同理心的培训工具。因此,我们邀请患者协助创建一个概念图,以向急救护理人员传授同理心。
我们招募了有急诊科就诊经历的患者、患者护理人员及患者权益倡导者,让他们参加三个独立的焦点小组(共18名参与者)。主持人引导讨论医生应展现出哪些行为,以便迅速建立信任;增强患者认为医生理解其观点、需求、担忧及恐惧的感受;并优化患者/护理人员对自身经历的理解。作者阅读了三个焦点小组的逐字记录,并经共识确定了五个主要主题及十个次要主题。在创建了带有主题定义的编码手册后,一名作者将所有记录整理成按主题编码的逐字摘录库。为测试评分者间的可靠性,另外两名作者对40%的记录进行了类似的随机编码。作者独立挑选出代表参与者共识及强烈情感反应的摘录。
约90%的意见和偏好集中在15个主题内,其中有五个核心主题:提供者透明度、对患者情绪的认可、提供者态度、对医生的信任及倾听。参与者还强调了真实性、情境及个性化对于增强共情沟通的必要性。对于同理心地图的内容,患者提供了一些示例行为,这些行为有助于提升对医生温暖、尊重、身体接触、病史了解、检查解释、透明度以及将患者视为合作伙伴的认知。由此产生的概念图被命名为“同理心圈”。
焦点小组参与者强调了改善急救护理中同理心的主题及具体行为。这些内容被纳入了“同理心圈”,这是一个新颖的概念图,可作为向急救护理人员传授同理心的框架。