Feasibility and acceptability testing of CommSense: A novel communication technology to enhance health equity in clinician-patient interactions

被引:1
|
作者
LeBaron, Virginia [1 ,4 ]
Flickinger, Tabor [2 ]
Ling, David [2 ]
Lee, Hansung [2 ]
Edwards, James [1 ]
Tewari, Anant [2 ]
Wang, Zhiyuan [3 ]
Barnes, Laura E. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Virginia, Sch Nursing, Charlottesville, VA USA
[2] Univ Virginia, Sch Med, Charlottesville, VA USA
[3] Univ Virginia, Sch Engn & Appl Sci, Charlottesville, VA USA
[4] Univ Virginia, Sch Nursing, 225 Jeannette Lancaster Way, Charlottesville, VA 22908 USA
来源
DIGITAL HEALTH | 2023年 / 9卷
关键词
Communication; wearables; natural language processing; digital health; palliative care; PHYSICIAN COMMUNICATION; CARE COMMUNICATION; PALLIATIVE CARE; RESEARCH AGENDA; BAD-NEWS; ONCOLOGY; NURSES; SKILLS;
D O I
10.1177/20552076231184991
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
BackgroundQuality patient-clinician communication is paramount to achieving safe and compassionate healthcare, but evaluating communication performance during real clinical encounters is challenging. Technology offers novel opportunities to provide clinicians with actionable feedback to enhance their communication skills. MethodsThis pilot study evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of CommSense, a novel natural language processing (NLP) application designed to record and extract key metrics of communication performance and provide real-time feedback to clinicians. Metrics of communication performance were established from a review of the literature and technical feasibility verified. CommSense was deployed on a wearable (smartwatch), and participants were recruited from an academic medical center to test the technology. Participants completed a survey about their experience; results were exported to SPSS (v.28.0) for descriptive analysis. ResultsForty (n = 40) healthcare participants (nursing students, medical students, nurses, and physicians) pilot tested CommSense. Over 90% of participants "strongly agreed" or "agreed" that CommSense could improve compassionate communication (n = 38, 95%) and help healthcare organizations deliver high-quality care (n = 39, 97.5%). Most participants (n = 37, 92.5%) "strongly agreed" or "agreed" they would be willing to use CommSense in the future; 100% (n = 40) "strongly agreed" or "agreed" they were interested in seeing information analyzed by CommSense about their communication performance. Metrics of most interest were medical jargon, interruptions, and speech dominance. ConclusionParticipants perceived significant benefits of CommSense to track and improve communication skills. Future work will deploy CommSense in the clinical setting with a more diverse group of participants, validate data fidelity, and explore optimal ways to share data analyzed by CommSense with end-users.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 8 条
  • [1] How does communication heal? Pathways linking clinician-patient communication to health outcomes
    Street, Richard L., Jr.
    Makoul, Gregory
    Arora, Neeraj K.
    Epstein, Ronald M.
    PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING, 2009, 74 (03) : 295 - 301
  • [2] The effect of clinician-patient alliance and communication on treatment adherence in mental health care: a systematic review
    Thompson, Laura
    McCabe, Rose
    BMC PSYCHIATRY, 2012, 12
  • [3] Exploring the Use of Wearable Sensors and Natural Language Processing Technology to Improve Patient-Clinician Communication: Protocol for a Feasibility Study
    LeBaron, Virginia
    Boukhechba, Mehdi
    Edwards, James
    Flickinger, Tabor
    Ling, David
    Barnes, Laura E.
    JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS, 2022, 11 (05):
  • [4] The effect of clinician-patient alliance and communication on treatment adherence in mental health care: a systematic review
    Laura Thompson
    Rose McCabe
    BMC Psychiatry, 12
  • [5] A brief intervention to enhance breast cancer clinicians' communication about sexual health: Feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary outcomes
    Reese, Jennifer Barsky
    Lepore, Stephen J.
    Daly, Mary B.
    Handorf, Elizabeth
    Sorice, Kristen A.
    Porter, Laura S.
    Tulsky, James A.
    Beach, Mary Catherine
    PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, 2019, 28 (04) : 872 - 879
  • [6] A randomised phase II trial testing the acceptability and feasibility of a narrative approach to public health communication to increase community engagement with palliative care
    Collins, Anna
    McLachlan, Sue-Anne
    Hill, Mike
    Collins, Sue
    Philip, Jennifer
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2020, 34 (08) : 1108 - 1117
  • [7] Implementation of Patient Engagement Tools in Electronic Health Records to Enhance Patient-Centered Communication: Protocol for Feasibility Evaluation and Preliminary Results
    Tai-Seale, Ming
    Rosen, Rebecca
    Ruo, Bernice
    Hogarth, Michael
    Longhurst, Christopher A.
    Lander, Lina
    Walker, Amanda L.
    Stults, Cheryl D.
    Chan, Albert
    Mazor, Kathleen
    Garber, Lawrence
    Millen, Marlene
    JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS, 2021, 10 (08):
  • [8] Can consumers learn to ask three questions to improve shared decision making? A feasibility study of the ASK (AskShareKnow) Patient-Clinician Communication Model® intervention in a primary health-care setting
    Shepherd, Heather L.
    Barratt, Alexandra
    Jones, Anna
    Bateson, Deborah
    Carey, Karen
    Trevena, Lyndal J.
    McGeechan, Kevin
    Del Mar, Chris B.
    Butow, Phyllis N.
    Epstein, Ronald M.
    Entwistle, Vikki
    Weisberg, Edith
    HEALTH EXPECTATIONS, 2016, 19 (05) : 1160 - 1168