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Patient–physician communication about early stage prostate cancer: analysis of overall visit structure

Published Web Location

https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12168
Abstract

Background

We know little about patient-physician communication during visits to discuss diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer.

Objective

To examine the overall visit structure and how patients and physicians transition between communication activities during visits in which patients received new prostate cancer diagnoses.

Participants

Forty veterans and 18 urologists at one VA medical centre.

Methods

We coded 40 transcripts to identify major communication activities during visits and used empiric discourse analysis to analyse transitions between activities.

Results

We identified five communication activities that occurred in the following typical sequence: 'diagnosis delivery', 'risk classification', 'options talk', 'decision talk' and 'next steps'. The first two activities were typically brief and involved minimal patient participation. Options talk was typically the longest activity; physicians explicitly announced the beginning of options talk and framed it as their professional responsibility. Some patients were unsure of the purpose of visit and/or who should make treatment decisions.

Conclusion

Visits to deliver the diagnosis of early stage prostate cancer follow a regular sequence of communication activities. Physicians focus on discussing treatment options and devote comparatively little time and attention to discussing the new cancer diagnosis. Towards the goal of promoting patient-centred communication, physicians should consider eliciting patient reactions after diagnosis delivery and explaining the decision-making process before describing treatment options.

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