This trial assesses patient perception of physician's compassion, communication skills, and professionalism during clinic visits through the use of videos and questionnaires.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. To compare patients' perception of physicians' compassion after they watch the first scripted-video vignettes of physicians: one portraying a physician using a standard electronic health record (EHR) and the other one portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. To compare patients' perception of physicians' compassion after they watch the second scripted-video vignettes of physicians: one portraying a physician using a standard electronic health record (EHR) and the other one portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication. II. To compare patients' perception of physicians' communication skills after they watch each scripted-video vignettes of physicians: one portraying a physician using a standard EHR and the other one portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication. III. To compare patients' perception of physicians' professionalism after they watch each scripted-video vignettes of physicians: one portraying a physician using a standard EHR and the other one portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication. IV. To compare patients' perception of physicians' compassion, communication skills and professionalism after they watch two scripted-video vignettes of physicians: one portraying a physician using a standard electronic health record (EHR) and the other one portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication. V. To compare patients' preference after they watch two scripted-video vignettes of physicians sequentially: one portraying a physician using a standard EHR and the other one portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication. VI. To examine patients' perception of EHR in healthcare delivery. VII. To establish demographic and clinical factors of patients preference for the physician. OUTLINE: Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 groups. GROUP I: Patients complete questionnaires and watch a video portraying a physician using a standard electronic health record (EHR) and then another portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR during communication over 35 minutes. GROUP II: Patients complete questionnaires and watch a video portraying a physician using an integrated model of EHR and then another portraying a physician using a standard EHR during communication over 35 minutes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Complete questionnaires
Watch videos of doctor and patient interaction in different settings
M D Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, Texas, United States
Patients' perception of physicians' compassion after they watch the first video
Quantified by the total score of ratings from a comprehensive 5-item tool which assesses dimensions such as warm/cold, pleasant/unpleasant, compassionate/distant, sensitive/insensitive, and caring/uncaring (ranging from 0 to 10 for each item, and from 0 to 50 for the total score). Physicians' compassion, communication skills and professionalism will be compared between standard electronic health record (EHR) and integrated EHR groups at the end of each video using a two-sample t-test or Wilcoxon rank-sum test when appropriate. The mixed model will be applied to further explore the patterns of physicians' compassion, communication skills and professionalism from both videos. Patients' preference of physician and perception of EHR will be compared between standard EHR and integrated EHR groups using Chi-squared test or Fisher's exact test when appropriate. Logistic regression model will also be employed.
Time frame: 1 year" or "up to 24 weeks", "through study completion
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Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
125