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Transcript
Strategies for Successful
Patient/Provider Communication
Erin E. Krebs, MD, MPH
Minneapolis VA Health Care System
November 16, 2012
“They come in here and they wanna talk
about my cholesterol and my blood
pressure or my mammogram and a
colonoscopy and everything, which, to me,
I just do that really kind of to appease
them ‘cause I’m not interested in it…I
mean, what affects every single day, every
single waking moment and half the time
my nights, is this constant pain.”
Experience of chronic pain care

Patient perspectives





Desire for validation of experience and suffering
Worries about cause and future implications of pain
Fears of being mistrusted or not believed
Feelings of frustration and powerlessness
Physician/provider perspectives




Concerns about patient motivations
Uncertainty about legitimacy and etiology of pain
Worries about pressure to provide tests/treatments
Feelings of frustration and powerlessness
US prescription opioid sales, 1997-2007
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Figure adapted from CDC Grand Rounds, 2/17/11; data source DEA ARCOS
Primary care frustration?
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Role of opioids in chronic pain

American Pain Society/American Academy of Pain Medicine
guidelines for opioid therapy in chronic pain
 25 recommendations: none based on strong evidence; 4 on
moderate evidence
 “At a minimum, this deficit will result in continued
uncertainty regarding best practices, and at worst these
deficiencies could contribute to unnecessary harms.”
Chou R et al, J Pain 2009;10(2): 113-130; Chou R et al, J Pain 2009;10(2): 147-159
Balancing benefits and harms
Pain
relief
Abuse/
addiction
Balancing benefits and harms
Symptoms
Dependence
Social role
Mood
Tolerance
Abuse/
Uncertain addiction
Pain relief Uncertain
Injuries
benefits
risks
Work
Hypogonadism
Physical
Sleep
activity
disorders
Pain hypersensitivity
The other side of the coin…


Effective communication is a powerful intervention
Patients with pain describe positive provider
behaviors






Listening and expressing empathy
Seeing patient as an individual
Acknowledging patients’ experiences with treatments
Providing options and sharing decision making
Being available between visits (email, phone)
Working with a care team (nurses, other providers)
Effective medical interviewing

Quick survey

How many received advanced interview skills training during
medical school or residency?

How many received advanced interviewing training after
your formal medical education was complete?
“Self-help” books
Four Habits Model



Habits = organized ways of thinking and acting during
clinical encounter
Synthesizes evidence about effective interviewing
strategies into a framework for clinic visits
Implemented extensively within Kaiser Permanente
Frankel RM and Stein, T Permanente Journal, 1999:3(3), available at
http://xnet.kp.org/permanentejournal/fall99pj/habits.html
Four Habits Model
1. Invest in the beginning

Typical visits fail to identify patients’ concerns



Physicians solicit at least one concern in 75% of visits
 Physicians interrupt patients’ initial statement of concerns
after an average of 23 seconds
 76% interrupted after first concern
Late complaints occur more than twice as often when initial
concerns not solicited (35% vs. 15%)
Most common complaint among patients with pain is
that doctors don’t want to listen
Beckman HB, et al. JAMA. 1999;281(3):283-287
1. Invest in the beginning

Elicit the full spectrum of patient concerns





“What would you like help with today?”
“Anything else?”
“Anything else?”
“ Anything else?”
Plan the visit


Repeat concerns to confirm understanding
Set expectations for visit, put your concerns on the table
 “I want to focus on your back pain today, but I also want
to make sure we’ve got you up to date on your cancer
screenings...”
2. Elicit the patient’s perspective

Physicians often fail to accurately identify patient
expectations



When patients expect information, physicians often believe
they expect tests, medications, or referrals
Addressing patient expectations improves patient and
physician satisfaction
Understanding effects of pain on valued activities is a
foundation for functional goal setting
Rao JK, Weinberger M, Kroenke K. Arch Fam Med. 2000;9:1148-1155
2. Elicit the patient’s perspective

Assess patient’s point of view



Identify patient requests


Explanatory model—“What have you been thinking about
the cause of this pain?”
Serious illness worries— “What concerns you most about
this pain?”
“Is there anything in particular you were hoping I would do
for you today?”
Explore implications of pain



“Tell me about how things have been going for you”
“What is a typical day like for you?”
“How has this pain affected your life?”
3. Demonstrate empathy


Empathy = “appreciation, understanding, and
acceptance of someone else’s emotional situation”
Patients hope for a good outcome, but expect caring


Perceived caring is associated with patient satisfaction
Perceived lack of caring is associated with malpractice
Beckman HB, et al. Arch Intern Med 1994;154:1365-70.
3. Demonstrate empathy

Identify emotions




Make eye contact
Encourage patient to express emotions (pause, “go on”)
“How are you feeling about that?”
Express empathetic statement



Reflect—“I see you’re feeling worried about…”
Legitimate—“I understand why you would feel angry”
Support—“I want to help you get through this”
Cohen-Cole SA. The medical interview. St Louis, MO: Mosby Year Book;1991
4. Invest in the end

Deliver diagnostic information, framed by patient
concerns


Provide an explanation for pain, even if work up is “negative”
Involve patient in decision making about treatment




Provide a rationale for recommendations
Explore patient preferences and barriers to adherence
Probe patient comprehension
Express intention to work with patient over time
Setting limits around opioids

Difficult conversations





Saying no to opioid initiation
Introducing opioid monitoring
Addressing abnormal drug screens, aberrant behavior
Tapering high-risk or ineffective opioids
Specific strategies





Take the time you need
Focus on benefits/harms of the drug
Develop a standardized monitoring approach
Ally with patient, share concerns and uncertainties
Prioritize safety, share decision-making for non-safety issues