AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding patient care involves the interplay of clear communication from physicians and consistent interaction with care teams, which can be hindered by various factors.
  • A survey conducted with 172 inpatients revealed that many patients did not know their main doctor, and 23% reported receiving mixed messages about their care, especially between primary and consulting doctors.
  • Increased daily interactions with the care team were linked to a decrease in perceived mixed messages, highlighting the importance of consistent communication for improving patient understanding and health outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Patient understanding of their care, supported by physician involvement and consistent communication, is key to positive health outcomes. However, patient and care team characteristics can hinder this understanding.

Objective: We aimed to assess inpatients' understanding of their care and their perceived receipt of mixed messages, as well as the associated patient, care team, and hospitalization characteristics.

Design: We administered a 30-item survey to inpatients between February 2020 and November 2021 and incorporated other hospitalization data from patients' health records.

Participants: Randomly selected inpatients at two urban academic hospitals in the USA who were (1) admitted to general medicine services and (2) on or past the third day of their hospitalization.

Main Measures: Outcome measures include (1) knowledge of main doctor and (2) frequency of mixed messages. Potential predictors included mean notes per day, number of consultants involved in the patient's care, number of unit transfers, number of attending physicians, length of stay, age, sex, insurance type, and primary race.

Key Results: A total of 172 patients participated in our survey. Most patients were unaware of their main doctor, an issue related to more daily interactions with care team members. Twenty-three percent of patients reported receiving mixed messages at least sometimes, most often between doctors on the primary team and consulting doctors. However, the likelihood of receiving mixed messages decreased with more daily interactions with care team members.

Conclusions: Patients were often unaware of their main doctor, and almost a quarter perceived receiving mixed messages about their care. Future research should examine patients' understanding of different aspects of their care, and the nature of interactions that might improve clarity around who's in charge while simultaneously reducing the receipt of mixed messages.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10042424PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-023-08178-4DOI Listing

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