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Author Notes:

Jerik Leung, Behavioral, Social and Health Education Sciences, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, 1518 Clifton Rd, Atlanta, GA, 30322, United States, Phone: 1 404 727 3956, Email: jerik.leung@emory.edu

JL, EAB, LZ, and AS conceived and designed the study. All the authors contributed to the design of the interventions and data acquisition. JL, EAB, AS, LZ, and LM contributed to data analysis and interpretation. JL and EAB drafted the manuscript with revisions from all other authors.

The authors would like to acknowledge the actors from the Metro Theater Company for their role and dedication in delivering this educational session. JL was supported by the Rheumatology Research Foundation (Lawren H Daltroy Health Professional Prereceptorship).

Disclosures: None decalared

Subjects:

Keywords:

  • physician-patient communication
  • arts-based education
  • social determinants of health
  • rheumatology
  • concordance
  • communication
  • participatory theater
  • health equity
  • physician education
  • interactivity

Rethinking the Difficult Patient: Formative Qualitative Study Using Participatory Theater to Improve Physician-Patient Communication in Rheumatology

Tools:

Journal Title:

Jmir Formative Research

Volume:

Volume 7

Publisher:

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Background Effective physician-patient communication is crucial for positive health outcomes for patients with chronic diseases. However, current methods of physician education in communication are often insufficient to help physicians understand how patients’ actions are influenced by the contexts within which they live. An arts-based participatory theater approach can provide the necessary health equity framing to address this deficiency. Objective The aim of this study was to develop, pilot, and conduct a formative evaluation of an interactive arts-based communication skills intervention for graduate-level medical trainees grounded in a narrative representative of the experience of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. Methods We hypothesized that the delivery of interactive communication modules through a participatory theater approach would lead to changes in both attitudes and the capacity to act on those attitudes among participants in 4 conceptual categories related to patient communication (understanding social determinants of health, expressing empathy, shared decision-making, and concordance). We developed a participatory, arts-based intervention to pilot this conceptual framework with the intended audience (rheumatology trainees). The intervention was delivered through routine educational conferences at a single institution. We conducted a formative evaluation by collecting qualitative focus group feedback to evaluate the implementation of the modules. Results Our formative data suggest that the participatory theater approach and the design of the modules added value to the participants’ learning experience by facilitating interconnection of the 4 communication concepts (eg, participants were able to gain insight into both what physicians and patients were thinking about on the same topic). Participants also provided several suggestions for improving the intervention such as ensuring that the didactic material had more active engagement and considering additional ways to acknowledge real-world constraints (eg, limited time with patients) in implementing communication strategies. Conclusions Our findings from this formative evaluation of communication modules suggest that participatory theater is an effective method for framing physician education with a health equity lens, although considerations in the realms of functional demands of health care providers and use of structural competency as a framing concept are needed. The integration of social and structural contexts into the delivery of this communication skills intervention may be important for the uptake of these skills by intervention participants. Participatory theater provided an opportunity for dynamic interactivity among participants and facilitated greater engagement with the communication module content.

Copyright information:

©Jerik Leung, Avira Som, Lily McMorrow, Lisa Zickuhr, John Wolbers, Karen Bain, Julia Flood, Elizabeth A Baker. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 06.03.2023.

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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