Strategies to improve doctor-patient communication may have a beneficial impact on patient's illness experience and mood, with potential favorable clinical effects. We prospectively tested the psychometric and clinical validity of the Decalogue, a tool utilizing 10 communication recommendations for patients and physicians. The Decalogue was administered to 100 consecutive patients referred for a cardiologic consultation, whereas 49 patients served as controls. The POMS-2 questionnaire was used to measure the total mood disturbance at the end of the consultation. Structural equation modeling showed high internal consistency (Cronbach alpha 0.93), good test-retest reproducibility, and high validity of the psychometric construct (all > 0.80), suggesting a positive effect on patients' illness experience. The total mood disturbance was lower in the patients exposed to the Decalogue as compared to the controls (1.4±12.1 versus 14.8±27.6, p=0.0010). In an additional questionnaire, patients in the Decalogue group showed a trend towards a better understanding of their state of health (p=0.07). In a cardiologic ambulatory setting, the Decalogue shows good validity and reliability as a tool to improve patients' illness experience and could have a favorable impact on mood states. These effects might potentially improve patient engagement in care and adherence to therapy, as well as clinical outcome.
CITATION STYLE
Ballo, P., Milli, M., Slater, C., Bandini, F., Trentanove, F., Comper, G., … Polvani, S. (2017). Prospective validation of the decalogue, a set of doctor-patient communication recommendations to improve patient illness experience and mood states within a hospital cardiologic ambulatory setting. BioMed Research International, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/2792131
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