Abstract
Background: Current interventions to enhance patient self-efficacy, a key mediator of health behavior, have limited primary care application. Objective: To explore the effectiveness of an office-based intervention for training resident physicians to use self-efficacy-enhancing interviewing techniques (SEE IT). Design: Randomized controlled trial. Participants: Family medicine and internal medicine resident physicians (N∈=∈64) at an academic medical center. Measurements: Resident use of SEE IT (a count of ten possible behaviors) was coded from audio recordings of the physician-patient portion of two standardized patient (SP) instructor training visits and two unannounced post-training SP visits, all involving common physical and mental health conditions and behavior change issues. One post-training SP visit involved health conditions similar to those experienced in training, while the other involved new conditions. Results: Experimental group residents demonstrated significantly greater use of SEE IT than controls, starting after the first training visit and sustained through the final post-training visit. The mean effect of the intervention was significant [adjusted incidence rate ratio for increased use of SEE IT∈=∈1.94 (95% confidence interval = 1.34, 2.79; p∈
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Jerant, A., Kravitz, R. L., Azari, R., White, L., García, J. A., Vierra, H., … Franks, P. (2009). Training residents to employ self-efficacy-enhancing interviewing techniques: Randomized controlled trial of a standardized patient intervention. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 24(5), 606–613. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-009-0946-4
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