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A randomized pragmatic feasibility trial to promote student perspective-taking on client physical activity level: a collaborative project. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Health-care practitioners need to learn how to talk to clients about unhealthy behaviors in a way that shows they care, which can help clients change these behaviors.
  • A study was done with university students in health-care programs to see if a special workshop on perspective-taking (understanding how others feel) would help them communicate better.
  • Out of 163 students, some took part in the workshop before talking to an actor acting as a client, but they didn't fully reach their goal for participation and practice opportunities weren't available for everyone.

Article Abstract

Background: Health-care practitioners have opportunities to talk with clients about unhealthy behaviors. How practitioners approach these conversations involves skill to be effective. Thus, teaching health-care students to communicate empathetically with clients should promote effective client-practitioner conversations about health behavior change. The primary objective of this pilot trial was to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and appropriateness of a theoretically informed intervention designed to improve perspective-taking.

Methods: For inclusion in this randomized mixed-methods parallel two-arm trial, participants needed to be a student at the investigators' Canadian university and have completed course content on behavior change communication. Using a 1:1 allocation ratio, participants in Respiratory, Physical, and Occupational Therapy; Nurse Practitioner; and Kinesiology programs were randomly assigned to full or partial intervention conditions. Full intervention participants completed a perspective-taking workshop and practiced perspective-taking prior to an in-lab dialogue with a client-actor (masked to condition) about physical activity. Partial intervention participants received the workshop after the dialogue. We assessed feasibility and appropriateness by comparing recruitment rates, protocol, and psychometric outcomes to criteria. We assessed acceptability (secondary outcome) by analyzing exit interviews.

Results: We screened and randomized 163 participants (82 = full intervention; 81 = partial intervention). We fell slightly short of our recruitment success criteria (10-15 participants per program) when 2/50 Occupational Therapy students participated. We met some but not all of our protocol criteria: Some full intervention participants did not practice perspective-taking before the dialogue, because they did not see anyone during the practice period or did not have a practice opportunity. Psychometric outcomes met the criteria, except for one measure that demonstrated ceiling effects and low reliability (Cronbach's alpha < .70). There were no adverse events related to participation.

Conclusions: The intervention should be largely feasible, appropriate, and acceptable to deliver. We suggest changes that are large enough to warrant conducting another pilot study. We outline recommended improvements that are applicable to researchers and educators interested in recruitment, adherence to home practice, and online uptake of the intervention.

Trial Registration: This trial was registered retrospectively on November 8, 2023, at https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06123507 .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11437983PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-024-01547-8DOI Listing

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