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Peter Maguire Cancer
Research UK Psychological Medicine Group, Christie Hospital NHS Trust,
Manchester M20 4BX Correspondence to: P Maguire
peter.maguire{at}man.ac.uk
Good doctors communicate effectively with patients When doctors use communication skills effectively, both
they and their patients benefit. Firstly, doctors identify their
patients' problems more accurately.1 Secondly, their
patients are more satisfied with their care and can better understand
their problems, investigations, and treatment options. Thirdly,
patients are more likely to adhere to treatment and to follow advice on
behaviour change.2 Fourthly, patients' distress and their
vulnerability to anxiety and depression are lessened. Finally,
doctors' own wellbeing is improved.3-5 We present
evidence that doctors do not communicate with their patients as well as
they should, and we consider possible reasons for this. We also
describe the skills essential for effective communication and discuss
how doctors can acquire these skills.
We used original research studies into doctor-patient
communication, particularly those examining the relation between key consultation skills and how well certain tasks (such as explaining treatment options) were achieved. We used key words ("communication skills," "consultation skills," and "interviewing skills"
whether associated with "training" or not) to search Embase,
PsycINFO, and Medline over the past 10 years. We also searched the
Cochrane database of abstracts of reviews of effectiveness (DARE).
Box 1 shows the key tasks in communicating with patients that good
doctors should be able to perform. Unfortunately, doctors often fail in
these tasks. Only half of the complaints and concerns of patients are
likely to be elicited.2 Often doctors obtain little
information about patients' perceptions of their problems or about the
physical, emotional, and social impact of the problems.6 When doctors provide information they do so in an inflexible way and
tend to ignore what individual patients wish to know. They pay little
attention to checking how well patients have understood what they have
been told.2 Less than half of psychological morbidity in
patients is recognised.7 Often patients do not adhere to
the treatment and advice that the doctor offers, and levels of patient
satisfaction are variable.
2 8
Until recently, undergraduate or postgraduate training paid little
attention to ensuring that doctors acquire the skills necessary to
communicate well with patients. Doctors have therefore been reluctant
to depart from a strictly medical model, deal with psychosocial issues,
and adopt a more negotiating and partnership style.
2 6
They have been loath to inquire about the social and emotional impact
of patients' problems on the patient and family lest this unleashes
distress that they cannot handle. They fear it will increase patients'
distress, take up too much time, and threaten their own emotional
survival. Consequently, they respond to emotional cues with strategies
that block further disclosure (box
2).9
Box 2:
Blocking behaviour
they identify
patients' problems more accurately, and patients are more satisfied
with the care they receive. But what are the necessary communication
skills and how can doctors acquire them?
Summary points
Doctors with good communication skills identify patients'
problems more accurately
Their patients adjust better psychologically and are more satisfied
with their care
Doctors with good communication skills have greater job satisfaction
and less work stress
Effective methods of communication skills training are available
The opportunity to practise key skills and receive constructive
feedback of performance is essential
![]()
Sources and selection criteria
Top
Sources and selection criteria
Deficiencies in communication
Reasons for deficiencies
Skills needed to perform...
How to acquire the...
Using new skills in...
References
![]()
Deficiencies in communication
Top
Sources and selection criteria
Deficiencies in communication
Reasons for deficiencies
Skills needed to perform...
How to acquire the...
Using new skills in...
References
![]()
Reasons for deficiencies
Top
Sources and selection criteria
Deficiencies in communication
Reasons for deficiencies
Skills needed to perform...
How to acquire the...
Using new skills in...
References
Even if doctors have the appropriate skills, they may not use them because they are worried that their colleagues will not give sufficient practical and emotional support if needed.10 Doctors may also not realise how often patients withhold important information from them or the reasons for this (box 3).9
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Skills needed to perform key tasks |
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Eliciting patients' problems and concerns
Establish eye contact at the beginning of the consultation and
maintain it at reasonable intervals to show interest.11
Encourage patients to be exact about the sequence in which their
problems occurred; ask for dates of key events and about patients'
perceptions and feelings. This helps patients to recall their
experiences, feel understood,12 and cope with their problem.
Use "active listening" to clarify what patients are concerned
about9
that is, respond to cues about problems and
distress by clarifying and exploring them.11 But avoid
interrupting before patients have completed important
statements.13
Summarise information to show patients they have been heard, and give them an opportunity to correct any misunderstandings.9 Inquire about the social and psychological impact of important illnesses or problems on the patient and family14; this shows the patient that you are interested in his or her psychosocial wellbeing, and that of the family.
