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肿瘤护理提供者同理心沟通技能培训以减少肺癌污名。

Oncology Care Provider Training in Empathic Communication Skills to Reduce Lung Cancer Stigma.

机构信息

From the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (S. C. Banerjee, N. Haque, E. A. Schofield, T. J. Williamson, C. M. Martin, P. A. Parker, D. C. McFarland, A. Moreno, J. S. Ostroff), Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; Department of Public Relations (C. L. Bylund), Division of Hematology & Oncology, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL; Department of Medicine (M. J. Shen), Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY; Support Initiatives, GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer (M. Rigney), Washington, DC; Department of Psychology and the Department of Family and Community Medicine (H. A. Hamann), University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ; and Department of Surgery (B. J. Park, D. Molena), Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY..

From the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (S. C. Banerjee, N. Haque, E. A. Schofield, T. J. Williamson, C. M. Martin, P. A. Parker, D. C. McFarland, A. Moreno, J. S. Ostroff), Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; Department of Public Relations (C. L. Bylund), Division of Hematology & Oncology, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL; Department of Medicine (M. J. Shen), Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY; Support Initiatives, GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer (M. Rigney), Washington, DC; Department of Psychology and the Department of Family and Community Medicine (H. A. Hamann), University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ; and Department of Surgery (B. J. Park, D. Molena), Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY.

出版信息

Chest. 2021 May;159(5):2040-2049. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.11.024. Epub 2020 Dec 16.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Despite the clinical importance of assessing smoking history and advising patients who smoke to quit, patients with lung cancer often experience feelings of blame and stigma during clinical encounters with their oncology care providers (OCPs). Promoting empathic communication during these encounters may help reduce patients' experience of stigma and improve related clinical outcomes. This paper presents the evaluation of OCP- and patient-reported data on the usefulness of an OCP-targeted empathic communication skills (ECS) training to reduce the stigma of lung cancer and improve communication.

RESEARCH QUESTION

What is the impact of the ECS intervention on OCPs' communication skills uptake and patient-reported outcomes (lung cancer stigma, satisfaction with communication, and perceived OCP empathy)?

METHODS

Study subjects included 30 multidisciplinary OCPs treating patients with lung cancer who participated in a 2.25 h ECS training. Standardized Patient Assessments were conducted prior to and following training to assess ECS uptake among OCPs. In addition, of a planned 180 patients who currently or formerly smoked (six unique patients per OCP [three pretraining, three posttraining]), 175 patients (89 pretraining, 86 posttraining) completed post-OCP visit surveys eliciting feedback on the quality of their interaction with their OCP.

RESULTS

OCPs exhibited an overall increase in use of empathic communication skills [t(28) = -2.37; P < .05], stigma-mitigating skills [t(28) = -3.88; P < .001], and breadth of communication skill use [t(28) = -2.91; P < .01]. Patients reported significantly higher overall satisfaction with communication post-ECS training, compared with pretraining [t(121) = 2.15; P = .034; Cohen d = 0.35]. There were no significant differences from pretraining to posttraining for patient-reported stigma or perceived OCP empathy.

INTERPRETATION

Empathy-based, stigma-reducing communication may lead to improved assessments of tobacco use and smoking cessation for patients with smoking-related cancers. These findings support the dissemination and further testing of a new ECS model for training OCPs in best practices for assessment of smoking history and engagement of patients who currently smoke in tobacco treatment delivery.

摘要

背景

尽管评估吸烟史并建议吸烟患者戒烟对临床具有重要意义,但肺癌患者在与肿瘤学护理提供者(OCP)进行临床接触时,往往会感到内疚和耻辱感。在这些接触中促进同理心沟通可能有助于减少患者的耻辱感,并改善相关的临床结果。本文介绍了 OCP 和患者对 OCP 为目标的同理心沟通技巧(ECS)培训的有用性的报告数据,以减少肺癌的耻辱感并改善沟通。

研究问题

ECS 干预对 OCP 沟通技巧的采用和患者报告的结果(肺癌耻辱感、对沟通的满意度和感知到的 OCP 同理心)有什么影响?

方法

研究对象包括 30 名参与 2.25 小时 ECS 培训的多学科 OCP,他们治疗肺癌患者。在培训前后进行标准化患者评估,以评估 OCP 的 ECS 采用情况。此外,在计划的 180 名目前或以前吸烟的患者中(每位 OCP 有六个独特的患者[三个预培训,三个后培训]),175 名患者(89 名预培训,86 名后培训)完成了 OCP 就诊后的调查,征求了他们与 OCP 互动的质量反馈。

结果

OCP 使用同理心沟通技巧的总体使用率增加[(28)t = -2.37;P <.05],减轻耻辱感的技巧使用率增加[(28)t = -3.88;P <.001],沟通技巧的使用范围也更广[(28)t = -2.91;P <.01]。与预培训相比,患者报告的沟通后总体满意度显著提高[(121)t = 2.15;P =.034;Cohen d = 0.35]。从预培训到后培训,患者报告的耻辱感或感知到的 OCP 同理心没有差异。

解释

基于同理心的、减少耻辱感的沟通可能会导致对与吸烟有关的癌症患者的烟草使用和戒烟评估得到改善。这些发现支持传播和进一步测试新的 ECS 模型,以培训 OCP 采用最佳实践来评估吸烟史并使目前吸烟的患者参与烟草治疗。

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