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Salem, G., Abdelsalam, A. (2017). Doctor-Patient Communication, What is the Situation? An Intervention Study at a Selected Governmental Hospital in Sharkia Governorate. Journal of High Institute of Public Health, 47(1), 22-28. doi: 10.21608/jhiph.2017.19974
Ghada Salem; Amira Abdelsalam. "Doctor-Patient Communication, What is the Situation? An Intervention Study at a Selected Governmental Hospital in Sharkia Governorate". Journal of High Institute of Public Health, 47, 1, 2017, 22-28. doi: 10.21608/jhiph.2017.19974
Salem, G., Abdelsalam, A. (2017). 'Doctor-Patient Communication, What is the Situation? An Intervention Study at a Selected Governmental Hospital in Sharkia Governorate', Journal of High Institute of Public Health, 47(1), pp. 22-28. doi: 10.21608/jhiph.2017.19974
Salem, G., Abdelsalam, A. Doctor-Patient Communication, What is the Situation? An Intervention Study at a Selected Governmental Hospital in Sharkia Governorate. Journal of High Institute of Public Health, 2017; 47(1): 22-28. doi: 10.21608/jhiph.2017.19974

Doctor-Patient Communication, What is the Situation? An Intervention Study at a Selected Governmental Hospital in Sharkia Governorate

Article 4, Volume 47, Issue 1, April 2017, Page 22-28  XML PDF (672.2 K)
Document Type: Original Article
DOI: 10.21608/jhiph.2017.19974
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Authors
Ghada Salem email ; Amira Abdelsalam
Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University, Egypt.
Abstract
Background: Good doctor-patient communication has multiple impacts as higher compliance, satisfaction for both patients and clinicians and decrease in malpractice.
Objective(s): To assess physicians’ perception towards importance of effective doctor-patient communication, as well as to measure their actual practice and skills of communication according to the items of the Kalamazoo checklist before and after training program.
Methods: An intervention study was carried out at outpatient clinics in a general hospital at Zagazig district. A randomly selected sample of 198 physicians was chosen. The phases of the study were: 1- Assessing the level of doctor patient communication practice using the Kalamazoo Checklist. 2- Assessing physicians’ perception towards effective communication, using a self-administered questionnaire. 3- Assessing the level of doctor patient communication practice after training program.
Results: 46.5% of physicians highly perceived the importance of effective communication; with higher perception among females. The highest perceived items (more than 80%) were the effect of good communication on patients’ compliance, patients’ satisfaction and physicians’ satisfaction. The intervention program significantly improved the physicians’ communication skills.
Conclusion: Less than half of the physicians highly perceived the importance of effective communication. Training can significantly impact communication skills.
 
Keywords
doctor-patient communication
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