Giving information
Check what patients consider might be wrong and how those beliefs
have affected them.15 Ask patients what information they
would like, and prioritise their information needs so that important
needs can be dealt with first if time is short.9 Present
information by category
for example, "you said you would like to
know the nature of your illness." Check that the patient has
understood before moving on.16
With complex illnesses or treatments, check if the patient would like
additional information
written or on audiotape. However, if you have
to give the patient a poor prognosis, providing an audiotape may hinder
psychological adjustment.
Discussing treatment options
Properly inform patients of treatment options, and check if they
want to be involved in decisions. Patients who take part in decision
making are more likely to adhere to treatment plans.2
Determine the patient's perspective before discussing lifestyle
changes
for example, giving up smoking.2
Being supportive
Use empathy to show that you have some sense of how the patient is
feeling ("the experiences you describe during your mother's illness
sound devastating"). Use educated guesses too. Feed back to patients
your intuitions about how they are feeling ("you say you are coping
well, but I get the impression you are struggling with this
treatment"). Even if the guess is incorrect it shows patients that
you are trying to further your understanding of their problem.
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How to acquire the skills |
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Effective training methods
Box 4 lists the teaching methods for helping doctors to acquire
relevant communication skills and stop using blocking
behaviour.
1 17
These methods have been used in
undergraduate and postgraduate teaching.
18 19
A
"good" doctor, wanting to audit and improve his or her skills,
should ensure that any course or workshop they attend includes three
components of learning: cognitive input, modelling, and practice of key
skills.
|
Cognitive input
Courses should provide detailed handouts or short lectures, or
both, that provide evidence of current deficiencies in communication
with patients, reasons for these deficiencies, and the adverse
consequences for patients and clinicians. Participants should be told
about the communication skills and changes in attitude that remedy
deficiencies and be given evidence of their usefulness in clinical practice.
Modelling
Trainers should demonstrate key skills in action
with audiotapes
or videotapes of real consultations. The participants should discuss
the impact of these skills on the patient and doctor.
![]() |
| (Credit: ALFRED PASIEKA/SPL) |
Practising key skills
If doctors are to acquire skills and relinquish blocking
behaviour, they must have an opportunity to practise and to receive
feedback about performance. However, the risk of distressing and
deskilling the doctor must be minimised.
Context of learning
Some doctors feel safer learning within their own
discipline.20 Others welcome the challenge of learning
with those from other disciplines, such as nursing21;
multidisciplinary groups enable doctors to understand and improve
communication between disciplines. The relative merits of these two
different environments has still to be determined.
Doctors are more likely to attend workshops or courses in communication skills if they know that substantial time will be devoted to their own agenda. Thus, they should be asked to identify the communication tasks they want help with. These will commonly include the tasks discussed already plus more difficult situations, such as breaking bad news, handling anger, and responding to difficult questions.
Limiting the size of the group to four to six participants creates the sense of personal safety required for participants to disclose and explore relevant attitudes and feelings. It also allows more opportunity to practise key communication tasks.22
Facilitators who have had similar feedback training are more effective
in promoting learning than those who have not.23 Residential workshops lasting three days are as effective as day workshops lasting five days.21 Whether longer courses are
more effective than workshops plus follow up workshops needs to be determined.
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Access to training
Sources of information
Well established courses
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Using new skills in practice |
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Practising communication skills with simulated patients leads to the acquisition of skills and the relinquishing of blocking behaviour. However, doctors do not transfer these learned skills to clinical practice as comprehensively as they should.24 Offering doctors feedback on real consultations should ensure more effective transfer of skills.
Current evidence suggests that the good doctor who attends short residential workshops or courses to improve his or her skills and then has an opportunity to receive feedback about how he or she communicates in real consultations will learn most. Doctors will find that both they and their patients benefit. Patients will disclose more concerns, perceptions, and feelings about their predicament, will feel less distressed, and be more satisfied. Doctors will feel more confident about how they are communicating and obtain more validation from patients.
Good doctors will wish to continue their learning over time by self
assessment (recording their own interviews and reflecting on them) or
attending further courses or workshops.
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Acknowledgments |
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PM is also professor of psychiatric oncology at the University of Manchester.
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Footnotes |
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Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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