Nurse practitioner consultations in primary health care: an observational interaction analysis of social interactions and consultation outcomes
Abstract
To determine the discrete nature of social interactions occurring in nurse practitioner consultations and investigate the relationship between consultation social interaction styles (biomedical and patient-centred) and the outcomes of patient satisfaction, patient enablement, and consultation time lengths. A case study-based observational interaction analysis of verbal social interactions, arising from 30 primary health care nurse practitioner consultations, linked with questionnaire measures of patient satisfaction and enablement. A significant majority of observed social interactions used patient-centred communication styles (P=0.005), with neither nurse practitioners nor patients or carers being significantly more verbally dominant. Nurse practitioners guided the sequence of consultation interaction sequences, but patients actively participated through interactions such as asking questions. Usage of either patient-centred or biomedical interaction styles were not significantly associated with increased levels of patient satisfaction or patient enablement. The median consultation time length of 10.1 min (quartiles 8.2, 13.7) was not significantly extended by high levels of patient-centred interactions being used in the observed consultations. High usage levels of patient-centred interaction styles are not necessarily contingent upon having longer consultation times available, and clinicians can encourage patients to use participatory interactions, whilst still then retaining overall guidance of the phased sequences of consultations, and not concurrently extending consultation time lengths. This study adds to the body of nurse practitioner consultation communication research by providing a more detailed understanding of the nature of social interactions occurring in nurse practitioner consultations, linked to the outcomes of patient satisfaction and enablement.Publisher
Cambridge University PressJournal
Primary Health Care Research and DevelopmentPubMed ID
29979148Type
Journal articleLanguage
enISSN
1463-4236ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S1463423618000427
Scopus Count
Collections
The following licence applies to the copyright and re-use of this item:
- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Related articles
- Nurse practitioner consultations in primary health care: a case study-based survey of patients' pre-consultation expectations, and post-consultation satisfaction and enablement.
- Authors: Barratt J, Thomas N
- Issue date: 2018 Jul 17
- Nurse practitioner consultations in primary health care: patient, carer, and nurse practitioner qualitative interpretations of communication processes.
- Authors: Barratt J, Thomas N
- Issue date: 2018 Oct 31
- Nurse practitioner consultations in primary health care: an observational interaction analysis of social interactions and consultation outcomes - ERRATUM.
- Authors: Barratt J, Thomas N
- Issue date: 2018 Aug 30
- Measuring quality in general practice. Pilot study of a needs, process and outcome measure.
- Authors: Howie JG, Heaney DJ, Maxwell M
- Issue date: 1997 Feb